News
Mountain Monday: Alliance for Appalachia Spotlight
Monday, January 26th, 2009
You may not know this, but iLovemountains.org is managed and funded not by a single organization, but by a coalition of groups from across Appalachia who work everyday at the grassroots on environmental issues such as mountaintop removal.
We will be taking one Monday each month to spotlight one of the amazing organizations that makes up the Alliance for Appalachia.
This month’s featured organization is the Ohio Valley Environmental Coalition. OVEC was formed in 1987 and since then has become a vital voice for environmental justice in the coalfields of West Virginia. Based in Huntington, WV, OVEC organizes around numerous environmental issues pertinent to the region including mountaintop removal mining, coal slurry impoundments and contaminated water, and the need for clean, alternative energy and green jobs.
OVEC first learned of mountaintop removal in 1997, when directly-impacted residents came to us to tell us about the issue and ask for our help. OVEC organized and hosted the first-ever public forum on mountaintop removal, and has been organizing in the West Virginia coalfields since then. The Coalition works with state, national and international media* to raise awareness about and ultimately hopes to end this extremely damaging form of coal mining. So far, OVEC has held back 90 valley fill permits at proposed mountaintop removal operations through litigation. Besides a host of newspaper and magazine articles, our work has been featured in music, books and films.
OVEC and its sister group, Coal River Mountain Watch, collaborate on the Sludge Safety Project (SSP), which works to protect clean water and promote human health and safety near coal waste storage sites. The recent coal ash disaster in Tennessee underscores how dirty and deadly the rear-end of the coal-use cycle is. SSP’s work examines and exposes the dirty and deadly front-end of that cycle. We encourage everyone reading this blog to learn more about coal slurry impoundments and underground coal slurry injection by exploring the SSP website and, if possible, attending our Jan. 31 SSP Legislative Kick-Off event–details here.
In addition, you can learn more about SSP volunteers work by listening to this West Virginia Public Radio news story.
OVEC’s work also focuses on solutions to the energy crisis. We’re a founding member of CLEAN , a grassroots collaboration of state and local organizations. CLEAN, a project of the Civil Society Institute, seeks policies that will protect our environment, cease and reverse global warming, disentangle the U.S. from unstable regions of the world, and create a new energy economy that promises jobs and a sustainable and equitable economic prosperity.
To address a root cause of all the issues OVEC has worked on, we lead the West Virginia Citizens for Clean Elections with the West Virginia Citizen Action Group
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* Newspapers that have quoted our members or staff or used our photos
E-magazine, O (Oprah Winfrey’s magazine), and dozens more.
Thanks to Vivian Stockman of OVEC for helping put together this post. Check back next week for more news from the mountains, a new edition of Better Know a CWPA Sponsor & Target, and more!