April 25, 1999
A stake in the future
Ralliers undercut mountaintop removal mining
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Even if coal companies were allowed to remove all the coal they wanted by blasting off the tops of mountains, the jobs they say would be saved would last just another 30 years, novelist Denise Giardina said at a rally Saturday at the state Capitol.

"Is it worth 30 years of a few more jobs? Is it worth 30 years of a few severance taxes? Is it worth 30 more years of dependence on coal?" she asked about 550 people in attendance.

The crowd grew steadily for about two hours. People gathered on the Capitol grounds between the governor's office and the mansion. Called the Mega-Rally for the Mountains, the event was in protest of mountaintop removal mining, in which the tops of mountains are cut away to reveal the coal inside.

"Thirty years from now, the generation now in college will be middle-aged. My generation will be in nursing homes. The young people now will look back on this time and they will curse our memory," Giardina said.

"They will curse our memory unless we get involved and change our process."

Elsewhere, supporters collected signatures on a petition to put Giardina on the ballot as a third-party candidate for governor.

When she finished speaking, there was a short chant of "Run, Denise, run."

Giardina said she is seriously thinking about running, but wouldn't be ready to make an announcement until May.

West Virginia should be making plans for an economy after coal, Giardina said. Twenty years ago she researched property values in McDowell County. The coal company owned a third of the surface land and a third of the mineral rights. But the company's property was valued so low that it paid just 16 cents an acre on a third of the county's land.

"And we wonder why that school system needs money?" she said.

Transplanted West Virginians came from Ohio, and fellow coal-mining activists came from Kentucky to speak at the rally. Some had pulled their gray hair into buns or ponytails. Younger ones pushed babies in strollers.

"Before I became an activist, I was a plain old grandma and mom," said Linda Brock, a member of Kentuckians for the Commonwealth. That was before mining ruined her family's well. "I was happy being that, but it's hard to live without water."

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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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