Dominion must change, citizens say

Several hundred citizens from Wise County and around Virginia rallied in early May to oppose a controversial coal fired power plant in Wise county. The message was not simply one of opposition. Speaker after speaker urged Dominion to change its policies and face the future.
The rally was held in the shadow of the Dominion Power Company offices in Richmond, Virginia, where employees watched the demonstration.
Demonstrators urged the company to drop the project and instead invest in energy efficiency and other clean sources of power.
The demonstrators were part of the Wise Energy for Virginia coalition which presented Dominion with a mile-long ribbon of paper containing more than 42,400 signatures of people opposed to the coal plant.
The coalition launched its campaign at a press conference last September, promising to gather enough signatures against the coal plant to fill a “mile-long” petition. Since then, they have held town meetings, aired radio spots, handed out leaflets at events and door-to-door, sent postcards and emails, and utilized blogs and social networking websites to get their message out.
“Today, we are here in Richmond again to celebrate the thousands of great Virginians from all across this Commonwealth who have signed in opposition and to deliver a loud, crystal clear message to Dominion,” said Kathy Selvage, a Wise County native and co-founder of the Southern Appalachian Mountain Stewards.
The lunchtime rally in Kanawha Plaza drew more than 100 people, who were given green bandanas to wear in a show of unity. The organizers draped the petition – in 53 rolls of 100 feet – around the park while two Virginia bands played folk and bluegrass music. After a brief press conference, Selvage and other members of the coalition gathered up the petition and presented it to a Dominion representative.
“We are delivering this mile-long petition today, but we want to encourage more Virginians to sign up, adding their voice to this movement to protect our mountains, our health and our future,” said Tom Cormons with Appalachian Voices.
The proposed 585-megawatt plant is designed with conventional technology and would emit up to 5.4 million tons of global warming gases each year. At that level, the plant would increase by almost 15% Virginia’s entire carbon output, putting Virginia ahead of California which has five times the population. The plant would also emit high levels of mercury, sulfur dioxide, nitrogen oxides and particle dust.
“Of the $1.8 billion cost to build this coal plant, not one penny will do anything to reduce the 5.4 million tons of global warming pollution it would emit every year – and Dominion’s shareholders and customers will be left holding the bag,” said Cale Jaffe, staff attorney with the Southern Environmental Law Center.
“Dominion spends millions and millions of dollars on political contributions, lobbyists, PR, and on misleading advertisements in an effort to convince the public that they are good stewards of Virginia’s air, soil and water,” said Steve Calos, Virginia director of Chesapeake Climate Action Network. “Let’s get Dominion to spend much less money on their lobbying and advertising campaigns and more on conservation and clean energy.”

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