King Coal

Hal Rogers leads charge to slash the EPA

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July 26, 2011
By David M. F. Schankula

The EPA is going to get what’s coming to them thanks to the House GOP (and presumably some Democrats, but we’ll wait for a vote to name names because a few of you are sensitive), The Hill reports:

House Republicans on Monday made no secret that their Department of the Interior, Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) and Related Agencies spending bill is designed to trim back the EPA, which they said is a huge creator of uncertainty in an already uncertain environment for business and job creation.

The overall bill, H.R. 2584, cuts spending by about 7 percent, but the EPA could be cut by 18 percent.

Quoth House Appropriations Chair, Hal Rogers (R-KY)

“Some have complained that these cuts are too much, too fast,” Rogers said. “It’s important to remember that these agencies and programs have seen unprecedented massive increases in spending in recent years. This sort of excess has contributed to our astronomical debt.”

Indeed. It is important to remember what caused our astronomical debt. It’s also important to remember what the EPA does:

The House began debate today on an interior-environment spending bill (HR 2584) that would slash spending on a raft of conservation and environmental programs. These include a 40 percent cut to sewage treatment programs aimed at cleaning up California beaches. Storm water washes pollution and sewage onto the state’s beaches, many of which have been periodically closed because of contamination.

Democrats are calling it the most anti-environment bill they’ve ever seen. Environmental groups are in an uproar. The Center for American Progress slide show shows huge cuts to big restoration programs ranging from the Great Lakes to the Chesapeake Bay. The bill guts wildlife refuges. The American Bird Conservancy called it one of the “worst assaults on birds and other wildlife ever to come before Congress.”

But who cares about California beaches and raw sewage and environmental groups and CAP slide shows.

What really matters to us here in the Commonwealth is how the EPA is trying to force us to drink clean water and not poison kids and other acts of treason (via WFPL).

Kentucky Coal Industry Calls New EPA Guidance ‘Overreaching’

In 2009, the Environmental Protection Agency announced it would increase scrutiny on a number of mountaintop removal permits in Appalachia and  would release guidelines for future permits. Those guidelines were released last week.

Mine operators will now find it much harder to get permits for valley fills—where valleys and streams are filled with debris from mining.

For two years, the coal industry has criticized the Environmental Protection Agency for creating a climate of uncertainty in the coalfields, as the agency changed its rules for permitting mining operations.

So cut their money. Slash it! If they’re not going to work for our corporate citizens, they shouldn’t work for anyone.

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To Do: Go see ‘The Last Mountain’ this Friday…

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July 25, 2011
By David M. F. Schankula

The Last Mountain premieres this Friday at The Kentucky Theater.

The movie, which played Sundance earlier this year, is on a rolling release which means each weekend in each new city, there are people in fancy offices somewhere watching the Box Office returns to see if they should keep sending the movie to more cities for more people to see it. Which means if you go see the movie this Friday at the Kentucky, you’re helping to make the film available to more people in the future.

Which isn’t the main reason why you should go. The main reason is probably that it looks like a pretty good flick:

So make plans to go to the Kentucky Theater this weekend to see this movie. Take your friends.

If you can’t go Friday, then go Saturday. Or Sunday. It’s playing July 29th to August 4th. So you have options!

You can find out more about the movie at their officials site and on Google Wave and on tweeter.

And if you’re not in Lexington, the movie will hit Paducah on August 12-14 at the Maiden Alley and many other cities, a full list of which you can find here.

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Kentucky GOP’s worst fears realized

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July 22, 2011
By David M. F. Schankula

The state’s Republican Party is already working out their despicable talking points on New York Jewish money as the Sierra Club has secured $50 Million in the fight against King Coal:

Bloomberg Philanthropies commits $50 million to Sierra Club’s Beyond Coal Campaign to move America toward cleaner energy

Grant a ‘game changer’ that will effectively retire one-third of the nation’s aging coal fleet by 2020

Alexandria, VA. Today the Sierra Club announced a partnership with Bloomberg Philanthropies that will effectively retire one-third of the nation’s aging coal fleet by 2020, replacing it with clean energy. The partnership includes a $50 million commitment over four years to the Beyond Coal Campaign that will fuel the Sierra Club’s effort to clean the air, end the coal era, and accelerate the transition to cleaner, cost-effective energy sources.

This is bad news for the 4th Most Polluted State and its leaders who are working hard to make it number one.

The $50 million grant will fill a significant portion of the campaign’s projected $150 million four-year budget and will have a significant impact in advancing the efforts of the Beyond Coal campaign.

The partnership will play a key role in helping the Sierra Club achieve their impact goals of:

  • Cutting 30% of coal production by 2020
  • Reducing mercury pollution from coal by 90% by 2020
  • Replacing a majority of coal with clean energy

From an organizational perspective it will:

  • Increase the number of Sierra Club campaign states from 15 to 45
  • Increase the active member base from 1.4 million to 2.4 million people
  • Double the size of full-time Sierra Club staff working on the campaign from 100 to 200

This is terrifying news. What is happening to America?

And it gets worse, as Obama’s EPA Stormtroopers continue their war on Kentucky by finalizing terroristic rules to force us to consume clean water and other inhumanities straight out of Chairman Mao’s playbook.

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Kentucky 4th Most Polluted State; Thank Hal Rogers, Ben Chandler and Steve Beshear

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July 21, 2011
By David M. F. Schankula

Good news, Kentucky!

Our “Casey Anthony Dunking Booth” may have been shut down but fear not, we aren’t out of the national headlines just yet. The Natural Resources Defense Council named Kentucky the 4th Most Polluted State!

Kentucky ranks fourth-highest on the list of states with the most air pollution from coal and oil-fired power plants, an environmental group said Wednesday.

The three highest states were Ohio, Pennsylvania and Florida, according to an analysis of federal data by the Natural Resources Defense Council.

This is great news because it motivates our state leaders to step up their efforts to lead the Commonwealth to the number one position. Apparently they aren’t doing enough.

But they are trying. Just last week, Congressman Hal Rogers (KY-05) led the charge to rip funding from the EPA:

The Republican-led House Appropriations Committee has approved a restrictive spending bill for Fiscal Year 2012 that allows uranium mining on public lands adjacent to the Grand Canyon, prohibits funding for the U.S. EPA to set greenhouse gas standards, and exempts oil and utility companies from the Clean Air Act.

The EPA’s budget would be cut by $1.5 billion and the Interior Department would take a $715 million hit under the bill passed by the House Appropriations Committee on Tuesday.

….

House Appropriations Chairman Hal Rogers, of Kentucky, said, “This bill sends a strong message that the EPA’s ‘legislation by regulation’ and commandeering of congressional authority is opposed by a strong bi-partisan contingent of lawmakers.”

Some may question Hal’s claim of “bipartisanship” but then, some might also wish to ignore Ben Chandler’s own repeated stance on the issue.

Congressman Chandler (KY-06) has a long history of fighting passionately to destroy the environment and pollute our air. He signed on to a letter that claimed, “The President and his unelected bureaucrats are once again attempting to change the rules as the game is being played to ram their radical agenda down the throats of the American people.”

Congressman Chandler joined Congressman Whitfield (KY-01) in voting to hobble the EPA’s greenhouse gas rules, or, as Whitfield wrote for both of them:

“We must stop this out-of-control EPA and that’s precisely what this bill is designed to do.”

Chandler voted to defund the EPA’s toxic coal ash regulations.

Chandler voted to give Big Oil $53 Billion in taxpayer money.

And he attacked the Clean Air Act while simultaneously begging for money from the Sierra Club.

Some might say this is all being too harsh on Ben Chandler and our ire should more correctly be directed at Hal Rogers… but they are forgetting that Ben Chandler has defended Congressman Rogers in the very recent past.

One Democratic operative last night suggested this blog was critical of party leaders like Chandler and, specifically, Governor Steve Beshear. But they have perhaps misunderstood the definition of “critical.”

For indeed it is not critical to point out the state of Kentucky ranks fourth to last in environmental quality — that’s just a fact reported from a study.

Likewise, it’s not critical to point out that the state will stay in this position so long as its Democratic Governor insists the very people who might better our position get off our backs:

 

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King Coal shifts blame from themselves to those inbred hillbillies that work for them

one comment
July 12, 2011
By Joe Sonka

When the study came out three weeks ago showing that mountaintop removal was linked to a rise in birth defects, I was wondering how long if would take for some “scientists” paid by the “mountaintop development” industry to come out with something debunking it. I’m sure that will happen eventually.

But what do we have in the meantime? WFPL’s Erica Peterson breaks this little slice of awful, as one of King Coal’s favorite law firms says it’s not the coal industry’s fault, it’s just that those hillbillies are all inbred:

Now D.C.-based law firm Crowell & Moring is citing Appalachian inbreeding as a way to discredit science linking mining and birth defects.

A critique posted on the Crowell & Moring website last month raises several issues with the study’s methodology, including that the study failed to account for consanguinity—or inbreeding—which can also cause birth defects. Crowell & Moring represents the National Mining Association, but an NMA spokesman says the association wasn’t involved in the firm’s critique.

Studies have shown that consanguinity, or inbreeding, isn’t any more common in Appalachia than it is in other areas. A Crowell & Moring spokeswoman said in an email response: “Our website alert was not intended to reflect views of the National Mining Association or any other coal company, but is an attempt to identify certain potential weaknesses of the study in question. Consanguinity is one of a number of commonly addressed issues in studies of this type, regardless of geography. Scientists address this consideration regularly because it can matter to scientific conclusions, and do so regardless of locale. We did not raise this issue with particular reference to any region, and we did not mean to imply any such thing. That said, we apologize for any offense taken, as none was intended.”

The piece was removed from the firm’s website earlier today.

Yes, how dare people suggest that King Coal doesn’t have the utmost respect for their workers.

Maybe Blankenship can use that defense in his trial?

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Sen. Perry Clark is a firecracker

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June 30, 2011
By Joe Sonka

Ryan Alessi sat down with Kentucky State Senator Perry Clark (D) last night, and I have to say that he is not boring.

He had plenty of criticism for David Williams, and plenty of praise for Steve Beshear, but here’s what he had to say about the “get off our backs!” business:

“He probably shouldn’t have even brought it up. It was simply pandering at the time, when he was screaming about the EPA “get off our backs” and “get off our coal”. The EPA has not caused one job in the United States to ever cease. What it has done is clean the air, and clean the water. Which I appreciate.”

That’s a tad surprising. But hey, great!

And here’s something else I didn’t know about Perry Clark until about 5 minutes ago when the Google Mechanism informed me, but I thought I should share it. In 2004, Perry Clark endorsed Lyndon LaRouche for President. And LaRouchites still promote Clark to this day (a “Long-standing LaRouche ally).

So… yeah, Clark is kind of an interesting guy, no?

LaRouche/Clark 2012?

Wow.

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Friends of Coal

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June 29, 2011
By Joe Sonka

Yeah, if only President Obama and his federal busybodies were as kind and generous to coal miners as the good and decent people running the coal companies

Mine owner Massey Energy kept two sets of records that chronicled safety problems. One internal set of production reports detailed those problems and how they delayed coal production. But the other records, which are reviewed by federal mine safety inspectors and required by federal law, failed to mention the same safety hazards. Some of the hazards that were not disclosed are identical to those believed to have contributed to the explosion.

Hey, but what’s a little murder between friends, right?

And that was West Virginia. Kentucky coal companies are totally on the ball

The federal Mine Safety and Health Administration has cited six Kentucky mines for safety violations. Those mines were among the 19 nationwide that the agency inspected in May as part of their special impact inspections, which target mines with a history of compliance problems.

At Perry County Coal Corporation’s E 4-2 Mine in southeastern Kentucky, federal inspectors found that the mine operator wasn’t maintaining dust collection systems, which are designed to protect miners from black lung disease. There were also ventilation problems, and the mine was cited for letting combustible materials accumulate near electrical equipment, which could lead to an explosion.

…and following the rules.

NPR’s Howard Berkes is reporting that the Labor Department is asking a federal judge to issue an injunction against a Kentucky coal mine for warning its miners of an inspection. The mine in question is CAM Mining’s #28 Mine in Pike County and the injunction would prohibit anyone at the mine from issuing advance warnings. Violation of that could result in fines or jail time.

But those federal busybodies are trying to nose in on us anyway…

The federal Mine Safety and Health Administration has released new Internet tools to help miners better understand their rights and responsibilities. According to the Federal Mine Safety and Health Act of 1977, miners can’t be discriminated against for raising concerns about workplace safety or requesting MSHA inspections.

The new tools include an electronic form for filling out hazard or discrimination complaints anonymously, information about black lung benefits and videos addressing common concerns. Issues surrounding miners’ fear of discrimination for reporting unsafe conditions arose last year after the explosion at the Upper Big Branch Mine. Assistant Secretary of Labor for Mine Safety Joe Main says his agency’s goal is to make sure all miners understand their rights.

It’s a shame that Rand Paul hasn’t been able to get these federal “safety” regulators off our backs yet, as he profoundly and bravely advocated in the campaign last year. Remember, we just need to let the coal companies do their own thing, and if people die in a company’s mine, then people will just go work in other mines. Unless they were one of the workers who died there, because they’d be dead. And if not, they’d just have to hope the other companies’ mines didn’t have a disaster, because their weren’t any safety rules in that one either. But it’s the Free Hand of the Dead Miner Market, and Rand Paul is never wrong.

Sure, we could save the lives of hundreds of coal miners, but what would we lose in terms of Liberty?

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Wind farms threaten Kentucky, earth

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June 28, 2011
By Joe Sonka

Much like King Coal and the Kentucky public servants that they buy, The Onion is never wrong:


In The Know: Coal Lobby Warns Wind Farms May Blow Earth Off Orbit

Kids could drink that water and get wind in their brains!

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"When will someone go to jail for exposing our communities to these dangerous pollutants?"

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June 28, 2011
By Joe Sonka

The day that Kentucky’s state government is not bought and sold and operated by King Coal, that’s when.

On the heels of yesterday’s news that Frasure Creek Mining and International Coal Group are just going to continue turning their communities’ water into a toxic dump until somebody makes them stop, a coalition of groups sent out this press release today, asking when the madness is going to stop and who in our government will have the courage to do it:

Appalachian Voices, Kentuckians For The Commonwealth, Kentucky Riverkeeper and Waterkeeper Alliance filed two 60-day notice letters alleging that the companies, ICG and Frasure Creek Mining, exceeded pollution discharge limits in their Clean Water Act permits more than 4,000 times in the first three months of 2011. Also joining in the Notice were several local residents impacted by the dumping of mining waste into Kentucky’s waterways.

The coal companies cited in the notice letter both operate in the eastern part of Kentucky under state-issued permits that allow them to discharge limited amounts of pollutants into nearby streams. In October 2010, the groups filed similar notice letters against ICG and Frasure Creek for more than 20,000 violations of the Clean Water Act, alleging that the companies had falsified discharge monitoring reports by illegally filing the same data month after month. Under the Clean Water Act, the massive amounts of alleged violations could have resulted in fines in the hundreds of millions of dollars.

The October filings prompted Kentucky Energy and Environment Cabinet officials to take industry-friendly actions to short-circuit the potential citizen lawsuits. With a light slap on the wrist, the officials proposed a settlement with the two companies, citing only 2,765 violations of the Clean Water Act and proposing fines against ICG and Frasure Creek of just $660,000.

One of the arguments they used to justify the small number of violations and low penalties was that many of the violations were merely “transcription errors,” not violations of pollution limits, and therefore did not warrant higher fines. At the end of the negotiation process, the Cabinet officials proudly proclaimed that the proposed settlement would remedy the ongoing problems with these two companies. Today’s filing proves otherwise.

“These new violations show two things,” said Scott Edwards, director of Advocacy for Waterkeeper Alliance. “First, it exposes the cabinet’s deal with the coal companies for the ineffective, choreographed sham we always knew it was, and second, it shows that it is almost certain that all those “transcription errors” the cabinet relied on to soft-pedal its settlement approach were really pollution discharge violations disguised as reporting errors.”

The allegations brought today by citizens groups are all for pollution limit violations found during just the first three months of 2011, subsequent to the negotiated settlement between the cabinet and the coal companies. The groups found more than 1,400 alleged pollution limit violations by ICG, including average monthly total suspended solids (TSS) levels that were up to 15 times higher than allowed by the permit, average monthly manganese and iron levels more than three times higher than allowed, as well as numerous pH, alkalinity and acidity violations.

The groups also found that Frasure Creek had more than 2,800 violations, including monthly average manganese levels more than 10 times higher than allowed by their permit, daily maximum iron up to 13 times higher than allowed, and daily maximum total suspended solids (TSS) up to 4.7 times higher than allowed.

“The sheer number of very serious pollution violations we found in the first three months of 2011 is astounding,” said Donna Lisenby, the director of Water Programs for Appalachian Voices. “It shows a systemic and pervasive pattern of ongoing water pollution problems with no meaningful enforcement by Kentucky Energy and Environment Cabinet officials, who continue to sit idly by and let coal companies get away with thousands of violations.”

“These violations represent a toxic soup being poured into our drinking water and streams,” said Ted Withrow, the retired Big Sandy Basin Management Coordinator for the Kentucky Division of Water and a member of Kentuckians For The Commonwealth. “A recent peer-reviewed study shows a strong correlation between mountaintop removal mining and a 42 percent increase in infant deformities and other health effects. We now have proof we are killing children and maiming them for life.”

Coal mining operations in Appalachia and across the country are notorious for the amount of water pollution that they produce on a daily basis. “Exposure to high levels of manganese in water can effect neurological development in infants and cause disorders similar to Parkinson’s disease in adults,” said Pat Banks, the Kentucky Riverkeeper. “These violations demonstrate an extraordinary level of malfeasance. When will someone go to jail for exposing our communities to these dangerous pollutants?”

But remember, these complaints must have no merit, because Steve Beshear is an environmental champion.

Get off his back!

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Steve Beshear: Environmental Champion

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June 27, 2011
By Joe Sonka

Environmental activists gathered all around Kentucky this weekend to call for stricter enforcement of the Clean Water Act, which our government in Kentucky ignores because they are owned by King Coal.

But Steve Beshear didn’t take this criticism of him lying down. Here’s what he said in response:

In a statement released Saturday, Beshear said: “My administration has a proven track record of actions and initiatives that highlight the Energy and Environment Cabinet’s commitment to not only enforcing the Clean Water Act but also collaborating with the many stakeholders across Kentucky to improve processes and achieve clean-water goals.”

The administration has worked with “research entities” and the coal industry in the development of alternative mining practices to meet more stringent environmental requirements. The administration also has conducted audit inspections of coal mining operations and their contract wastewater-testing labs to ensure compliance with permit requirements.

Wow. That’s, uh… quite a statement.

And that second paragraph… it’s not in full quotes, or attributed to Beshear, so it seems like they’re just stating that as fact, no? Interesting. Because it’s 100% spin that no one is really stupid enough to believe.

Or have we pegged Steve Beshear wrong over the past year? After all that “get off our backs” bluster, is he really “committed to enforcing” the federal government’s rules on the coal industry, “collaborating” with KFTC and the Sierra Club, promoting “alternative mining practices” that are environmentally friendly, and vigorously auditing and inspecting the coal industry’s effect on water?

Maybe we’ve all been just been unfair to him? After all, the man loves Earth Day, so he can’t be all that bad:

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