Since purchasing our WV property earlier this year, we’ve become aware of the destruction occuring in the Appalachian mountains due to mountaintop removal for the sake of mining coal.  Put a stop to this destruction and complete disregard to the Appalachian mountains, wildlife and people.  Sign this letter.  Its 2007, global warming is a fact.  We are in dire need to invest in alternatives to coal.  Tell the Bush administration you’re saying no to dirty coal!  Please. 

Below is an e-mail I received this morning from Co-op America.   Please read and take action.

 Co-op America’s plan to combat global warming calls for a moratorium on coal. Coal is the dirtiest of all fossil fuels — it creates more pollution than oil, natural gas and gasoline when burned.  As Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid said recently, “There’s not a coal-fired plant in America that’s clean.  They’re all dirty.”  If we’re going to get serious about fighting global warming, we need a complete halt to the coal industry.  Mountaintop removal mining flattens mountains, devastating communities and ecosystems in Appalachia.  A biologically diverse habitat is being destroyed, and the rich Appalachian culture it inspired is threatened.  It is a deadly lose-lose for climate change — accelerating coal burning and deforestation.

In the process of mountaintop removal mining:

  • forests are clear-cut to expose the tops of mountains, which are then blown off with explosives
  • coal is extracted using large machinery
  • unused soil and rock are dumped into adjacent stream valleys, filling them up and creating a flat landscape

Residents of Appalachia living near these mines are threatened by:

  • dangerous toxic sludge dams
  • dynamite blasts that damage homes and create clouds of rock dust from poorly regulated mine operations
  • poisoned or depleted well water and polluted streams
  • increased flooding
  • the loss of traditional fishing and hunting areas
  • breathing coal dust in their homes

Learn more about coal mining’s toxic hazards.

This destructive practice has been facilitated by the Bush administration’s disregard of a Reagan-era regulation, known as the “stream buffer zone rule.”  This rule prohibits any mining activities to take place within 100 feet of a stream unless it can be proven that water quality and quantity will not be adversely impacted.  According to the Office of Surface Mining, the Bush administration has blatantly disregarded this rule by approving the destruction of 535 miles of streams since taking office.  The administration is now proposing to repeal the steam buffer zone rule and give mountaintop removal mining companies a blank check to dump toxic waste and hundreds of millions of tons of mountain remains directly into steams.  You can help stop the destruction of Appalachia’s communities, mountains and streams by saying NO to King Coal.

Stop climate change. Stop King Coal. Stop mountaintop removal. Join Co-op America members nationwide and sign our letter on the proposed rule change to the Department of Interior’s Office of Surface Mining.

Thank you.