Share this page

40,776 people have already pledged to help end mountaintop removal.
Add your voice!





Tell me more


Write to Congress
Watch America's Most Endangered Mountain Videos
What's My Connection?
Bloggers Challenge
Go Tell It on the Mountain
The High Cost of Coal
Please Donate

 
 
 
    Follow us on Twitter

    Ragland, WV

    Ragland

    Friday, September 1st, 2006

    Penny Loeb is a distinguished author and the web designer for http://www.wvcoalfield.com , who has generously allowed her articles to be reprinted here.

    Mining is nothing new for the residents of Ragland. The mountains around this community between Logan and Delbarton have been mined in some fashion since the 1930s. Many of the men in the community spent their working lives deep underground in tunnels stretching half a dozen miles.

    Many Ragland residents don’t oppose the mines, underground or mountaintop. But they have seen so much damage, that they are angry-and frustrated that politicians and public officials fail to help them.

    Ragland probably has more mine-related problems concentrated in a small area than many communities. With mines snaking under the community, it is virtually impossible to have a well that isn’t contaminated. So Ragland finally got a public water system about three years ago. But that system also draws its water from the deep mines. Those mines, often half a century old, are filled with discarded oil, asbestos, human waste and other potentially toxic chemicals. The public water is treated. But tests aren’t required for all contaminants in the mines. The public water to some people’s houses, including James Bailey’s, still has orange water and black residue. The Baileys drink only bottled water.

    Since Ragland squeezes between the mountains and the river, most houses have no room for adequate septic systems. Many pour raw sewage directly into the river. Yet, government officials can’t find the money to extend the public sewer system to Ragland. “They built a flood wall for $275 million in Williamson. But we can’t even have water,” says one Ragland resident.

    What concerns many Ragland residents the most is the slag dam near the top of the mountains. It stretches nearly three football fields across and is twice as long. Originally it was about 140 feet deep. But waste coal covers the bottom, so the water depth is considerably less. The watery dump was used for nearly 30 years until it reached capacity a few years ago. Since the dam sits nearly a mile off the road and reachable only on four wheelers and steep roads, those just passing through wouldn’t know it exists. But for the Ragland residents, it lies above the community, a dark watery reminder of the tragedy at Buffalo Creek. The community has been evacuated at least once because of concerns that dam would break. People who have worked around these kinds of dams find this one of the most worrisome. They believe it was improperly constructed, though improvements were made more recently.

    Anyone driving to Ragland should proceed slowly. The overweight trucks are running several loads of coal a week out of the preparation plant to the railroad. Roads already weakened by winter weather are developing treacherous craters.

    As if bad water, lack of public sewers, a looming lake and pot-holed roads weren’t enough. Soon a White Flame Energy mountaintop mine will move in at the end of one hollow.

    One of the two valley fills on the Ragland side of the mine will come down this valley. The hillside on the left is built from waste coal that was dumped there in the 1980s and covered with a thin layer of soil. Patches of usable coal have risen to the surface of the hill. The coal is creating acid runoff that has turned the stream orange. James Bailey, whose house is closest to the valley fills, is worried that the hillside isn’t stable enough for the mine coming behind it.

    Bailey and others have been notified that they are eligible for pre-blast surveys. However, some people who appear to live within half a mile (the required distance for notification) haven’t been notified. “They can blast within 300 feet of your home,” one resident said. “People don’t believe that.”

    2 Responses to “Ragland”

    1. Billy Bob Says:

      If you didnt want us there, you shouldnt have been so damned greedy when they offered you the money for the land. They got that land from the people who live there. Dont point fingers at the mining industry, point them at your neighbor and ask him for your cut. I work on a strip very near White Flame, and i can tell you we are VERY careful what we put in the fills. We are very careful not to allow rocks to go over the hill in the wrong places, and when we’re done we reclaim areas not with loose rock as your site suggests, we use dirt. In fact when we come across a large amount of dirt we stockpile it for use in reclamation. And most of all we are you. We work to support our families. We work to keep our homes, and you idiots want us out of a job. Most of your neighbors work either at one of our jobs or a job nearby. Without surface mining ragland west virginia would have dried up and died years ago. You might want to think real hard about that before you start putting families out of work and making them lose their homes. You sold the land, I didnt hear you complaining then. Have a great day. Thanks for making people afraid they will lose their jobs everyday because of idiots like you with an internet connection. Better yet, offer me a job that pays 22 dollars an hour and I’ll gladly park my equipment for you. Give me a sustainable job that pays that much and we’ll be glad not to go to that place. Bet I wont ever hear from ya on that one.

    2. good quality Says:

      this is my favorite!

    Leave a Reply

       

    Share this page

    Appalachian Citizens Law Center  •   Appalachian Voices  •   Appalshop  •   Coal River Mountain Watch  •   Heartwood  •  Keeper of the Mountains

    Kentuckians for the Commonwealth  •   MACED  •   Ohio Valley Environmental Coalition  •   Statewide Organizing for Community eMpowerment

    Sierra Club Environmental Justice  •   Southern Appalachian Mountain Stewards  •   SouthWings  •   West Virginia Highlands Conservancy

    Buy stickers, shirts, hats, and more...

    Site produced by Appalachian Voices 191 Howard St, Boone, NC 28607 ~ 1-877-APP-VOICE (277-8642) ~ ilm-webmaster@ilovemountains.org
    HOME | LEARN MORE | MULTIMEDIA | LATEST NEWS | PRESS | BLOGGERS | TAKE ACTION | PRIVACY POLICY | DONATE