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June 14, 2008
Dems vote down mountaintop removal ban
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Delegates at the Democratic State Convention narrowly voted down a resolution Saturday that supported a freeze on new permits for mountaintop removal sites.

The final vote on the Healthy Jobs, Healthy Communities, and Healthy Mountains Resolution 215 to 190.

Daniel Chiotos, environmental caucus delegate for West Virginia Young Democrats, said the close vote is encouraging.

"This is obviously an issue that is gaining momentum," Chiotos said. "We're going to continue to work to push this through."

Nick Busch, a Wirt County delegate, said the vote doesn't reflect delegates' true feelings about the issue.

"You won't find a person here that supports mountaintop removal," said Busch, who voted against the resolution.

More than 56 percent of West Virginians are opposed to mountaintop removal, compared to just 29 percent that support it, according to a 2004 survey conducted by the polling firm Lake, Snell, Perry and Associates for the Appalachian Center for the Economy and the Environment.

Busch said it failed because delegates were concerned it would cost the party the presidential election. He said the Republican Party would say Democrats were trying to take jobs out of the state.

State party chairman Nick Casey said the issues brought up by the resolution are better addressed by the courts that the Party.

While the resolution would not become part of the party's official platform, it would have sent a clear signal to politicians in the state, Chiotos said.

The resolution supported deep mining other methods of strip mining; enforcement of current environmental regulations; increased investment in sources of renewable energy; and called for all Democratic legislators to work to protect safety standards and "bring good paying green jobs" to West Virginia.

In April, the West Virginia Young Democrats passed the same resolution. That group represents party members age 35 and under.

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Posted By: clean energy for the future (2:29pm 07-14-2008)
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I have witnessed the impacts of MTR. It is a short sighted economic choice. Massey and other coal burning companies propose otherwise.
I too have photos of impacted MTR streams, sludge impoundments and valley fills. There is nothing sustainable about this method of generating energy. Nothing beautiful or clean.

The good news is that the winds are blowing, this discussion is happening, lawmakers are growing more concerned with energy choices. Someday WV will have a new administration and the evolution toward energy efficiency, alternative energy and economic justice will prevail.

Posted By: scooby08 (9:13pm 06-17-2008)
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Mountaintop removal mining supports and feeds my family. I can prove thru pictures how much these enviromental groups such as OHVEC exaggerate and even lie about mountaintop removal. They say that streams are polluted. I have pictures taken this memorial day weekend below a surface mines (that recently was attacked by OHVEC and permit was challenged and men was layed off) that Mrs Gunnoe (OHVEC employee) said the water was contaminated and people could no longer enjoy the creek in Bim, WV---these pictures is of a family enjoying the creek, fishing in the waters at the bridge entering the property. The judge ruled in her favor because he said it ruined their quality of life. So false. People need to get educated on this issue. Coal is important for our future! We need to convert coal to liquid. Our state is sitting on a black gold mine. We can do this in a enviromental friendly way.

Posted By: LOL (3:46pm 06-17-2008)
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Attention Environmentalists (aka: Tree Huggers): Turn Off Your Computers, You Are Burning Coal!

Posted By: Miguel (2:38pm 06-17-2008)
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Anna --

Thirty or forty years? Alright, then maybe I will be around to see what happens when it runs out.

C'mon; don't take me so literally. Numbers are important, surely, but economic arguments are not to be substituted for issues of basic justice.

Yes, Virginia, global warming is real. The rest of the world WILL LEAVE WEST VIRGINIA BEHIND if we do not find new technologies to develop. Anna, you have the answer right in your response to me -- you're exactly right! I, too, can only imagine what technology and services will be available in WV -- technologies like cleantech, solar power, manufacturers, etc. Coal is the past; West Virginia legislators need to focus on lowering taxes and encouraging entrepreneurship and sustainable business in this state.

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