From:
wvec-board@yahoogroups.com [mailto:wvec-board@yahoogroups.com] On Behalf Of cindyrank
Sent: Tuesday, December 02, 2008 2:53 PM
To: WVHCBOARD@yahoogroups.com; wvec-board@yahoogroups.com;
fom@lists.riseup.net; the-alliance-for-appalachia@googlegroups.com;
justice@lists.citizenscoalcouncil.org
Subject: [wvec-board] Fw: NEWS: EPA Signs Off on Mountaintop Removal
Mining Rule
This just sent out
nationally. ....cindy
FOR
IMMEDIATE RELEASE
December
2, 2008
Contact:
Joan
Mulhern/Kathleen Sutcliffe, Earthjustice, (202) 667-4500
Oliver
Bernstein, Sierra Club, (512) 477-2152
Vivian
Stockman, Ohio Valley Environmental Coalition, (304) 360-1979
Vernon
Haltom, Coal River Mountain Watch, (304) 854-2182
Cindy
Rank, West Virginia Highlands Conservancy, (304) 924-5802
Agency Signs Off on Controversial Rule to Allow
Stream Destruction
Rule removes protections for streams, allows more
mountaintop removal mining
Washington,
D.C. – The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency today signed off on
a controversial 11th hour
repeal of the stream buffer zone rule, an environmental law which since 1983
has prohibited surface coal mining activities within 100 feet of flowing
streams.
The
repeal of this important protection clears the way for an even greater
expansion of mountaintop removal mining – the aptly named process of
mining coal by blasting off the tops of mountains, and bulldozing the crumbled
peaks into adjoining valleys.
“The
EPA's decision is a slap in the face of Appalachian communities, which have
already endured enough injustice from mountaintop removal,” said Vernon
Haltom, co-director of the West Virginia-based Coal River Mountain Watch.
“My home and thousands of others are now in greater jeopardy.”
EPA’s
approval comes in spite of a recent wave of criticism directed generally at the
outgoing administration’s ‘midnight regulations’ and
specifically at the repeal of the stream buffer zone rule.
“Once
again, the Environmental Protection Agency has failed to live up to its name.
With less than two months left in power, the Bush administration is determined
to cement its legacy as having the worst environmental record in
history,” said Joan Mulhern, senior legislative counsel at Earthjustice.
“This is a sad day for all people who are thankful for the clear mountain
streams and stately summits of the Appalachians.”
The
change, which is being proposed by Department of the Interior’s Office of
Surface Mining (OSM), had to receive written approval from EPA before it could
be finalized. That last hurdle was cleared today. Opponents of the repeal of
the stream buffer rule argued that EPA could not legally approve the rule
change because doing so conflicts with EPA’s duties under the Clean Water
Act.
“The
EPA’s own scientists have concluded that dumping mining waste into
streams devastates downstream water quality,” said Ed Hopkins, director
of Sierra Club’s Environmental Quality Program. “By signing
off on a rule to eliminate a critical safeguard for streams, the EPA has
abdicated its responsibility and left the local communities that depend on
these waters at risk.”
Last
month, top decision makers in the coal mining states of Kentucky and Tennessee
urged EPA to block the rule change. Kentucky Gov. Steven Beshear, Attorney
General Jack Conway, and Reps. Ben Chandler and John Yarmuth each wrote letters
to EPA head Stephen Johnson asking him not to sign off on the repeal of the
stream buffer zone rule. And Tennessee Governor Phil Bredesen also weighed in
with EPA, voicing concerns on behalf of his state.
“The
regions most affected by this rule, in the Appalachian Coal Belt, are some of
the poorest in the nation,” said Lane Boldman with the Sierra Club
Cumberland (Kentucky) Chapter. “And all they are asking for is some
fundamental protection of their waterways so that they can continue to fish and
swim downstream.”
In
October, a landmark nationwide poll on mountaintop removal mining found that
two out of three likely voters opposed the rule change. Upon hearing that
“more than 1,200 miles of streams in Appalachia already have been buried
or destroyed by mountaintop removal coal mining,” fully 85 percent of
voters said they were concerned about the effects of this mining practice.
The
practice of mountaintop removal mining has long been opposed by many residents
of Appalachia. The poll, the first to test voters’ views of this practice
nationwide, showed that voters in every region of the country are similarly
against mountaintop removal mining.
“We
are surely thankful the Bush administration will soon be gone. We are
hopeful that once Obama is president, he will ban mountaintop removal entirely,
and Bush's last minutes sneaky moves won't end up destroying even more of our
streams, and by extension, our mountains, our communities and our culture,”
said Vivian Stockman project coordinator for the Huntington, W.Va.-based Ohio
Valley Environmental Coalition.
Since
coal companies began the practice of mountaintop removal mining in earnest, the
topography of Appalachia has been forever altered: More than 400 mountaintops
have been stripped of trees and flattened, 1,200 miles of mountain streams
buried under rubble. Already the lush forests which once cloaked 387,000 acres
of the world’s most ancient mountain range have been replaced by apocalyptic
lunar landscapes. If industry is allowed to proceed at the current rate, an
area the size of Delaware will have been lost.
“With
this rule change, the outgoing Bush is poised to eliminate forever more of our
headwater streams - the very lifeblood of our mountains and the source of
healthy water resources that future generations will depend upon,”
said Cindy Rank, West Virginia Highlands Conservancy’s mining chair.
For
a memo detailing the survey findings, please visit:
For
more information on the poll methodology, please visit: