Coal Tattoo

Coal miners rally in Washington, D.C.

Coal mining supporters from the Appalachian states hold a rally near the Capitol in Washington, Wednesday, Sept. 15, 2010. (AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite)

Here’s an Associated Press report from Washington, D.C.:

By Frederic J. Frommer

WASHINGTON (AP) — Hundreds of coal miners rallied on Capitol Hill Wednesday against the Obama administration’s attempts to rein in mountaintop removal mining, accusing the Environmental Protection Agency of trying to wipe out the coal industry.

“This administration is trying to shut down coal and fire all of you,” claimed Rep. Hal Rogers, R-Ky., adding that the EPA was practicing “strangulation by regulation.”

The industry-backed group Faces of Coal paid for most of the travel and lodging expenses for the coal miners, who came from West Virginia, Virginia, Kentucky, Pennsylvania and Ohio. Speakers included politicians from both parties and country music singer Stella Parton. A rival rally was planned later in the day by opponents of mountaintop removal, featuring country music performer Big Kenny.

In mountaintop removal mining, forests are clear-cut, explosives blast apart the rock, and machines scoop out the exposed coal. The earth left behind is dumped into valleys, covering intermittent streams. Coal operators say it’s the most efficient way to reach some reserves, and that it supports tens of thousands of jobs and provides coal for electric power plants across much of the South and East. But opponents say it is destroying land and harming water quality.

From left, West Virginia Gov. Joe Manchin, Sen. Mark Warner, D-Va., and Sen. Jim Webb, D-Va., attend a rally with coal mining supporters from the Appalachian states near the Capitol in Washington, Wednesday, Sept. 15, 2010. (AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite)

The coal industry has filed a lawsuit against the EPA’s new policy which tightened water quality standards for valley fills at surface coal mines in West Virginia, Kentucky, Pennsylvania, Ohio, Virginia and Tennessee. EPA Administrator Lisa Jackson has said the goal is a standard so strict that few, if any, permits would be issued for valley fills.

Ralliers wore blue Faces of Coal T-shirts, and some sported hard hats. They hoisted signs that said, “Coal Keeps the Lights on,” and “Coal Miners ‘Dig’ Their Jobs.”

When an opening prayer was given, it included thanks to God for natural resources such as coal.

“They’re trying to take our jobs,” yelled Haven King, a 65-year-old retired coal miner from Hazard, Ky. “We have to stand up.”

West Virginia Gov. Joe Manchin, a Democrat, said that the EPA is stopping jobs.

“West Virginia will fight back and every coal state must fight back,” he said.

The state’s senior senator, Democrat Jay Rockefeller, said that Jackson “doesn’t understand the sensitivities economically of what unemployment means. Her job is relatively simple: clean everything up, keep it clean, don’t do anything to disturb perfection. Well, you can’t do coal and do that at the same time. God didn’t make coal to be an easy thing to work with.”

The EPA did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Next January, the EPA plans to start regulating greenhouse gas emissions that are blamed for global warming, another cause of alarm for the coal miners. Rockefeller has sponsored legislation to suspend that for two years.

Sen. Jim Webb, D-Va., urged support for Rockefeller’s measure.

“We are not going to let the EPA regulate coal out of business,” he said.

Although the rally was billed as bipartisan and a number of Democrats spoke, there were some partisan comments, especially from Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky. He said that this administration and current Congress are the most anti-coal in history.

“Send them a message on November 2,” he yelled to cheers.