May 21, 1998
Underwood forms mountaintop removal task force
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In the last two years, citizens have complained more about mountaintop removal mining. Their complaints have drawn widespread media converage, including investigations by U.S. News and World Report magazine and ABC's Nightline. The issue also got front-page treatment two weeks ago in The New York Times.

Asked last year about the issue, Underwood said he had never read the U.S. News article and thought mountaintop removal was good because it provided flat land.

In early April, Underwood ignored the recommendations of his own environmental regulators and signed into law a bill that makes it easier for coal companies to dump mountaintop removal mine waste into streams.

The Wednesday task force announcement was made the same day Underwood testified in defense of the coal industry at a congressional hearing on the global climate treaty.

In his statement on the task force, Underwood also emphasized the coal industry's economic importance to the state.

"Given the employment and energy implications associated with this issue, we must fully examine the facts and determine the best course of action for the people of our state," he said.

"I believe we must balance the economic opportunities that coal mining provides today and the long-term economic future of the areas in which the mining occurs," he said.

Underwood press secretary Rod Blackstone said a big part of the task force's work will be to examine how land is used after mountaintop removal is finished.

A Gazette investigation found that most mountaintop removal mines in the state were not required to get a variance and show how they will develop land once it is flattened by mining.

"If there are opportunities for flat land and development after mountaintop removal, we need to make the most of those opportunities," Blackstone said. "We could do a better job of some strategic planning with regard to the future use of reclaimed land."

Blackstone said the task force will have between 11 and 15 members. Those members have not been named yet, he said. The governor said he will ask the group to report back to him by Dec. 1.

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In West Virginia, mining companies are literally moving mountains to uncover valuable, low sulfur coal reserves. Mountaintop removal has become the dominant form of surface mining in the state. Coal operators are blasting off hilltops, and dumping leftover rock and dirt into nearby valleys. An untold amount of the state has been flattened, and hundreds of miles of streams have been buried. Find out more in this Special Report.
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