News
July 1, 2008
Mountaintop removal mining appeal scheduled for Sept. 23

Arguments in the latest mountaintop removal court appeal have been scheduled for late September.

The 4th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in Richmond, Va., set the oral argument for Sept. 23, a court docket showed Monday.

Coal industry lawyers and the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers are appealing two related rulings by U.S. District Judge Robert C. Chambers to curb mountaintop removal.

Argument had been scheduled for May, but was delayed because of an unspecified "scheduling issue" by the appeals court.

In a March 23, 2007, ruling, Chambers concluded that the corps had not fully evaluated the potential environmental damage before approving four Massey Energy strip-mining permits. Citing the "alarming cumulative stream loss" to valley fills, Chambers ruled that the corps needed more to more thoughtfully consider a mine's potential impacts before granting a permit.

"Coal mining has long been part of the fabric of Appalachian life, providing jobs to support workers and their families and energy to fuel the nation," Chambers wrote.

"Unfortunately, coal mining also extracts a toll on the natural environment. In particular, the mining technique at issue in these permits potentially results in dramatic environmental consequences."

In a second ruling on June 13, Chambers concluded that the Clean Water Act does not allow coal operators to build in-stream sediment ponds at the bottom of valley fills.

Coal industry lawyers argue in their appeal that Chambers' ruling "cripples West Virginia's coal production" and that new permits have "slowed to a standstill" in the state's southern coalfields.

Federal government lawyers argue that the corps properly studied mining's impacts and that Chambers should have deferred to the agency.

Gov. Joe Manchin joined in the appeal, with two of his agencies filing "friend of the court" briefs at the 4th Circuit.

This is the fourth major mountaintop removal ruling by a federal judge in West Virginia to go before the Richmond, Va.-based appeals court. Appeals court panels have overturned the three previous rulings that required tougher regulation of mining.

Reach Ken Ward Jr. at kw...@wvgazette.com or 348-1702.

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Posted By: Beenthere (10:13am 07-01-2008)
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Watcher: In addition to all of the very correct comments by wvhellbilly, I can name several things as they apply directly to your comments. In Pittsburgh WalMart was recently forced to abandon attempts to build a new store because their digging caused landslides. Construction of I-99 through central PA was delayed while crews worked to correct and repair damages from pollution caused by their digging into acid bearing rock. Two major national homebuilders were just fined millions of dollars for violations of laws such as the Clean Water Act and the problems which resulted. I have lived in coal territory my entire life and am yet to see a "reclaimed" area which even remotely resembles the vibrant ecosystem which was destroyed by the mining.

Posted By: wvhellbilly (9:44am 07-01-2008)
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Get a clue Watcher. Mountaintop removal does a number of terrible things to the environment, community and economy. MTR mining not only chops off HUNDREDS of feet of mountaintop but it then dumps that overburden into adjacent valleys. This creates problems with selenium for the entire ecosystem downstream (ie Mud River)and sludge ponds that can break.

MTR blasting is so incessant and devestating that it cracks people's wells and poisons underground water supplies in local communities. Once the mountain is gone so are the temporary jobs but the community never recovers.

MTR mines pay less than deep mining, need less workers than other forms of mining and damage the acsetic beauty of an area so that potential tourism can never happen.

The list of negatives goes on and on so don't sit there and tell me MTR is good for the state because it is not and we will realize that when we try to explain why the mountains are gone to our grandkids.

Posted By: watcher (8:29am 07-01-2008)
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Take a look around people. If you are going to fight mountaintop removal how about fighting everybody doing it instead of just targeting the coal mines? Walmart takes off a mountain every time they put in a new store. The road construction companies rip through multple mountains at a time. New subdivisions,housing projects,strip mall etc. all move the earth. At least the mines do have reclaimation projects and don't just cover it with cement.

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