Kayford Mountain, USA — dozens march onto “reclaimed” site and plant trees

KAYFORD MTN., W.Va.–Forty-four peo­ple risked arrest yes­ter­day on Kay­ford Moun­tain by tres­pass­ing on a Patri­ot Coal Com­pa­ny “recla­ma­tion” site to plant trees. “The coal com­pa­nies sure as hell aren’t going to do any­thing about it – someone’s got to,” said Junior Walk, 20, of the Coal Riv­er Val­ley.

KAYFORD MTN., W.Va.–Forty-four peo­ple risked arrest yes­ter­day on Kay­ford Moun­tain by tres­pass­ing on a Patri­ot Coal Com­pa­ny “recla­ma­tion” site to plant trees. “The coal com­pa­nies sure as hell aren’t going to do any­thing about it – someone’s got to,” said Junior Walk, 20, of the Coal Riv­er Val­ley. Once all the trees were plant­ed and the activists were not under arrest, they walked back off with their shov­els.

“The coal indus­try does not attempt to return the land­scape to its pre­vi­ous bio­di­ver­si­ty – leav­ing it up to the cit­i­zens to reclaim it them­selves. Fix­ing the ruined land­scape will pro­vide long term jobs for those put out of work by the abo­li­tion of moun­tain­top removal” said John John­son, a forester and envi­ron­men­tal­ist.

Peo­ple in the front of the march includ­ed Ken Hech­ler, Lar­ry Gib­son and two Colom­bian union coal min­ers, Nation­al Pres­i­dent of Sin­tramiener­get­i­ca Raul Sosa and Jose Brito of the Sin­traCar­bon union. The Colom­bian Net­work Against Transna­tion­al Large-Scale Min­ing sent let­ter of sup­port to Appalachi­an Ris­ing. The two Colom­bians joined the march to the mine’s edge as part of a sol­i­dar­i­ty tour that includ­ed a meet­ing with the Mate­wan local UMWA and peo­ple work­ing to save Blair Moun­tain. Free trade agree­ments such as the North Amer­i­can Free Trade Agree­ment (NAFTA) and Unit­ed States-Colom­bia Trade Pro­mo­tion Agree­ment (CTPA) hurt work­ers, com­mu­ni­ties and envi­ron­ments both here and in Colom­bia.

Lead­ers in their unions have been assas­si­nat­ed by para­mil­i­taries, and the union says Alaba­ma-based Drum­mond Co. is behind them. The tour is the result of work by Ken­tuck­ians for the Com­mon­wealth, and pos­si­bly oth­ers.

Don’t miss the video from the day!

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Octo­ber 25, 2010

Hun­dreds ral­ly on Kay­ford Moun­tain; dozens march onto “reclaimed” site and plant trees

Con­tact:
Charles Sug­gs or Josh Grau­pera: 304.854.1937

NOTE: Infor­ma­tion, Pho­tographs, & Video will be updat­ed on www.climategroundzero.org. Ban­ners: Recla­ma­tion Fail; Over 500 Moun­tains Destroyed, Recla­ma­tion Jobs Now; EPA, We’re Doing Your Job

KAYFORD MTN., W.Va.–Forty-four peo­ple risked arrest yes­ter­day on Kay­ford Moun­tain by tres­pass­ing on a Patri­ot Coal Com­pa­ny “recla­ma­tion” site to plant trees. “The coal com­pa­nies sure as hell aren’t going to do any­thing about it – someone’s got to,” said Junior Walk, 20, of the Coal Riv­er Val­ley. Once all the trees were plant­ed and the activists were not under arrest, they walked back off with their shov­els.

“The coal indus­try does not attempt to return the land­scape to its pre­vi­ous bio­di­ver­si­ty – leav­ing it up to the cit­i­zens to reclaim it them­selves. Fix­ing the ruined land­scape will pro­vide long term jobs for those put out of work by the abo­li­tion of moun­tain­top removal” said John John­son, a forester and envi­ron­men­tal­ist.

The stan­dard recla­ma­tion prac­ticed by min­ing com­pa­nies is inad­e­quate, which involves regrad­ing high walls into gen­tle, high­ly-com­pact­ed slopes and seed­ing the rocky soil with grass. Some com­pa­nies plant trees but rarely return to tend them–most trees don’t sur­vive long. The extreme­ly diverse mixed mes­o­phyt­ic forests of Cen­tral Appalachia, which rely upon the micro-cli­mates cre­at­ed by the area’s fold­ed land, can­not regrow on reclaimed sur­face mines. Native plants like gin­seng require the steep north-fac­ing slopes of Appalachia that retain mois­ture, and will nev­er grow on the gen­tle slopes of a reclaimed strip mine.

The coal indus­try defends moun­tain­top removal by tout­ing the flat land of reclaimed mine sites as prime for devel­op­ment. Accord­ing to a recent report by the Nat­ur­al Resoures Defense Coun­cil, how­ev­er, “only about four per­cent of moun­tains in Ken­tucky and West Vir­ginia, where the vast major­i­ty of this min­ing is occur­ring, had any post-min­ing eco­nom­ic activ­i­ty.”

The day’s ral­ly began in the Stan­ley Heir’s Park, a small island of green sur­round­ed by 12,000 acres of moun­tain­top removal, much of which is in some state of recla­ma­tion.

Peo­ple in the front of the march includ­ed Ken Hech­ler, Lar­ry Gib­son and two Colom­bian union coal min­ers, Nation­al Pres­i­dent of Sin­tramiener­get­i­ca Raul Sosa and Jose Brito of the Sin­traCar­bon union. The Colom­bian Net­work Against Transna­tion­al Large-Scale Min­ing sent let­ter of sup­port to Appalachi­an Ris­ing. The two Colom­bians joined the march to the mine’s edge as part of a sol­i­dar­i­ty tour that includ­ed a meet­ing with the Mate­wan local UMWA and peo­ple work­ing to save Blair Moun­tain. Free trade agree­ments such as the North Amer­i­can Free Trade Agree­ment (NAFTA) and Unit­ed States-Colom­bia Trade Pro­mo­tion Agree­ment (CTPA) hurt work­ers, com­mu­ni­ties and envi­ron­ments both here and in Colom­bia.

Lead­ers in their unions have been assas­si­nat­ed by para­mil­i­taries, and the union says Alaba­ma-based Drum­mond Co. is behind them. The tour is the result of work by Ken­tuck­ians for the Com­mon­wealth, and pos­si­bly oth­ers.

“I am a 6th gen­er­a­tion West Vir­gin­ian from Mer­cer Coun­ty and I’m a grand­daugh­ter and great grand­daugh­ter of coal min­ers. And they’d be mad about moun­tain­top removal,” Wendy John­ston said. “The bat­tle of Blair Moun­tain lives on in my and my fathers’ spir­it.”

The ral­ly and action comes on the heels of the EPA’s rec­om­men­da­tion to veto the Spruce No. 1 mine’s per­mit and Appalachia Ris­ing, the largest nation­al gath­er­ing of peo­ple in oppo­si­tion to moun­tain­top removal coal min­ing to date. Appalachia Ris­ing cul­mi­nat­ed with a march to the White House of over 2,000 peo­ple and 114 arrests for non-vio­lent civ­il dis­obe­di­ence at the White House, PNC Bank, Depart­ment of Inte­ri­or and Army Corps of Engi­neers.

Ken Hech­ler, a long-serv­ing West Vir­ginia states­man said at the ral­ly, “I may be 96 but there’s a fire in my bel­ly. I’m here to help save these beau­ti­ful moun­tains of West Vir­ginia and put peo­ple back to work doing use­ful things.” Ken Hech­ler has been a vocal oppo­nent of moun­tain­top removal since the ear­ly 1970’s.