May 15, 2009
Obama's EPA clears 42 of 48 new mountaintop removal mining permits
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"So far, we have not seen any such information," Mulhern said. "There is no scientific study that we are aware of that finds that there is any mountaintop removal that is not harmful."

At the same time, Rahall said there are still probably another 150 mountaintop removal permits across the Appalachian coalfields that are still awaiting EPA review.

Rahall said he has asked federal officials "to conduct permit reviews in a transparent and coordinated process" and "to conduct them as expeditiously as possible.

"For its part, the coal industry cannot comply with a moving target," Rahall said. "Having regulatory stability is vitally important to the industry, its workers and those of us who reside in the coalfields of Southern West Virginia. It is also equally important to environmental protection."

Adora Andy, a spokeswoman for the EPA's Jackson, issued a short statement early Friday evening in response to questions about Rahall's announcement.

"EPA continues to conduct a detailed and rigorous review of all pending Clean Water Act permits for mines in the Appalachian coalfields," the statement said. "We have concluded, under the law, that six projects of an initial 48 permits EPA reviewed will not proceed unless adverse environmental impacts are further reduced.

"We will continue to follow the law and use the best science as we quickly and thoroughly evaluate over 150 pending applications to reduce harmful environmental impacts," the EPA said.

The statement said, the "EPA decided not to provide additional comments on the remaining 42 permits after consideration of the nature and extent of project impacts. Twenty-eight of the projects have two or fewer valley fills. Eleven have no valley fills at all. None have more than six.

"EPA's understanding is that none of the projects would permanently impact high value streams that flow year-round," the EPA said. "By contrast, EPA has opposed six permits because they would all result in significant adverse impacts to high value streams, involve large numbers of valley fills, and impact watersheds with extensive previous mining impacts."

Reach Ken Ward Jr. at kw...@wvgazette.com or 304-348-1702.

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Posted By: FYI25203 (5:13pm 05-20-2009)
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I wonder if Obama's going to be wondering why he's been forsaken by the Libarisees as he hangs all alone.

Posted By: sodbuster (7:58am 05-20-2009)
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Strip Here! Strip Now! Obama 2012

Posted By: smarbap (10:33pm 05-19-2009)
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This is great! More coal to provide for our nation's energy independence, and the expansion of level land upon which to erect more of Obama's windmills! Talk about a win-win scenario!

Posted By: ClayCoBoy (12:46am 05-19-2009)
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Obama doesn't live here.... we do... I think they need to move the white house, so the government can build new homes for the ones they destoryed in WV

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