Wednesday, October 3, 2007

MTR Awareness Festival




The MTR Awareness Festival was held in Athens, OH at the Ohio University Campus on the weekend of September 28th & 29th. It was organized by the Sierra Student Coalition.






Saturday was a beautiful day and the event was held outside.








The Aurora Lights' table.




Old time fiddle.



Julian Martin explained the destruction of MTR.



Old time ballads.



Elisa Young explained the necessity of alternative energy and the devastation of coal fired power plants.



Mike Morningstar played some good dancin' songs.



Jen Osha sang and spoke about the issues surrounding MTR.





Aurora Lights would like to thank the Appalachian Community Fund for the financial support to get us from Morgantown, WV to Athens, OH to record and participate in this event. We would also like to thank Becky, Cory, and all of the members of the Sierra Student Coalition at Ohio University. You guys did an awesome job putting this together!!!!

photos and text by Sam

Thursday, September 6, 2007

Call for Musicians!!!!!!



This is a call for musicians!!!!!!!!!

Jen Osha and Sam McCreery are putting out a CD and are looking for songs about the Coal River Valley and the effects of Mountaintop Removal Coal Mining. The final product will have roughly 12-15 songs and 5-7 interviews as well as an interactive map. This is the first part of larger cultural mapping project based around the Coal River Mountain area in Boone and Raleigh Counties in southern West Virginia. This project will spread awareness of MTR and show people that there is a rich culture in this area.

We are looking for songs that are place based around the Coal River Mountain area. We would like to connect the songs directly to the map.

Some song topics we are looking for:

-overloaded coal trucks

-community empowerment

-streams and rivers being affected

-King Coal politics

-Ed Wiley’s walk from Charleston, WV to Washington D.C.

-Ed Wiley’s month in New York City

-Stover Cemetery

-Wildlife impact

-connecting MTR to other environmental/social struggles

We are also looking for suggestions for the CD’s title.

Tell your friends!!!

We would like all song submissions with a copy of the lyrics in by December 30th. You can send them to:

Sam McCreery

200 Cherry St

Morgantown, WV

26501

E-mail any questions or concerns to sam.mccreery@gmail.com

Wednesday, August 1, 2007

"We almost lost our lives that day."




Community members gather in Dorothy to remember the 2001 flood and get ready for Thursday's hearing on the Eagle 2 mountaintop removal mine.


Bobby, Sam and I met at Mike Maynor's house in Dorothy to have an informal meeting to prepare for this Thursday's hearing regarding the Eagle 2 surface mine permit. As we settled down comfortably into Mike and Lessie's hospitality to wait for other community members, the conversation turned to the current state of Stover cemetery. Family members believe that at least 16 of their ancestors' graves have been bulldozed. Mike believes the skeletons are in the spoil that has been pushed over.

“We won’t even be safe from the coal company when we’re dead,” Mike says.

Mike and Lessie's home, Dorothy, was hit hard in the 2001 flood (see pictures of flooding in Dorothy). “It was a little tsunami,” Mike said, “or a series of them.” It was early Sunday morning when Mike and his wife Leslie ran from their home of 29 years. “When we stepped outside, the water was up to our knees. When we got in our truck, the water came in the door. By the time we got to the other side of the house, about 45 seconds from walking out the door, the water was over the hood of our truck.”

The 2001 flood water level on the side of Maynors' old house.



A neighbor pointing to the high ground Mike and his wife ran to in the flood of 2001.


“We almost lost our lives that day. Good thing it was daylight,” Lessie said. “That’s the only reason we didn’t both die. Bad as it is to lose everything from 36 years of marriage, you can replace that eventually, but you can’t replace a life.”

Mike remembers, “we’ve had rain like that before, and we experienced what we’ve always experienced: low curbs get flooded, water in the road. We didn’t have 5 feet of water in the house. Great, huge trees floating by the house with the branches scraping everything as they went by, tearing out bridges.”




The floor of the Maynors' new home is higher that the ceiling of their old house.




Mike built their new home after their home was destroyed by the 2001 flood. Although he was told he should build it 6 cement blocks high, he built it 14 cement blocks high. Although they are six years into this new project, the Maynors still can not grow anything in their garden. Coal continues to surface in his yard from the rock, gravel, and coal that the floods brought onto his yard.




Coal in the Maynors' driveway



Despite all of his hard work, Mike is certainly not satisfied. If anything, he is much more concerned. "All this work that I’ve done, raising my house up 7 feet, is just false security. My neighbor said to me, ‘all that means, Mike, is that you’ll be the last one to drown.”

It is Mike and Lessie's concern over future flooding that has caused them to invite community members to their house this evening to talk about the Eagle 2 surface permit. In the 2001 flood, three sediment ponds failed in Buger hollow. There are 23 additional ponds slated for the Eagle 2 permit.






Lessie talks about the Eagle No. 2 permit that will affect everyone in the Dorothy, Colcord, and Sycamore area.


For the Maynors, it's not a question of if a flood will occur, it is a question of when. Like many residents of Dorothy, fear of flooding is part of their daily life. "I break down the weeds so that I can shine my spotlight across the steet and see how high the river is," Mike says.





The view from Mike's new porch. Notice the mowed area across the road. He did this so he can look from his front porch and see the level of the water in the river.


In addition to the fear of losing their lives in the next flood, they also are worried about the toxins in the water itself. Mike, a trucker for 30 years, has seen tankers without placards (legal requirement to state the contents of the truck) pass his house full and return empty. Knowing the mountains so well, Mike knows there are only a few places that tanker could be emptying. All of the options end up in the stream in front of his house, or in the floodwaters.




The foundation for the swinging bridge that used to cross the river. The water has been higher than the foundation multiple times since they started mining on Kayford.




The maple tree in his front yard that died after the flood of 2001. To the right of the telephone pole and just above the fence is the clearing Mike made so he could see the level of the river.






Text by Jen Osha
Pictures by Sam McCreery

Tuesday, July 31, 2007

Kayford Mountain as viewed from Rock House



Last Sunday Allen took Sam and I up Rock House to see Kayford mountain and the MTR sites surrounding it from an entirely different angle. What follows are the pictures we have so far. Video will be up in a few days.

Allen and Jen standing on a drill bench site in Rock House facing East towards Kayford.

Looking at a haul road on the Red Warrior strip owned by Catanary Coal. The hump on the ridge to the right is where the Stanley Heirs cabins are. When they are finished, the entire area between where we are standing and the cabins will be flat.

A valley fill on the Seng Creek side of Catanary mines. The green area has been hydro-seeded. A massive flood in 2002 originated from this area.



Pictures from Kayford Mountain










for more photos visit OHVEC's website at

http://www.ohvec.org/

photos taken by Sam McCreery and David Bennett

Monday, July 30, 2007

Reforestation Project





These past two weeks, Tony Ervolina donated 50 hours of his time to create a nursery in Harrison county and transplant seedling trees for a future reforestation project here in Coal River. He planted Sugar Maples, White Ash, Hornbeam, Serviceberry, Dogwood, Hickory, Beech, Hawthorn, and Black Spruce. We will be able to use many of these trees next spring for a community reforestation program! Thanks Tony!

Tuesday, July 24, 2007

Kennedy's Speech

On July 17th, Robert Kennedy, Jr, came to the church in Rock Creek, West Virginia to give a speech. The campaign house cooked a dinner for him and the church house was packed with local people interested in what he had to say.

The speech started around 6pm and Kennedy spoke for about an hour and then spent a long time answering questions from the audience.

“He did a good job connecting environmental destruction and pollution as criminal acts. If you pollute the air and child gets asthma it should be considered child abuse. If you pollute the water and people get sick, it should be considered human rights abuse. It’s a pretty simple statement, but it’s not being done.”
-Bobby Mitchell

"Kennedy is a man who speaks truth to power. He doesn't pull any punches. I really respect how he truly uses his voice in our society to speak for the land and the people who usually aren't heard. It's inspiring to see a man with such speaking power who doesn't just use it for himself."
-Jen Osha

“Mr. Kennedy’s visit was a great moral booster. Good to know that there are people who care about what’s happening here and aren’t ready to sacrifice the people and the region for coal.”
-Vernon Haltom

“I was glad to here Kennedy address the issue of jobs in the area and how it’s the government’s responsibility to provide transitional funds for families who depend on surface mining for a living when mountaintop removal is phased out.”
-Sarah Haltom

"Thanks Mr. Kennedy for telling it like it is and not leaving anyone out.
He really hit home when he says a journalist isn't supposed to write about sides, its about the truth and not a balanced story."
Patty Sebok




Preparing food before the speech.




The parking lot filled up quickly. Bobby was in charge of organizing the cars.




Gathering in front of the church before the speech.




Debbie Wiley gave the introduction.




Kennedy speaking...he got some good shouts and hollers from the community!


Thank you, Bobby!

A link to an article about Kennedy's book "Crimes Against Nature"



Monday, July 16, 2007

The Campaign House - Where Everyday is an Adventure

Today, many people put a lot of energy towards getting ready for Kennedy's visit to Rock Creek tomorrow. We wanted to prepare a meal for him and his crew that came directly from the land that he was helping us to stand up for.



Becky picking Basil in the garden.


Nathan's fudge in the cool down stage.


Nathan is the resident fudge expert. This is an action shot of him putting it into the pan.

Rhubarb and raspberries from...


Ed and Debbie's garden!


Rhurbarb and rapsberry pies.


The finished pies.


The beginning stages of lasagna.

This is how more lasagna ingredients arrived. Thanks, Dustin!

Becky and her potato salad.

Community effort in the clean-up stage of cooking. Thanks, Julia!

Nathan and Dustin doing more dishes.

Bobby and his new haircut!