More Arrests on Coal River Valley as Actions Against Mountaintop Removal and Coal Sludge Dams Continue

Non-vio­lent Civ­il Dis­obe­di­ence in Coal Riv­er Val­ley, WV: Sev­en­teen Arrest­ed in Three Sep­a­rate Actions

Non-vio­lent Civ­il Dis­obe­di­ence in Coal Riv­er Val­ley, WV: Sev­en­teen Arrest­ed in Three Sep­a­rate Actions

May 23, 2009: Coal Riv­er Val­ley, WV More than sev­en­ty-five res­i­dents of the Coal Riv­er Val­ley and mem­bers of a coali­tion that includes Moun­tain Jus­tice and Cli­mate Ground Zero pick­et­ed the entrance to Massey Ener­gy’s Mar­fork min­ing com­plex today at noon. Sev­en peo­ple were arrest­ed. The actions were in protest of the com­pa­ny’s plans to blast 100 feet away from the Brushy Fork coal sludge impound­ment.

The demon­stra­tion began with a prayer and ser­mon by Bob “Sage” Rus­so of Chris­tians for the Moun­tains. Ref­er­enc­ing the Ser­mon on the Mount, he called upon cit­i­zens to be stew­ards of the Earth and to move towards sus­tain­able, sta­ble jobs.

Pro­tes­tors stood in front of the gates of the mine facil­i­ty with signs includ­ing “7 bil­lion spilled, 998 killed.”

“Passers­by on Route 3 were over­whelm­ing sup­port­ive with honks, waves, and thumbs up signs,” Rock Creek (Raleigh Coun­ty) res­i­dent Julia Sendor said.

Dur­ing the protest, sev­en peo­ple approached the entrance to the dam facil­i­ty and the Whitesville detach­ment of the West Vir­ginia State Police asked them to leave. When the sev­en refused, the State Police arrest­ed them. Dis­patch­ers say the activists were sent to the South­ern Region­al Jail near Beck­ley, but that infor­ma­tion has not been con­firmed. Bail was report­ed­ly set at $2,000 per per­son.

After the arrests, for­mer U.S. Con­gress­man Ken Hech­ler, a long­time oppo­nent of strip min­ing, gave a speech. He under­scored the respon­si­bil­i­ty of cit­i­zens to safe­guard their free­doms and stand up for their rights.

The protest came just hours after activists car­ried out two non-vio­lent direct actions to protest moun­tain­top removal and coal sludge impound­ments.

This morn­ing, at the Mar­fork facil­i­ty, two peo­ple wear­ing haz­mat suits and res­pi­ra­tors were arrest­ed after boat­ing onto the Brushy Fork impound­ment and float­ing a ban­ner that read, “No More Tox­ic Sludge.” State Police charged the activists with lit­ter­ing and mis­de­meanor tres­pass and trans­port­ed them to the South­ern Region­al Jail. Their bail has been set at $2,000.

At anoth­er action, six activists hung a “Nev­er Again” ban­ner and chained them­selves to a mas­sive dump truck on a Patri­ot Coal-owned moun­tain­top removal mine on Kay­ford Moun­tain. State Police arrived on site to find three peo­ple chained to the main axle of the truck and three oth­ers chained out­side the truck­’s cab. The police removed the six activists, who, along with two oth­ers sup­port­ing them, were trans­port­ed to the Madi­son Coun­ty Cour­t­house, where they were report­ed­ly processed and released.

The tox­ic lake at Brushy Fork dam sits atop a hon­ey­comb of aban­doned under­ground mines. Massey Ener­gy’s own fil­ings with the state Depart­ment of Envi­ron­men­tal Pro­tec­tion project a min­i­mum death toll of 998 should the sev­en-bil­lion-gal­lon dam break. Flood­wa­ters would reach 38.78 feet in height in the town of Pey­tona, 26.61 miles down­stream, with­in three hours and fif­teen min­utes of break­age.

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May 26, 2009: BECKLEY, W.Va. — Sev­en­teen moun­tain­top removal activists had no choice but to enforce the laws since all admin­is­tra­tive reme­dies have been exhaust­ed, said some of the activists and sup­port­ers at a press con­fer­ence today. The four still-jailed activists were released on their own recog­ni­zance by Judge Burn­side short­ly after the press con­fer­ence, which was held on the Raleigh Coun­ty Cour­t­house steps.

“I’ve lived in West Vir­ginia most of my life. I’m sick and tired of big busi­ness and the cor­rupt gov­ern­ment telling us what to do,” began Sid Moye of Mer­cer Coun­ty, who par­tic­i­pat­ed in the Pick­et at Pet­tus. “They come in and they can take our land, they can ruin our water and they can take our resources. It’s not right and some­body has to do some­thing about it so we do the lit­tle things that we can.”

Eric Blevins, also arrest­ed in the Pet­tus action, said, “I asked the offi­cer arrest­ing me if Massey is going to be allowed to blast near the dam and he did­n’t want to talk about it. I asked him, does­n’t he have a respon­si­bil­i­ty to enforce the law, and he said ‘Not those laws.’ ”

“We locked down on the Kay­ford moun­tain­top removal site with mud from Min­go Coun­ty on our boots,” Ash­lee Hen­der­son said in a state­ment from the Kay­ford 8, “After we were arrest­ed we had the dust remains from Kay­ford Moun­tain added to that mud.”

“Just because a min­ing per­mit is applied for,” Deb­bie Jar­rell of Rock Creek, Raleigh Coun­ty asked the crowd, “Is there a law that states that it has to be grant­ed? If there’s a clean­er way to devel­op ener­gy, such as the Coal Riv­er Wind Project, should we not take advan­tage of it?”

Matt Louis-Rosen­berg point­ed out the absur­di­ty of the lit­ter­ing charges for the two indi­vid­u­als on the Brushy Fork Dam and the $2,000 bail for each of the pro­test­ers. He con­trast­ed the bail rate with the $1,800 fine Massey paid in 1999, when 14.5 miles of the Coal Riv­er were black­ened with slur­ry and the $15,000 A & G Coal paid for the death of three year old Jere­my David­son out­side of Appalachia, Vir­ginia in 2004.

“It was extreme­ly unjust that the mag­is­trate ille­gal­ly post­ed such a high bail, when our max­i­mum fine was only one hun­dred dol­lars,” said Lau­ra Steeple­ton of the Pet­tus 7, who was released this after­noon. “He jus­ti­fied his state­ment by telling us that we had no ties to the area. As a human being and a cit­i­zen of this coun­try I do not only have a tie to this area, but a respon­si­bil­i­ty to ensure secu­ri­ty for these moun­tains and the safe­ty for the peo­ple of this beau­ti­ful com­mu­ni­ty.”