West Virginia residents have spent years battling the loss of Coal
River Mountain to mountaintop removal mining. At
the end of October, Massey Energy began
dynamiting
at the site. Opponents of the mountain’s destruction say the
Environmental Protection Agency has the full
authority
and legal and moral obligation under the Clean Water Act to preserve
the
ecosystem
and clean waters of the mountain, the last untouched peak in Coal River
Valley. When asked for comment by Hill Heat,
EPA spokesman Brendan Gilfillan responded:
EPA is closely examining the company’s
compliance with all legal requirements.
As the EPA conducts its legal investigation,
the blasting continues.
Last Thursday, Don Blankenship, CEO of Massey
Energy, the fourth largest United States coal company, described his
critics as “communists,” “atheists,” and “greeniacs.” In an address
before the Tug Valley Mining Institute in Williamson, WV, Blankenship
said those who criticize him are “our
enemies”
like Osama bin Laden:
It is as great a pleasure for me to be criticized by the communists
and the atheists of the Charleston Gazette as to be applauded by my
best friends. Because I know they are wrong. People are cowering away
from being criticized by people that are our enemies. Would we be
upset if Osama bin Laden was critical of us?
These are actually mild words for Don Blankenship. This spring,
Blankenship was caught on tape threatening to
shoot
an ABC reporter and then assaulting
him:
The Charleston Gazette’s coverage of Don Blankenship has included these
controversial stories:
The Fatal Aracoma Mine Fire.
In the months before the fatal 2006 fire at the Aracoma mine, which
had 25 violations of health and safety laws, Blankenship personally
waived company policy and told mine managers to ignore rules and “run
coal.”
Political Corruption.
Blankenship has spent millions of dollars to influence West Virginia
judgeships and state legislative races, and palled around in Monte
Carlo with state Supreme Court Chief Justice Elliott “Spike” Maynard
and their “female friends” in July 2006. The state court reversed a
$77 million verdict against
Massey in 2008.
Mountaintop
Removal.
Massey Energy is the king of the incredibly destructive practice of
mountaintop removal mining. The Bush Administration (which includes
former Massey officials) overturned Clinton-era rules limiting the
practice. Massey now plans to destroy Coal River
Mountain despite lacking
necessary permits.
How many times have the people in this room heard, at the US Chamber
of Commerce or at the National Mining Association, “I don’t believe in
climate change, but I’m afraid to say that because it is a political
reality”? The greeniacs are taking over the world.