News
December 17, 2008
Water "too toxic to touch" in Boone County town
Prenter residents import water, say groundwater contaminated
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PRENTER, W.Va. -- Residents of a northern Boone County community say their well water is "too toxic to touch," so they're trying to raise $15,000 to deliver barrels of clean water to about 300 homes.

The contaminated water in Prenter Hollow has caused widespread health problems, including high rates of gallbladder and kidney disease, community organizers said. Children also suffer from unexplained urinary tract infections and tooth decay.

"The water is not good for human consumption," said Glen Collins, a volunteer organizer with the Prenter Water Fund project. "But people are still drinking it. They're bathing their children in it. They're cooking with it."  

Money donated to the water fund would help deliver 55-gallon barrels of fresh water to Prenter homes twice a month for a year.

A previous donation from the Vivian and Paul Olum Foundation was used to purchase barrels, hand pumps and a tank to haul the water.

The Boone County Public Service District has applied for a state grant to build a public water line to Prenter. The line would connect to a West Virginia American Water line near Seth. The project would take more than a year to complete.

Meantime, residents and outside experts allege the local well water in Prenter Hollow continues to make people sick.

They believe coal slurry injections from abandoned mines contaminated the groundwater. Blasting at nearby mines had made the problem worse, they said. The water started going bad in 2003.

"The tragedy in Prenter and other Appalachian communities is that folks had good water, then over a period of time, their water gradually degraded to the point where it is obviously not fit for bathing, much less cooking and drinking," said Benjamin Stout, a Wheeling Jesuit University biology professor who has tested well water in Prenter. "During that period of degradation, they have been unknowingly exposed to high levels of metals that have well-known human consequences."

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Posted By: One Citizen (11:42pm 12-22-2008)
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SURFACE MINER = MERCENARY ECO TERRORIST. Nuff said...

Posted By: 4GOD (7:55am 12-21-2008)
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When I was younger, maybe 12, I remember setting through a local trial. An oil company was accused of ruining local water wells. I can remember a DEP official testifying that the water had contaminates, but no proof of the origin. I can remember evidence of the same material content in the water that the oil company used to fracture their oil wells. Seems to me any two-bit judge could put two and two together and reach the correct decision. The jury did, but the judge through out the decision because of lack of proof the contaminated came from the oil company. (I will always question the decision of one overriding the decision of twelve).

Posted By: 4GOD (7:55am 12-21-2008)
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I watched these people carry water (from the creek) to bath, wash clothes and general use. They had to carry clean water for cooking and drinking. A little later, I watched the oil company start drilling a new well. The person who owned the property had just spent about all he had to buy boards to build a new barn. I watched the drillers cut up his lumber and burn it (it was cold). The sheriff was called in and I thought he would take care of the situation. His first words, where are your boards. The farmer said they burned them. The sheriff’s response “well I guess you have no proof”.
Reality set in at this point. The sheriff, on his deathbed, admitted to taking money from the oil company (among other things). Sad to see the same thing are still happening today.

We look for fixes (buy a filter, have public water piped in) but do not address the root problem. If a company can not execute business ethically and within public safety, then they need to fix their problems.

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