West Virginia Politicians Vow To Fight Dirty On Coal, While EPA Enforces Laws To Protect Appalachian Residents

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Dirty coal and climate denial are hot topics in West Virginia right now. ย Last week, acting Governor Earl Ray Tomblin (D-WV) delivered West Virginiaโ€™s State of the State address where he gave a spirited defence of โ€œcarbon friendlyโ€ coal. ย Then the very next day the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) stole the spotlight by vetoing what would have been the largest mountaintop removal project in theย state.

Tomblin, who replaces former Governor and newly minted Senator Joe Manchin (D-WV), emphasized his support for the expanded use of coal as a vital part of the nationโ€™s energy mix. ย He also vowed to aggressively pursue West Virginiaโ€™s lawsuit against EPA until a more โ€œsensibleโ€ approach can be found to regulate coalโ€™s global warming emissions.

Governor Tomblinโ€™s comments do not break new ground and will tie West Virginia to coal despite the fact that the industry negatively impacts the stateโ€™s economy. ย His counterparts Senators Jay Rockefeller (D-WV) and the aforementioned Joe Manchin are already well known for frequently overlooking the negative impacts of coal.

This trio will lead West Virginiaโ€™s politicized effort to oppose EPA action to address coalโ€™s huge pollution problems. ย Sen. Rockefeller has already declared plans to reintroduce his bill to block EPAโ€™s effort to limit global warming emissions from power plants and other stationary sources for two years. ย And in the wake of the Arizona tragedy, who can forget the grim spectacle of Joe Manchinโ€™s โ€œDead Aimโ€ attack ad in which he fired a rifle at (already dead) climate legislation.

Unfortunately for Governor Tomblin, less than 24 hours after his speech touting the myth of โ€œcarbon friendlyโ€ coal, he faced an early challenge from an EPA espousing commonsense.

Reserved for only exceptional cases and used just 13 times since 1972, the EPA exercised its authority under Section 404(c) of the Clean Water Act and issued a 99-page decision to halt the proposed disposal of coal mining waste into streams at Arch Coalโ€™s non-union Mingo-Logan Coal Companyโ€™s Spruce No. 1 coal mine. ย The operation has been under review for more than a decade and has included an extensive scientific and environmental study, a major public hearing, and some 50,000 public comments. ย In its final determination, the EPA ruled that not enough was being done to avoid anticipated environmental, water quality, and wildlife impacts from the dumping of waste rock and dirt into Pigeonroost Branch, Oldhouse Branch and their tributaries.

After more than a year of discussions failed to produce an agreement to protect Appalachian communities, the EPA overturned approval for the 2,300-acre mountaintop removal project, originally granted by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers inย 2007.

According to EPA Assistant Administrator Water Peter S.ย Silva:

โ€œThe proposed Spruce No. 1 Mine would use destructive and unsustainable mining practices that jeopardize the health of Appalachian communities and clean water on which theyย depend.โ€

โ€œCoal and coal mining are part of our nationโ€™s energy future and EPA has worked with companies to design mining operations that adequately protect our nationโ€™s waters. ย We have a responsibility under the law to protect water quality and safeguard the people who rely on cleanย water.โ€

Halting this major mountaintop removal mining project was hailed by conservationists and environmentalists, including Sierra Club Environmental Quality Program Director Edย Hopkins:

โ€œIn sharp contrast to the previous administrationโ€™s policies on mountaintop removal coal mining, EPA Administrator Lisa Jackson is showing a strong commitment to the law, the science and the principles of environmental justice.โ€

โ€œShe deserves enormous credit for changing policies to protect Appalachiaโ€™s health, land andย water.โ€

Not surprisingly, the move was assailed by the โ€œfree marketโ€ Competitive Enterprise Institute as job killing, and the stateโ€™s political class was โ€œdeeply angeredโ€ vowing โ€œthe fight is not overโ€ and that the EPA decision would be overturned in court. ย Senator Rockefeller also vented his frustration in a letter to President Obama about the EPAโ€™sย decision:

โ€œI am writing to express my outrage with the Environmental Protection Agencyโ€™s (EPA) decision to veto a rigorously reviewed and lawfully issued permit at the Spruce Number 1 Mine in Logan County, West Virginia.โ€

โ€œThis action not only affects this specific permit, but needlessly throws other permits into a sea of uncertainty at a time of great economicย distress.โ€

Sometimes government is accused of moving too slowly. ย On this, I am not so sure. ย You have a Senator who has already written a letter, and not to be outdone, a Governor who countered the EPA decision with the announcement of a Rally For Coal:

โ€œOur coal industry provides jobs for our men and women, money for our childrenโ€™s education, and energy for our countryโ€™s growing appetite for electricity,โ€ Gov. Tomblin said. ย โ€œWe must stand up and show federal regulators that we will not retreat from their unfair actions. ย We will continue the fight not just for the Spruce Number One mine but for every coal miner, coal company and for our way ofย life.โ€

The tough talk by West Virginiaโ€™s coal-addicted politicians echoes the tone of many of the new Republican leaders in Congress, including Fred Upton (R-MI), the new Chair of the House Energy and Commerce Committee with jurisdiction over the Clean Air Act, and Mike Simpson (R-ID), the new Chair of the EPAโ€™s appropriations subcommittee. ย But the EPA is not about to back down from a critical fight to protect the health of Appalachian residents, who have heard enough of the coal industryโ€™s lies fromย politicians.

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