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Notice!! This is data about which features this issue contains. Delete this description to rebuild the list.[“2009-issue-3-junejuly”,”across-appalachia”,”allposts”,”voice”,”naturalistsnotebook-voice”,”inside-av”,”hiking-highlands”,”editorial”,”av-bookclub”]

Good Things Come in Small Packages

Story by Sarah Vig Though the image of large industrial-scale wind turbines has become common, seen on PowerShift T-shirts and sprouting out of cornfields in Iowa and mountains in Tennessee alike, not every wind turbine towers on the skyline. Wind

Flooding Takes Its Toll In West Virginia

Story by Penny Loeb Tina England knows why flood waters rose seven feet on the road up Big Huff Creek: recent logging and new roads to gas wells at the top of the mountain. “Coming off a big mountain like

Mountaintop Removal Activist Receives Goldman Environmental Prize

Maria Gunnoe’s family connections to her land in Boone County, W. Va, stretch back to Cherokee ancestors who hid from forced removal by the government in the 1830s. Her Cherokee grandfather purchased land there in the 1950s; she herself was

Coal Sludge Protests Rock West Virginia

Two women in hazmat suits and respirators were arrested in May after floated a 60 foot banner in the Brushy Fork impoundment “lake” which contains 8 billion gallons of coal sludge. The banner read: “No More Toxic Sludge.” Ironically, the

Some Permits Suspended But Mountaintop Removal Fight Goes On

The ongoing controversy over mountaintop removal mining see-sawed this spring, as the Obama administration stopped seven high-impact mining permits but then proceeded forward with 42 others. Perhaps 150 more are waiting in the wings, according to an EPA spokesman. One

EPA Assumes Oversight of TVA Coal Fly Ash Disaster

Story by Chris Martin On Monday, May 11, the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) announced that it would oversee the cleanup of coal fly ash in Roane County, Tenn., after last December’s dam failure at the Kingston Fossil Plant flooded the

Hundreds Protest Duke’s Cliffside Power Plant Expansion

Story by Sarah Vig Thoreau wrote near the end of his life, “if I repent of anything it is likely to be my good behavior.” At 76, Bruce King, a retiree and military veteran – like Thoreau – was beginning

Head to the Roof with Project EMMA

Growing on a roof in downtown Asheville, N.C. are beans, cucumbers, tomatoes, salad mix, radishes, lavender, rosemary, lemon balm, basil and other plants. The result of a partnership between the Appalachian Sustainable Agriculture Project and the Council on Aging of

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