January 5, 2010
Hobet deal cuts stream impacts, preserves jobs
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CHARLESTON, W.Va. -- Patriot Coal will cut in half the length of streams buried by its Hobet 45 mountaintop-removal mine, but still produce nearly the same amount of coal as the company originally hoped, under a deal announced Tuesday by the Obama administration.

Company officials modified their mining plan under pressure from the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, which could have blocked Patriot from receiving a Clean Water Act permit for the operation.

The deal protects the jobs of more than 350 employees and avoids what could have been a huge battle with the United Mine Workers union and West Virginia's congressional delegation.

U.S. Sen. Robert C. Byrd, D-W.Va., praised all sides for working to resolve the dispute.

"By choosing cooperation over confrontation, Patriot and the EPA are creating a template for how coal operators and regulators can work together to protect mining jobs while also abiding by federal laws that protect the land, water and people from negative environmental impacts," Byrd said in a prepared statement.

But environmentalists criticized the deal, saying it still allows the Hobet 45 operation to bury more than three miles of streams.

Also, while the deal calls for increased monitoring of water quality impacts -- especially increased conductivity caused by mine runoff -- the agreement would not stop mining if the monitoring detects water pollution violations. Instead, the deal calls for the company to conduct increased "mitigation" projects that environmental groups and most scientists don't believe work.

"This is a political deal, not a scientific deal," said Joe Lovett, director of the Appalachian Center for the Economy and the Environment. "This is the administration's capitulation to West Virginia's congressional delegation."

In mountaintop removal, mine operators blast apart hilltops to uncover valuable, low-sulfur coal reserves. Leftover rock and dirt -- the stuff that used to be the mountains -- is dumped into nearby valleys, burying streams.

Statewide, surface mining accounts for about 41 percent of West Virginia's coal production, with mountaintop removal accounting for about 61 percent of that.

Hundreds of miles of Appalachian streams have been buried by waste rock and dirt from mining operations. EPA is concerned about scientific studies that have increasingly found significant water quality problems downstream from surface mines.

Agency officials said Tuesday that mining can "contaminate surface waters for hundreds of years" and that data from coalfield communities indicates mining is responsible for causing fish kills and contaminating fish and wildlife.

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Posted By: pipedreams57 (3:14am 01-06-2010)
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I wonder what lap dog in Byrds corner "prepared" that statement? What a joke! The real shame here is that the Corp. of Engineers got totally thrown out of the picture when it came to the mining permit issue. I say go ahead and throw out the EPA now too, and let anyone anywhere apply for a permit to pollute anything they want, so long as the last 350 mining jobs in WV can be preserved. Byrd probably shouted "this is for Teddy" when the deal was done,...just like he did when he voted to shove "Obamacare" down Americas throat! If you conect the dots in this area of mountain top removal, you go from Danville to Sharples, Blair Mountain, Buffalo Creek, Man, Rich Creek, Logan, Whitman, Holden, and dozens more areas. When and where will it ever stop? And where is the so called "development" that coal operators and politicians alike say is possible on such sites? I grew up at Blair and Logan and have saw every one of these sites. I didn't see any factories the last time I drove through Blair.

Posted By: Rational (5:33pm 01-05-2010)
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Yay! The environment is less of a priority when union jobs hang in the balance.

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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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