The Front Porch Blog, with Updates from AppalachiaThe Front Porch Blog, with Updates from Appalachia

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Appalachia will rise again this weekend!

Tuesday, September 21st, 2010 | Posted by Jillian Randel | No Comments

Rising Up for Appalachia!

This coming weekend, September 25-28, the Appalachian Voices crew will be traveling to Washington D.C. for the Appalachia Rising: Voices from the Mountains conference. The weekend workshops will be educational, focusing on issues such as: mountaintop removal, coal ash, coal-fired power plants, citizen lobbying, climate change, resource extraction, corporate campaigns, organizing efforts and legal rights.

The conference will be followed by a rally as well as a day of citizen lobbying Congress.
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Charlotte Coal Ash Hearing Shows Strong Support for Subtitle C

Thursday, September 16th, 2010 | Posted by Jillian Randel | No Comments

An Elder from Holy Covenant Church of Christ performs a ritual ashing during the hearing

An Elder from Holy Covenant Church of Christ performs a ritual ashing during the hearing

Tuesday’s standing room only coal ash hearings in Charlotte, N.C. were nothing less than encouraging. As a fresh addition to Appalachian Voices, it was a learning experience for me on all things “coal ash.” Citizens from all walks of life stood up to testify against the harmful effects of the improper disposal of coal ash in the environment.

Close to fifteen members, staff and board from Appalachian Voices accompanied our Watauga Riverkeeper, Donna Lisenby, to Charlotte to participate in the process.

The topic of the hearing was the U.S. EPA’s upcoming vote on subtitle C, which will treat coal ash as hazardous waste and provide federal regulations of the byproduct, and subtitle D, which will allow coal ash to be titled as non-hazardous waste and leave disposal decisions up to individual states.

“I don’t think our lives are worth any less. We are not worthless. I want the EPA to see this,” said Elisa Young, a subtitle C supporter from Ohio. (more…)

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A Century of People Step Out to Support Blair Mountain

Wednesday, September 15th, 2010 | Posted by Jillian Randel | No Comments

Over 100 people gathered to rally in support of Blair Mountain this past Labor Day weekend. Blair Mountain is the site of the famous battle waged by coal miners in 1921 to unionize in support of better conditions in the coalfields. It is the location of what is considered the largest civil uprising in the U.S. since the Civil War.

The controversy over the listing and then subsequent delisting of the battlefield as a historic site has been ongoing since the 1980s. Status as a historic site would protect Blair Mountain from the destructive mountaintop removal coal mining that so many of West Virginia’s mountains have suffered. Let’s keep rallying to protect Blair Mountain!

Visit the Friends of Blair Mountain website to get involved and help protect Blair Mountain.



 

 


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