July 11, 2009
'Coal Country' debuts to large, but calm, crowd
Advertiser

CHARLESTON, W.Va. -- There were two sides to most everything at the world premiere of "Coal Country" at the West Virginia Cultural Center on Saturday night.

Eddie Morris, of Alum Creek, knew both well.

For the past five years, he's worked as a coal miner and he's the younger brother of "Coal Country" producer, Mari-Lynn Evans. She is also the producer of the public television series "The Appalachians."

A standing-room-only crowd attended the premiere without incident. People who represent sides of the issue of mountaintop-removal mining were well represented, though divided.

Evans commended those who helped her with the film, including former Secretary of State Ken Hechler, an opponent of the practice. At the mention of his name, many of the crowd applauded, but a small part of the audience reacted negatively. It was a tense moment, but there was no serious confrontation between the two sides of the issue of mountain top removal mining.

In the cultural center lobby, coal miners and their families talked among themselves on one side of the room and environmentalists and others on the other side.

Morris and his wife sat on one of the many wooden benches in the lobby, away from most of the crowd.

During production, he helped his sister along, but he never appears onscreen.

"I'm kind of looking forward to seeing how it goes," he said.

The documentary was originally set to screen at the South Charleston Museum, but after reports of security concerns, the theater was unwilling to host the film.

Evans said she was surprised to hear that people would protest the film. She didn't expect any sort of protest to happen Saturday night.

It didn't.

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Posted By: eastwood78 (10:47pm 07-14-2009)
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I did not mean to imply that MTR does not destroy people's houses and ruin the drinking water. I have been to some of these homes and have seen the waters that once ran so clear and was drinkable turn now to a dirty black infected toxic stream that is not fit for fish to survive in. I truly feel for these people, and my mother and father were forced to move from their home or as we like to call it "The Old Home Place." But the Old Home Place is gone with the wind. No matter how much we miss it, things will never again be the same at the Old Home Place. My Mother and Father have passed on, and hopefully are in a better place than the one they inhabited here on this earth. Did they hate the coal operator that caused them to leave their home? No they did not, nor did they have any hate toward the MTR miners and underground coal miners that went by their new home everyday and night to work at these coal sites. May we abide by God's word, and love thy neighbor as God loves us.

Posted By: sodbuster (9:50pm 07-14-2009)
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Well I can understand if someone has a good paying job and maybe they could rationalize and convince themselves it was ok to pollute the creek and kill the fish or pollute the air and maybe cause a little asthma.

But when you blast someone's house off the foundation or ruin their well that is not right and I think they know it.

Posted By: eastwood78 (8:58pm 07-14-2009)
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In the great Civil War it was the North against the South. It was brother against brother, and families against families. Let me remind everyone that this was in the United States. Many Americans lost their lives on both sides in this great Civil War. But, eventually they were United again as one Nation, under God with liberty and justice for all. Yet, even today there are die hards Northern and Southern people that still hate each other. I have read all the comments, and it reminds me of that great war. The PRO-MTR people and the ANTI-MTR people seem to be throwing barbs at one another with each comment I read. I would love to read a comment where the PRO and CON could get together and say nice things about each other. All I read in these comments is Massey did this, Massey did that. MTR has destroyed my home, the water is not drinkable. I know that there is some truth to what both sides say in these comments. Please try to speak nice about each other. God bless you all.

Posted By: viewer (5:31pm 07-14-2009)
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The comment made by Mustang has to be coming from someone not from the southern coalfields. You are right. It is about MONEY. And, to me, it has nothing to do with GREEN. I am not a person who wants to live primitive and back to nature. I am all for progress. I enjoy my electricity, computers, phones and automobiles. What you are wrong about is we CHOOSE to live in an area plagued by floods and coal mining. I do NOT choose to live like that. I now live like that thru no choice of my own. I did NOT ask for MTR to take place out my window. I do NOT want a bailout from the federal government. I was here long before MTR came to this area without any approval from the residents. I used to have a 100 ft water well with good water until the blasting ruined it. Do you think I got one penny for my ruined well?? Try to prove a company ruined your well?? Impossible. I know coal is the lifeblood of WV and I support coal mining but I do NOT support MTR if you call that mining.

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