ilovemountains.org has teamed up with Ashley Judd and The Alliance for Appalachia to get mountaintop removal into America’s living rooms.

We’ve created a powerful new ad uses the most talked about ad in America’s history – President Johnson’s “Daisy Girl” – to convey the severity of mountaintop removal.

We don’t have the coal industry’s billions. But we do have the power of people like you! We need people to watch thead, share the ad, and then help raise money so that we can raise the stakes! Can you help publicize this powerful ad and fundraising effort? The widget above has everything you need to share this important effort on Facebook, Twitter – you name it.

We also need you to donate. Millions of people could learn about mountaintop removal through this effort – with the help of a few – or a few hundred – dollars from people like you.

And DC folks – mark your calendars! Ashley Judd – a Kentucky girl – is a long-time activist who has partnered with the KFTC and Natural Resources Defense Council and other allies to raise national awareness and inspire others to join the fight to end mountaintop removal.  We’re so pleased that NRDC has arranged for her to speak about her efforts at a National Press Club luncheon on June 9 – including her work on this commercial.  The luncheon begins at 12:30 p.m.  Please join us.  Reserve tickets at (202) 662-7501 orreservations@press.org.

Over 50 grassroots activists were able to attend the amazing Music Saves Mountains concert at the Ryman Auditorium – hosted by Natural Resources Defense Council. Read NRDC’s Rob Perks’ update on the concert here.

Artists sung classic songs from coal country – highlighting the history of coal in Appalachia and celebrating the fact that the Appalachians are the birthplace of some of America’s greatest music. It was an exhilarating honor to be among so many incredibly talented stars and heroes – both on stage and in the audience. The concert was followed the next night by showings of the powerful films Deep Down and Coal Country.

The concert featured Dave Matthews and Emmylou Harris, along with special guests Patty Griffin, Buddy Miller, Patty Loveless, Kathy Mattea, Alison Krauss, Big Kenny and more. It also featured debut clips of the forthcoming film The Coal War and clips from the film Deep Down.

From the Music Saves Mountains Website:

NRDC owes tremendous thanks to these performers for standing up for our beloved Appalachian Mountains and we look forward to their continued efforts to spread awareness of this issue as we seek to bring an end to the world’s worst coal mining!

And The Alliance for Appalachia and all our friends and allies owe NRDC and all the musicians, technicians, promoters, artists, and activists a thanks for all their time, energy and talent that made the Music Saves Mountains such an amazing success.

The concert was a moment to celebrate the powerful movement that so many thousands across Appalachia and across the United States have created – and to celebrate the beautiful mountains and heritage we’re fighting to protect.

from www.kftc.org

Today the National Trust for Historic Preservation named Black Mountain and the surrounding communities of Benham and Lynch one of the 11 Most Endangered Historic Places in America for 2010.

Located in Harlan County, Black Mountain is the highest peak in Kentucky and has an ecological diversity greater than virtually any other section of the U.S. At the base of Black Mountain are Benham and Lynch, two small towns established by the coal industry nearly 100 years ago.11 Most logo

Proud of their coal heritage, now Benham and Lynch are looking to create a future beyond coal. But proposed strip, auger and deep mining threaten Black Mountain, the local water supply, historic buildings, the quality of life, and the potential for new economic development.

To read more about efforts to protect Black Mountain and to get involved, click here.

From www.ran.org

Just in time for JPMorgan’s annual shareholder meeting, which is happening in NY tomorrow, the lead U.S. financier of mountaintop removal (MTR) coal mining released its first public statementon MTR financing. This just after RAN, the Sierra Club and BankTrack gave JPMorgan an ‘F’ in our recent MTR report card for its lead role in financing the devastating practice of blowing up the Appalachian Mountains and contaminating drinking for a tiny amount of coal.

We’re not popping the champagne over this one yet, but it’s definitely a solid step in the right direction. RAN has been campaigning for over a year to get JPMorgan to stop financing companies who practice MTR, and this is the bank’s first public step forward. To be specific, for the first time JPMorgan has included in its Corporate Responsibility report a statement on its “enhanced review” process for doing business with companies engaged in mountaintop removal.

One major point of interest is that JPMorgan is saying it did no financing for any company with “significant” MTR operations in 2009. What does that mean? Well, comparing its 2008 clients to 2009 and 2010, there’s an obvious exception: Massey Energy, the leading MTR company in the country which is currently facing criminal charges for last month’s fatal mine explosion. We’d like to think the removal of Massey Energy from the bank’s portfolio is an intentional part of the new enhanced review process, but JPMorgan won’t confirm that.

From www.iLoveMountains.org:

Two new studies from Appalachian Voices and the Natural Resources Defense Council (NRDC) that combine to debunk one of Big Coal’s biggest lies about mountaintop removal coal mining.

Click this link to view the Reclamation FAIL map:
http://www.ilovemountains.org/Reclamation-Fail

Coal companies like to tout reclamation as a solution to their mining destruction. According to Big Coal, after a mountain has been destroyed by mountaintop removal coal mining, the post-mined land is “reclaimed” for “beneficial” industrial, commercial, residential or public use. They also claim that more flat land is needed to encourage economic growth.

But the Reclamation FAIL reports reveal that Big Coal’s claims are a big, flat lie.

To date, some 500 peaks – encompassing roughly 1.2 million acres – have been leveled throughout Kentucky, West Virginia, Virginia, and Tennessee. NRDC’s survey focused on 410 of those mine sites (excluding 90 active mines). What did they find? Despite Big Coal’s rhetoric, 90% of post-mined sites remain unreclaimed.

We need your help to get the word out on this important report — and to debunk the myth of mining “wrecklamation.” Please, take a moment to read the report, and spread the word.

Click here to read the studies.

Desks and playground equipment, covered with a thin film of chemical-laden coal dust, sit just 225 feet from a coal silo. Overhead looms the Massey Energy Shumate impoundment, an embankment holding back 2.8 billion gallons of toxic liquid coal waste. Welcome to Marsh Fork Elementary School.

Ed Wiley’s granddaughter, Kayla, attended this school nestled in the Coal River Valley near Sundial, W.Va. Kayla inspired Wiley’s campaign, Pennies of Promise, to raise the $8.6 million needed to build the children a new school in a safe location.

Today, that mission is a success. Gov. Joe Manchin held a press conference on Friday to announce that Massey Energy and the Raleigh County School Board would supply the final $1.5 million needed to complete the necessary funding for a new school, matching a $2.5 million grant by the Annenberg Foundation announced on Thursday. Add this to the $10,400 raised by Pennies of Promise, $1 million from the Raleigh School Board, the $1 million promised by Massey energy, and the $2.6 million granted by the School Building Authority.

“The whole movement made this happen, the communities, all the kids collecting pennies across the country,” said local resident Judy Bonds. “This is a victory for everyone.”

Read more at www.appvoices.org

From www.kftc.org

By KFTC Member Martin Mudd

For the last five years I have been aware of the abomination that is Mountaintop Removal mining, thanks to KFTC. I have attended rallies in Frankfort, lobbied politicians, sent letters. It was only last year, however, that I first participated in an act of non-violent civil disobedience to protest Massey Energy’s crimes against the residents of the coalfields. I was inspired to do so while participating in the 2009 Mountain Justice Summer training camp, where I heard the passionate stories of people fighting MTR right in their backyards. Their stories moved me, and I knew that I had to do something more than just send another letter to Frankfort.Mountain Justice Camp

I want to invite all members of KFTC to join me at Mountain Justice Summer 2010. Come hear the stories of MTR, the history of resistance to strip mining; see the devastating ecological and human impacts caused by surface mining in Appalachia. Come learn techniques of resistance, how to organize in the coalfields and elsewhere, how to heal broken land and help build sustainable economies and communities. Come celebrate Appalachian culture in words, music, art and dance. Come join author and KFTC member Wendell Berry in a conversation about what it’s going to take to stop the destruction of our mountains.

Mountain Justice is a group of people across the country that demand the abolition of MTR and steep-slope strip mining of coal. We work to protect the cultural and natural heritage of the Appalachian coal fields. We work to contribute with grassroots organizing, public education, nonviolent civil disobedience and other forms of citizen action.

The camp will be at Wiley’s Last Resort in Letcher County from May 27-June 6. All ages are welcome. Come when you can, leave when you must. Register now atwww.mountainjustice.org

I’ll see you there!

PNC, JPMorgan Chase and UBS Receive Failing Grades
From The Rainforest Action Network: www.ran.org/reportcard

A new report card issued today by Rainforest Action Network, the Sierra Club and BankTrack ranks nine of the world’s largest banks on their financing of dangerous mountaintop removal (MTR) coal mining projects as well as their lending policies. PNC, JPMorgan Chase and UBS received failing grades as the lead financiers of companies practicing MTR.

A copy of the report card, which reviews the financing practices of Bank of America, Citi, Credit Suisse, Wells Fargo, JPMorgan Chase, Morgan Stanley, GE Capital, PNC and UBS, can be found at www.ran.org/reportcard. Since January 2008, the report card found that these nine banks have provided more than $3.9 billion in loans and bonds to companies practicing mountaintop removal coal mining, including Massey Energy and Arch Coal.

“The idea of corporate responsibility has come up repeatedly in recent weeks following the coal mine and oil disasters. That responsibility extends beyond profits to the health and wellbeing of our communities. By continuing to finance mountaintop removal coal mining these banks are throwing that responsibility aside,” said Mark Kresowik of the Sierra Club.

PNC, which finances almost half of all mountaintop removal coal mining, ranked worst of the worst. The bank earned an “F” for its total failure to take environmental risks into account in its lending practices. Also earning an “F” were UBS and JPMorgan Chase, which respectively finance about one-third of all the MTR coal mined in Appalachia, and GE Capital, which backs about one-quarter of all operations.

“PNC, JPMorgan Chase and UBS received failing grades today as the lead financiers of mountaintop removal, the devastating practice of blowing up our mountains for an insignificant amount of dirty coal,” said Amanda Starbuck of Rainforest Action Network. “When it comes to protecting America’s mountains and clean drinking water, we don’t grade on a curve. When banks stop funding mountaintop removal they will move to the head of the class.”

RAN and Sierra Club disclosed the findings of this report card to each of the nine analyzed banks and offered them the opportunity to improve their grade with further information or changes to banking policies. In response to initial report card findings, Morgan Stanley released a public MTR policy that moved them from a failing grade to a C grade. JPMorgan Chase, despite a yearlong pressure campaign and their upcoming Annual General Shareholder meeting, has yet to make changes to their MTR financing.

Credit Suisse topped the list, earning an “A-” for their efforts to promote responsible mining practices. Credit Suisse has confirmed that they do not finance the extraction of coal in a mountain top removal setting.

The report card calls for the nine banks reviewed to strengthen their policies and cease their financial support for MTR. The ‘best practice’ recommended in the report card is a clear exclusion policy on commercial lending and investment banking services for all coal companies who practice mountaintop removal coal extraction.

Mountaintop removal mining is a devastating form of mining where companies blow the tops off mountains to reach a thin seam of coal and then dump the waste rock into valleys below. This destructive practice has buried nearly 2,000 miles of streams and threatens to destroy 1.4 million acres of land by 2020. The mining destroys Appalachian communities, the health of coalfield residents and any hope for positive economic growth.

Members of The Alliance for Appalachia and many other working for social, economic and environmental justice in Central Appalachia were thrilled to see these powerful words come from Senator Byrd today.

We whole-heartedly agree with the Senator that:

“The old chestnut that “coal is West Virginia’s greatest natural resource” deserves revision. I believe that our people are West Virginia’s most valuable resource. We must demand to be treated as such.”

Below is the statement in full

For Immediate Release: Wednesday, May 5, 2010

“Our Greatest Resource”

U.S. Senator Robert C. Byrd, D-W.Va.

The recent explosion at the Upper Big Branch coal mine in my home county of Raleigh, which killed 29 West Virginians and injured 2 others, has brought West Virginia statewide sorrow and worldwide attention.

Reflecting on President John F. Kennedy’s death, Robert F. Kennedy once said, “Tragedy is a tool for the living to gain wisdom.”

As we seek to understand how and why the Upper Big Branch disaster occurred, we might also re-examine conventional wisdom about the future of the coal industry in our state.

Americans depend mightily on our coal to meet their energy needs. Coal is the major source of electricity in 32 states, and produces roughly half of all the electricity consumed in the United States.

As West Virginians, our birthright is coal. The ancient fossil is abundant here, and is as emblematic of our heritage and cultural identity as the black bear, the cardinal, and the rhododendron.

Indeed, the coal severance tax codifies the philosophy that the coal belongs to all West Virginians, and that they deserve meaningful compensation for its extraction. This philosophy has also been embraced nationwide, through the Black Lung Excise Tax, the Abandoned Mine Reclamation Fee, and several other existing and proposed programs that provide additional compensation to the people and places that produce our coal, oil, gas, and other energy resources.

Coal brings much needed jobs and revenue to our economy. But the industry has a larger footprint, including inherent responsibilities that must be acknowledged by the industry.

First and foremost, the coal industry must respect the miner and his family. A single miner’s life is certainly worth the expense and effort required to enhance safety. West Virginia has some of the highest quality coal in the world, and mining it should be considered a privilege, not a right. Any company that establishes a pattern of negligence resulting in injuries and death should be replaced by a company that conducts business more responsibly. No doubt many energy companies are keen for a chance to produce West Virginia coal.

The industry of coal must also respect the land that yields the coal, as well as the people who live on the land. If the process of mining destroys nearby wells and foundations, if blasting and digging and relocating streams unearths harmful elements and releases them into the environment causing illness and death, that process should be halted and the resulting hazards to the community abated.

The sovereignty of West Virginia must also be respected. The monolithic power of industry should never dominate our politics to the detriment of local communities. Our coal mining communities do not have to be marked by a lack of economic diversity and development that can potentially squelch the voice of the people. People living in coal communities deserve to have a free hand in managing their own local affairs and public policies without undue political pressure to submit to the desires of industry.

We have coal companies in West Virginia which go out of their way to operate safely and with minimal impact on our environment. Those companies should be commended and rewarded.

But the coal industry has an immensely powerful lobby in Washington and in Charleston. For nearly a hundred years they have come to our presidents, our members of Congress, our legislators, our mayors, and our county commissioners to demand their priorities. It is only right that the people of West Virginia speak up and make the coal industry understand what is expected of it in return.

The old chestnut that “coal is West Virginia’s greatest natural resource” deserves revision. I believe that our people are West Virginia’s most valuable resource. We must demand to be treated as such.

Supporting Mine Safety

Our friends at ILoveMountains.org are collecting signatures for a letter to West Virginia Congressman Nick Rahall to show support for his strong stance on mine safety. Lorelei Scarbro, whose husband died of black lung and who has relatives working at Upper Big Branch Mine, will hand-deliver the letter to Congressman Rahall.

Here’s an excerpt from the letter:

Our nation’s miners, who courageously go to work each day knowing that they are putting their lives in danger, deserve the strongest protections the law can provide. …

As hearings and legislation to strengthen mine safety laws move forward in Congress, we will stand behind your efforts to protect miners and hold irresponsible mining companies accountable. We furthermore urge you to take a broad view in providing safety and security for everyone in the communities where coal is mined.

To read more about this effort and sign on to the letter, click here.

« Newer Posts - Older Posts »