February 28, 2013
March 1, 2013: WVU sports; broadband; Morrisey; library
Page 2 of 2
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Morrisey dishonest in rhetoric on the EPA

Editor:

Some West Virginia leaders appear to have slightly backed off on the divisive "War on Coal" or anti-EPA rhetoric, but the new attorney general, Patrick Morrisey, has continued with the dishonest claims perpetuating divisiveness. He falsely claims in a recent stern letter to President Obama that workers were laid off because of Environmental Protection Agency permit delays.

The Feb. 11 letter signed by Morrisey asks for the nomination of a new EPA administrator more sympathetic to the coal industry.

His only example that actually alleges any real harm on West Virginians has a serious factual flaw. Morrisey sources a news release from Rockefeller, Manchin, Rahall and Tomblin, issued a week before the election, bashing the EPA, stating, "After the EPA delayed issuing a needed 402 permit, Consol issued a WARN Notice tonight notifying [145] workers that they would be laid off."

Morrisey falsely claimed in his appeal to Obama that 150 coal miners were laid off because of this EPA permit delay; however, Consol Energy stated in its annual report filed with the SEC on Feb. 7 "Consol Energy was able, in this instance, to redeploy these [145] employees to work at another adjacent coal mine property for which a permit was already issued."

Rob Goodwin

Charleston

 

Library not 'parasitic,' BOE President Thaw

Editor:

Regarding your article of Feb. 22 ("Supreme Court Upholds Kanawha Library Funding Decision"), I was quite dismayed by the comments of Pete Thaw, the Board of Education president, describing the library's relationship with the board as "parasitic."

If Mr. Thaw does not recognize the library's role in educating the schoolchildren of Kanawha County, perhaps the Board of Education can volunteer to assist students with science fair experiments, social studies projects, homework hours, computer classes and term paper research. (It's not all story time, Mr. Thaw).

Resources are scarce, but libraries are known for making every penny count. Unfortunately, the same cannot be said for our educational system. Mr. Thaw clearly has no idea the extent to which libraries foster critical-thinking skills and create a culture of learning.

It's a small price to pay, which returns great dividends for our communities.

Mr. Thaw's comments reflect yet another school official with a "teach to the test" mentality, but Kanawha County students deserve more.

Virginia D. Kline

Keyser

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