Demolishing Appalachia
Contributed photo
A “Coal Country” production crew interviews Kathy Selvedge, center, at her Wise County home.
A Wise County, Va., woman is among the stars of a controversial film on mountaintop removal mining that premieres today in Charleston, W.Va.
The film, “Coal Country,” looks at the negative effects of surface coal mining on Appalachian residents and communities in four states. Kathy Selvage, a Wise County activist opposed to mining practices used in the region, is among those featured in the documentary.
“I believe our hope is it brings international exposure to that and also that it furthers a conversation about where we go in energy policy in this country,” Selvage said of the film. “I hope it opens people’s minds to the problems that are the side effects of mountaintop removal coal mining. I hope it opens people’s hearts to the suffering that goes on in communities where this mining occurs right where people live.”
After the premiere in Charleston, more screenings are planned at film festivals and in major cities such as New York and Los Angeles, said the film’s executive producer, Mari-Lynn Evans. The 90-minute movie also will be shown in thousands of smaller screenings around the country – including Bristol and Wise County, Va. – before it begins airing on public television.
Evans said she has worked to tell both sides of the story.
Barbara Altizer, executive director of the Eastern Coal Council, offered the same response she said she has given regarding other coal-related films in recent years: Viewer beware.
Evans, a West Virginia native, said she sought to put a face on those who are negatively affected by mining, but also on the coal industry.
“At the point we started working on this film four years ago, I had no idea it was going to come out in the most contentious, critical time in the history of the coalfields, but it has,” Evans said. “People need to realize what these coalfield residents are saying, and people also need to listen to these miners who say we
have three options: We work for coal; we work for a fast-food restaurant; or we leave the state. Because it’s a mono-economy, and that mono-economy has enslaved this culture of people.”
Altizer said that after looking at the film’s Web site she doesn’t think it really shows both sides of the story.
She said people need to look at the whole process of mining and reclamation – not just the way a site looks at a point in time – and consider that extensive state and federal regulations govern the process. She estimates that only 1 percent of the region’s population has been seriously affected in a negative way by surface mining.
“Anything you build you’ve got to mess up,” Altizer said, comparing a surface mine to a house under construction.
“It [mining] has provided areas for home sites, airports, shopping strips, golf courses … there’s lots of positive things out of it, and you just never ever get the opportunity to read about that. And when people see this movie, they’re going to be less informed about our industry.”
Altizer also said that in Southwest Virginia, where coal severance tax revenue has been used for two decades to diversify the economy, real development has taken place in industries other than coal, much of it on land flattened by mining.
“I hope you … will realize they’ve shown what it looks like at the beginning, and yes it’s not very attractive, but you can realize that after it’s been reclaimed there are a lot of beneficial uses and yes it can be attractive again,” Altizer said.
Evans said a divide has come to the mountains where coal is mined, between those who want more than anything to preserve their land and those who work for the coal industry to put food on the table.
“My brother is a coal miner. My sister is a rabid environmentalist,” Evans said. “This issue is so volatile, it really is brother against brother.”
She compares the situation to a 1921 march by West Virginia coal miners demanding better working and living conditions – a protest that turned deadly after law enforcement acted against the marchers.
“ ‘People that don’t understand the past are condemned to repeat it,’ is just a phrase that keeps coming through my mind,” she said.
“Why are these people [in the Appalachian region] the poorest in the United States of America when they are living on land that is the richest in the United States of America? It seems obvious from that alone that there is a problem. ... We’ve got to figure out how Appalachia is going to flourish in a future that does not involve coal.”
Like Evans, Selvage said she doesn’t have all the answers, but she’d like to see coal subsidies diverted to green energy projects and elected leaders in Richmond and Washington working on a solution that considers the region’s economic needs along with its environmental needs.
There is a need for technology-related jobs, she said, so the sons and daughters of the coalfields have a reason to return home after college, and so America can find the power it needs without destroying its mountains.
People here don’t need charity, Selvage said, they need empowerment and the means to earn a living while protecting the land they’ve cherished for generations.
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Reader Reactions
dad, you and tmullins sure have the inside scoop on a lot of conspiracies. You’ve discovered that coal companies go bankrupt to avoid paying their creditors. Boy that sure doesn’t happen in any other industry. You’d never catch an auto manufacturer, bank, wall street broker, or insurance company going bankrupt. Seems to be just coal companies, wonder why that is.
tmullins, I’ve tried to encourage you to move, and you’ve obviously rejected that idea. So if these things bother you so much don’t look.
Some coal companys file Pre-emptive Bankruptizes when they face large fines or when someone gets hurt to aviod workmans comp.
There are many resons they file bankruptize it has been going on for years. Often a large company palns to buy one out and they file bankruptize to get rid of debt so they can cash out nig time in the sale.
I’ve had a fifty year lesson on the impact of strip mining and mountaintop removal, I applaud Southern Company for their realization of the impact to the environment but over the past fifty years, there’s been very little concern for the environment. I never could understand how when the coal was booming, and the money was flowing why coal companies were filing for bankruptcy. Now it’s all too clear looking at the moonscape and water that used to be Wise County.
http://www.wisecountyissues.com/?p=138
tmullins you should look at this site and learn what you need to make a better point. The truth will sound better with those who you dont agree with.
http://www.southerncompany.com/commonsense/
kona, all this time the power companies have been buying coal, mining coal, and building power plants, and all they had to do was put up a windmill. It’s too bad you aren’t in the energy business. You need to quit the herb, so you can pass the OSHA required drug test and see if AEP, Dominion, or some other energy producer could use you.
Windmills have been around hundreds of years. There is a reliability problem and a transmission problem. T. Boone Pickens alluded to that just the other day. At times there is no wind. Today is a good example. At some point in the future it might be feasible, but that’s in the future.
Also, people don’t want them either. The Kennedys fought a planned windmill project in Nantucket Sound. They could see it from their compound. It’s the old we need it, but not in my back yard mentality.
Anyway, I must commend you for a vivid imagination. By the way is that imagination natural or is helped along a little?
HA! That’s a bunch of boogeldyslotch…
HA HA, you are a funny one Pvt.
Keep sendin’ your cash to OPEC, dummy.
Mr Mullins;
If it weren’t for the coal industry, Pound wouldn’t even exist today. Allthe roads built around the area were put there so you could get the H out- and you just keep on goin’ and complainin’ about thye ills caused decades ago.
Do you think Cap & Trade is going to make the thriving metropolis of Pound a center of prosperity? Is any one moving INTO Pound these days?
No, and NO!
My…
Are you ladies still trying to argue your failed points?
mullins has you well in hand with his posted facts vs your greed-based uneducated opinions. But there’s always more to add.
Being Republicans, the only factor you’re considering is money and you’re wrong there too. You look like a bunch of line-dancers the way you side step and boot scoot around the environmental devastation you cause.
commonsenslessness….
Let me explain since your limited honesty and intellect seem to have you all discombobulated.
You said “how many windmills”.
LOLOLOLOLOLOL
I smoke pot and you’re the dummy. How does that work? :D
A combination of wind, solar, bio-diesel, geo-thermal etc. is the answer. Not your Jr. High School vision of a continent covered in windmills.
LOL, just LOL.
Now pay attention, stooges.
We have stopped over 100 coal plants and shut them down. The country wants it that way and that’s the way it will be.
Last year, for the first time, the wind industry created more new jobs than coal mining, and 42% of all new power-producing capacity last year came from wind.
LINK
Get with the program, children. The change is coming and your time would be better spent building your personal knowledge of alternative energy than whining on a web site.
Oh, please make a sizable donation to the Sierra Club first chance you get. They’re saving your families lives.
Thanx.
tmullins, I believe your best bet is to catch the next ride out of there. How can you stay in a place that’s so bad?
By the way you seem to be saying that mining caused Pound to deteriate. So had there been no mining in the Pound area it would have been a thriving town. How is that? And how is it mining’s fault it isn’t?
Have you ever been to Pikeville KY? There’s all kinds of mining going on in that area, including mountaintop mining, and Pikeville is a busy and bustling community. I think you might quite possibly look to the leadership of Wise County rather than blaming coal mining for the problems there. After all, and I’m not endorsing the Republicans, hasn’t Wise County been ran by the democratic party since time began.
The coal, the mountains, the water is gone in Pound, there are buildings either boarded up or caving in on themselves on main street. Can’t remember all those fast food places going to Wise and Norton causing our environment turning into a toxic moonscape. Pound is the perfect lesson of what the prosperity of mountaintop removal and strip mining a community looks like when it all dries up.
http://www.wisecountyissues.com/?p=138
I can remember enjoying the dam for boating, fishing, swimming. Now it’s turned into an e-coli infested sewer.


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