Get Our RSS Feed!
Front Porch Blog


Breaking: New Study Links Mountaintop Removal to 60,000 Additional Cancer Cases


Wednesday, July 27th, 2011 | Posted by Jeff Deal



by Jeff Biggers, cross posted from Alternet.org
Among the 1.2 million American citizens living in mountaintop removal mining counties in central Appalachia, an additional 60,000 cases of cancer are directly linked to the federally sanctioned strip-mining practice.

That is the damning conclusion in a breakthrough study, released last night in the peer-reviewed Journal of Community Health: The Publication for Health Promotion and Disease Prevention. Led by West Virginia University researcher Dr. Michael Hendryx, among others, the study entitled “Self-Reported Cancer Rates in Two Rural Areas of West Virginia with and Without Mountaintop Coal Mining” drew from a groundbreaking community-based participatory research survey conducted in Boone County, West Virginia in the spring of 2011, which gathered person-level health data from communities directly impacted by mountaintop mining, and compared to communities without mining.

“A door to door survey of 769 adults found that the cancer rate was twice as high in a community exposed to mountaintop removal mining compared to a non-mining control community,” said Hendryx, Associate Professor at the Department of Community Medicine and Director of West Virginia Rural Health Research Center at West Virginia University. “This significantly higher risk was found after control for age, sex, smoking, occupational exposure and family cancer history. The study adds to the growing evidence that mountaintop mining environments are harmful to human health.”

Bottom line: Far from simply being an environmental issue, mountaintop removal is killing American residents.

Read the entire article on Alternet.org

Rahall: Protecting Appalachians Is Harming National Security


Thursday, September 23rd, 2010 | Posted by JW Randolph



A set of so-called “pro-coal” Representatives have introduced HR 6113 to prove that they care more about Don Blankenship’s approval than their constituents’ health. This bill asserts that Obama’s EPA threatens national security.

Continuing their march to ignore evidence, make stuff up, and push for an entirely rampant and unregulated coal industry, coal-bound legislators have introduced what they are calling the “Electric Reliability Protection Act” (HR 6113). If signed into law, this bill would defund EPA’s efforts to protect Appalachian citizens from the toxic valleyfills associated with mountaintop removal. In addition, the Representatives assert that the Obama Administration’s very attempt to protect citizens from toxic drinking water is indeed a threat to national security, which we’ll go into below. This is an election season bill that has little chance of passage. However, stunts like this allow Congressmen like Nick Rahall to prove that he needs Don Blankenship’s support more than he needs his constituents to have clean water, a decent job, or an average lifespan. This legislation is as cowardly as it is nihilistic, and just as irresponsible.

Of course, one of Senator Byrd’s final messages was that a majority of Congress opposes mountaintop removal, and it certainly shows in the lack of support for HR 6113. While a good bill like the Clean Water Protection Act (HR 1310) has 172 bipartisan cosponsors, HR 6113 has just 15, nearly all of them with some vested interest in the coal industry.

The lead sponsor, Congressman Hal Rogers (KY-05), has more mountaintop removal in his district than any other in the United States. More than 60% of mountaintop removal has been inflicted right there in eastern Kentucky, and Mr. Rogers wouldn’t have it any other way. Despite his staunch allegiance to letting the coal industry rampage through his district, KY-05 has the 7th highest poverty rate in the nation. In fact, 37.3% of the children in Mr. Rogers’ district live below the poverty line. This is all too common for the children of Appalachian communities left impoverished by (among other things) mountaintop removal mining and lack of economic diversification. Communities in Appalachia that are not relying on mountaintop removal do much better economically. In beautiful western North Carolina’s 5th district (home of Appalachian Voices’ HQ), the topography is similar to eastern Kentucky, but the poverty rate is half that of Rogers’ devastated district.

Congressmen Rogers’ and Rahall’s districts are #1 and #2 for most mountaintop removal in the whole country, right there at the top (congrats fellas!). But Rahall and Rogers have much more in common than that. In the latest Gallup “physical well-being” index, Rogers and Rahall sit on top of the charts again for having …wait for it… the sickest districts in the whole United States! Fellow Blankenship-lover Rick Boucher (D-VA-09) comes in a distant third in both mountaintop removal and ability to let the coal industry sicken his constituents to an early death.

So, since mountaintop removal has been such a resounding success (in getting Don Blankenship a performance bonus), these Congressmen have decided to return Blankenship the favor by introducing HR 6113.

The problem is that this trainwreck of a bill is the legislative equivalent of an unconstructed valleyfill.

Read more
...


Facebook Twitter FlickR YouTube
Front Porch Bloggers Tags
Show/Hide list (-)

15th Anniversary 112th Congress 113th Congress A & G A & G Coal Corporation Acid Mine Drainage Across Appalachia Agriculture Air Pollution air quality Alabama ALEC Alexadra Cousteau Alliance for Appalachia Alpha Natural Resources American Chestnut american dream appalachia Appalachian Appalachian Culture Appalachian history Appalachian Identity Appalachian Legislators Appalachian politics Appalachian Regional Commission Appalachian State University Appalachian Streams Appalachian Transition Appalachian Treasures Appalachian Voices Appalachian Voices board of directors Appalachian Water Watch Appalachia Restoration Act Appalachia Water Watch Appalshop arch coal Arsenic Art Asheville Athens County Avian wildlife Bank of America bark Batson Creek Battle of Blair Mountain Bearwallow Mountain Beyond Coal campaign biodiversity black bears blair mountain blood mountain Blue Ridge Commons: Environmental Activism and Forest History in North Carolina Blue Ridge Escarpment Book Club Boone buffalo creek cancer carbon capture Carolina Mountain Land Conservancy Center for Appalachian Studies Central Appalachia Charlottesville Chattanooga Chimney Rock State Park China citizens united Clean Air Clean Air Act clean energy Clean Water Clean Water Act Clean Water Act 40th Anniversary Clean Water Protection Act Climate Climate Change climate change denial Coal Coal Ash coal ash health effects coal ash ponds coal decline coal electricity coal employment Coal generation Coal mining coal plants coal production Coal Report Coal Waste conductivity Congress Connestee Falls constellation Creation Care Cross-State Air Pollution Rule Cumberland Plateau Cypress creek d.c. Daniel Martin Moore David Brewer David McKinley Democracy dnc Documentaries Don Blankenship Downstream Strategies duke Duke Energy DuPont State Recreation Forest Earth Day EarthJustice Earth Ministry Eastern Band of Cherokee Economic Transition Economy editorial Education efficiency electricity Electric Utilities Elk Knob State Park Emory River Endangered species end mountaintop removal energy Energy Efficiency Energy Information Administration Energy Saving Energy Savings Environment environmental education Environmental Justice environmental literacy Environmental Protection Agency EPA Expedition Blue Planet extinction FArCES of Coal FERC Fish Kill Florence Nature Preserve fly ash Folktales Fontana Lake Foothills Trail forest Forestry Fox Squirrels fracking Frasure Creek Frasure Creek Mining and International Coal Group friends of smokies Gallatin game species gas gas emissions Georgia Georgia Power ghost stories globalization Golden-winged warbler Google Earth Gov. Steve Beshear grandfather mountain Great Smoky Mountains National Park green green-collar green building green economy green energy future GreenFaith and the Evangelical Environmental Network Greenhouse Gases Greenpeace Green River Preserve Hal Rogers Hampton Roads Hampton Roads Coal Plant HB 710 headquarters Health Heifer USA Hickory Nut Gorge Hidden Treasures High Falls hiking Hiking the Highlands hiking trails home improvement and remodeling Hooker Falls houses Hunting hydraulic fracking hydroelectricity ICG iLoveMountains Inside Appalachian Voices Interfaith Power & Light Interior Department Ison Rock Ridge Jay Rockefeller Jeff Goodell Jeff Goodell Jr. Jim Justice Jim Rogers jobs Joe Manchin Joseph Pizarchik Jr. Kathryn Newfont Kathy Mattea Kens Rock Kentuckians for the Commonwealth Kentucky Kentucky Energy and Environment Cabinet Kentucky Litigation Kentucky Riverkeeper Kudzu kudzu bug land Land Conservation Land management land protection LEAF lobbying local farming Marcellus Shale Massey Energy Matt Wasson membership spotlight Mercury Mercury and Air Toxics Standard mercury and air toxic standards Michael Johnathon mine Mine Safety and Health Administration Mining Jobs Molly McGinn mountains Mountaintop Removal Mountaintop removal permits MSHA Mussels N.C. Politics Nally & Hamilton Nantahala National Forest National Mining Association National Resources Defense Council Natural Gas Naturalist's Notebook nature New River Nick Rahall North Carolina NRDC nuclear ODEC Office of Surface Mining offshore wind Ohio Operation Medicine Cabinet opportunities Outdoor Recreation Patriot Coal Pennsylvania Photography Pine Mountain Park Pisgah Forest Politics pollution Possum Jenkins Powder River Basin Prescribed burns President Obama progress Progress Energy Property Rights public lands re-zoning recycling recycling building materials Red Red White and Water Religion in the Environment Renewable Energy Renewable Portfolio Standards Rick Boucher Riverkeeper Rivers Robert F. Kennedy Same Sun Here scenic vistas Scenic Vistas Protection Act Science and Nature science education SELC Selenium selenium pollution Senate settlement sewanee coal seam shale gas Sharyn McCrumb Shelley Moore Capito Sierra Club Silver Slip sludge sludge safety project Solar Solar Energy Solar Homestead Project South Carolina South Cumberland Plateau Southern Appalachian Mountains Southern Appalachian Mountain Stewards Southern Environmental Law Center SouthWings spirituality Sportsman’s Heritage Act spruce pine state environmental policy Stone Mountain stop mountaintop removal Stream Buffer Zone Stream Protection Rule summer camps Sundance Power Systems surface mining Surface Mining Control and Reclamation Act Surry Surry Coal Plant sustainability sustainable agriculture sustainable alternatives sustainable building sustainable farming tax credits and incentives Tennes Tennessee Tennessee Scenic Vistas Protection Act Tennessee State legislature The American Chestnut Foundation The American Legislative Exchange Council The Appalachian Voice the human cost The Voice This Green House Tom Cormons Tom Hansell Tom Kilgore TRAIN Act Transylvania County treasures Triple Falls TVA TVA Kingston coal ash spill U.S. Department of Energy U.S. Representatives from North Carolina U.S. Representatives from Tennessee U.S. Representatives from Virginia U.S. Representatives from West Virginia UMWA Uncle Falls United Mine Workers of America United Mountain Defense united states Upper Watuaga Riverkeeper uranium mining US Forest Service Viewpoint Virginia Virginia General Assembly Virginia ODEC virginia state parks Virginia Tech Wales War on Coal washington Washington DC Watauga Water Waterkeeper Waterkeeper Alliance Water Pollution Water quality weatherization Weed Patch Mountain Week in Washington West Virginia White Squirrel Hiking Challenge Wilderness Society Wildlife Williamson wind energy Wind Power wind turbine Wise County Wise Energy for Virginia Wise Energy for Virginia Coalition wvdep Youngs Mountain

Tags