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October 12, 2007
Boone County mountaintop removal project blocked
Ruling might cost 39 miners their jobs at Castillo

A federal judge on Thursday blocked a coal operator from starting a new valley fill at a mountaintop removal mine in Boone County.

U.S. District Judge Robert C. Chambers issued a preliminary injunction that stops new mining at Jupiter Holdings LLC's Callisto Surface Mine near Bob White.

Chambers ruled that permanent damage to streams and forests outweighed temporary and speculative economic harm to the company.

"Money can be earned, lost and earned again," Chambers wrote in a 12-page opinion, "a valley once filled is gone."

Chambers said it is "undisputed" that the mining would damage the environment. Also, the judge said, the permit approval was based on the same flawed environmental evaluation and mitigation techniques as others he previously has ruled were illegal.

The preliminary injunction issued Thursday blocks further mining until Chambers can hold a full trial on allegations about the permit's legality.

In the meantime, the ruling could cost at least 39 miners at the strip operation their jobs. Another 180 miners at a related underground mine also might be affected, company officials have said.

"They were very disappointed," Magnum Coal engineer Mike Day said after telling workers of the ruling. "With the holidays coming soon, it was tough to deliver that message." Magnum is Jupiter Holdings' parent company.

Chambers ruled in favor of a request by the Ohio Valley Environmental Coalition and other groups that he block a U.S. Army Corps of Engineers permit for the mine.

That legal effort comes after Chambers ruled in March that the corps had not fully evaluated potential environmental damage before approving four other strip-mining permits owned by Massey Energy.

The judge later allowed three of the four Massey permits to continue dumping waste because they already had started operations. Massey is seeking a similar ruling for the fourth mine.

After Chambers' March ruling, environmental group lawyers added the corps' permit for the Callisto Mine to their lawsuit in U.S. District Court in Huntington.

In Thursday's ruling, Chambers explained that all environmental laws contain "numerous provisions that serve as checks on development, industry and other economic activities in order to ensure that environmental consequences are considered and valuable environmental resources are protected.

"While it is true that these statutes contemplate a certain amount of environmental degradation, they also mandate a certain amount of economic loss," Chambers wrote. "Economic gain is not to be pursued at all costs, and certainly not when it is contrary to the law."

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In West Virginia, mining companies are literally moving mountains to uncover valuable, low sulfur coal reserves. Mountaintop removal has become the dominant form of surface mining in the state. Coal operators are blasting off hilltops, and dumping leftover rock and dirt into nearby valleys. An untold amount of the state has been flattened, and hundreds of miles of streams have been buried. Find out more in this Special Report.
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