April 3, 2008
John McFerrin
Latest round in ongoing dispute: Gift card option irritates friends of coal industry
Page 2 of 2
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 OVEC's other tactic - the one that has the Coal Association and its publicity arm, the Friends of Coal, all riled up - is surprisingly conservative. They go to court to seek enforcement of environmental laws. In the instance that has the coal guys in an uproar, OVEC managed to persuade a federal judge to enforce the federal Clean Water Act. The result of the enforcement was a restriction on mountaintop removal mining.

While the coal guys characterize anyone who disagrees with them as a radical, the court system is inherently conservative. It enforces laws approved Congress. The Clean Water Act was passed during the Nixon administration by an overwhelming majority of the United States Congress. In the case of the coal industry, it is being enforced by a federal judge.

The federal courts are not the forum of choice of radicals. To get to be a federal judge, one has to be appointed by the president and confirmed by the U.S. Senate. It is a system designed to weed out lunatics. One doesn't get to be a federal judge without being acceptable to two branches of government and being more or less acceptable to the prevailing political system. The judge who decided the most recent mountaintop removal case, Robert Chambers, was nominated and approved without controversy.

 The Coal Association needs to lighten up. This is America. If you do something illegal, someone is going to call you on it. Someone is going to go to court to make you stop. If you do something that a lot of people find abhorrent, someone is going to criticize you. What the Ohio Valley Environmental Coalition does is not some aberration; that's the way things are supposed to work.

The Coal Association has more lawyers than Carter has little liver pills. If it doesn't like the result in court, it can appeal.

OVEC believes that mountaintop removal mining is harmful to our state. If the coal guys think otherwise, they can say that. They already have billboards everywhere. Within walking distance of my house there are two pro-coal billboards. They can buy some more of those TV commercials with the cutesy animated bug talking about how great mountaintop removal really is.

What they shouldn't do is attack their opponents and threaten boycotts of anyone who is remotely connected to its opponents. It's not just that such tactics are the province of those who know in their hearts that their position on the merits is untenable. Worse than that, it's un-American.

McFerrin, a Beckley lawyer, is a Gazette contributing columnist.

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