

SUBSCRIBE TO OUR FREE NEWSLETTER
Daily news & progressive opinion—funded by the people, not the corporations—delivered straight to your inbox.
5
#000000
#FFFFFF
To donate by check, phone, or other method, see our More Ways to Give page.


Daily news & progressive opinion—funded by the people, not the corporations—delivered straight to your inbox.
A 42-year-old coal miner in southern Illinois recently asked me a question I couldn't answer: Who took Van Jones' job in the Obama administration as the green jobs administrator?
Anxious to find a job in another field in a depressed town with no industry (but cross-country truck driving opportunities), my coal miner friend recognized that Van Jones understood, as a I wrote a year ago, that strip-mining operations have blindsided any progress for sustainable or diversified economic development and clean energy jobs in coal mining regions from Appalachia to Alaska.
Van Jones, alone in Washington, had included coal miners in his green jobs crusade.
Love mountains and miners? Want to end mountaintop removal strip-mining and get floundering labor, greens and jobs-scared coal-rich state Democrats at the same table?
It's time to campaign for a joint public/private Coalfields Regeneration Fund.
Or, as my coal miner friend in southern Illinois badgered me, if the federal and state governments can provide billions of dollars in subsidies for multinational coal corporations during record years of profits, why can't we establish a specific fund to assist impoverished coalfield communities into clean industries?
This coal miner, like many I have interviewed over the past decade, can't wait to find another job. Just one problem: While the rest of the nation is booming in green jobs development, coalfield communities have been left behind and stuck in the annual ritual of fighting over more Big Coal mines.
When are the visionary venture capitalists--from the billion-dollar firms of tireless clean energy campaigners like Bobby Kennedy, Jr and Al Gore and Google, among others--going to come to the coalfields?
President Obama called for the end of subsidies to the oil industries in his State of the Union last January. Why can't we end subsides to the coal industry and shift those monies into real investment for clean energy manufacturing, reforestation and energy efficiency programs in besieged coalfield regions?
To be clear: As the beloved anti-mountaintop removal godmother Judy Bonds told me many times, it's not the role of besieged coalfield citizens to provide new jobs to coal miners in order to stop mountaintop removal mining. Here's the truth: Mountaintop removal and reckless strip-mining operations that forcibly displace and terrorize American citizens with the blasting fallout, contaminate waterways, and obliterate our nation's natural heritage are criminal and should be abolished immediately.
Sure, protesting mountaintop removing mining in central Appalachia is still important--lord knows I've covered every direct action over the past several years. And lobbying efforts in Washington, DC and the coalfields state capitals for new strip-mining laws remain indispensable--devastating strip-mining operations are expanding in Alaska, Alabama, Mississippi, Illinois, Montana and in nearly 20 other states, not just central Appalachia.
But mountaintop removal is NOT a new phenomenon, as is often misconstrued, and the truth is that the EPA has gone as far as it can in "regulating" this nearly half-century abomination. Nor do any meaningful legislative efforts to halt mountaintop removal mining have any chance of passing in our current Republican-controlled US House of Representatives. (The first federal bill to end strip-mining was introduced by my Illinois Senator Everett Dirksen in 1940!)
In 1969, after serving 46 years as a coal miner, Elias Bailey stood in the state capitol in Charleston, West Virginia to testify before a hearing on the ravages of strip-mining. Stricken by black lung disease, Bailey declared: "I'm just a broke down miner now," whose tiny cattle farm and streams had been destroyed by strippers. Here's a clip of Bailey's lobbying efforts in the 1969 film, Before the Mountain Was Moved:
Bailey's poignant plea in West Virginia in 1969 makes me feel like we're stuck in a time warp--protesting the same outlaw ways of Big Coal, educating uninformed outsiders and exposing Big Coal-bankrolled politicians.
We need to move on. We need to get one step beyond "beyond coal" and not only set out a roadmap for a just transition to clean energy, but badger our friends, as the coal miner in southern Illinois chided me, in investing in the clean energy jobs in the coalfields.
We need to find investors to get Judy Bonds' Coal River Mountain Watch and Bob Kincaid's Head-On Radio operations off the grid in the coalfields of West Virginia.
We need to listen to brilliant coal country analysts like Rory McIlmoil, from Downstream Strategies in West Virginia--and fund their studies on the true costs of a declining coal industry in every state.
Or, as the heroic Kristin Tracz of Appalachian Transitions notes: Green jobs are not just for blue states.
The good news: This process has already started. In a breakthrough effort last month, former coal miners installed 46 solar panels in the heart of West Virginia coalfields, thanks to the determined work of the JOBS Project, which will launch the first wind farm later this month.
If we had a JOBS Project in every coalfield community, we could actually transition from strip-mining in a few years--and not just protest about it.
Love mountains and miners?
Show me the money. Campaign for a Coalfields Regeneration Fund.
Dear Common Dreams reader, It’s been nearly 30 years since I co-founded Common Dreams with my late wife, Lina Newhouser. We had the radical notion that journalism should serve the public good, not corporate profits. It was clear to us from the outset what it would take to build such a project. No paid advertisements. No corporate sponsors. No millionaire publisher telling us what to think or do. Many people said we wouldn't last a year, but we proved those doubters wrong. Together with a tremendous team of journalists and dedicated staff, we built an independent media outlet free from the constraints of profits and corporate control. Our mission has always been simple: To inform. To inspire. To ignite change for the common good. Building Common Dreams was not easy. Our survival was never guaranteed. When you take on the most powerful forces—Wall Street greed, fossil fuel industry destruction, Big Tech lobbyists, and uber-rich oligarchs who have spent billions upon billions rigging the economy and democracy in their favor—the only bulwark you have is supporters who believe in your work. But here’s the urgent message from me today. It's never been this bad out there. And it's never been this hard to keep us going. At the very moment Common Dreams is most needed, the threats we face are intensifying. We need your support now more than ever. We don't accept corporate advertising and never will. We don't have a paywall because we don't think people should be blocked from critical news based on their ability to pay. Everything we do is funded by the donations of readers like you. When everyone does the little they can afford, we are strong. But if that support retreats or dries up, so do we. Will you donate now to make sure Common Dreams not only survives but thrives? —Craig Brown, Co-founder |
A 42-year-old coal miner in southern Illinois recently asked me a question I couldn't answer: Who took Van Jones' job in the Obama administration as the green jobs administrator?
Anxious to find a job in another field in a depressed town with no industry (but cross-country truck driving opportunities), my coal miner friend recognized that Van Jones understood, as a I wrote a year ago, that strip-mining operations have blindsided any progress for sustainable or diversified economic development and clean energy jobs in coal mining regions from Appalachia to Alaska.
Van Jones, alone in Washington, had included coal miners in his green jobs crusade.
Love mountains and miners? Want to end mountaintop removal strip-mining and get floundering labor, greens and jobs-scared coal-rich state Democrats at the same table?
It's time to campaign for a joint public/private Coalfields Regeneration Fund.
Or, as my coal miner friend in southern Illinois badgered me, if the federal and state governments can provide billions of dollars in subsidies for multinational coal corporations during record years of profits, why can't we establish a specific fund to assist impoverished coalfield communities into clean industries?
This coal miner, like many I have interviewed over the past decade, can't wait to find another job. Just one problem: While the rest of the nation is booming in green jobs development, coalfield communities have been left behind and stuck in the annual ritual of fighting over more Big Coal mines.
When are the visionary venture capitalists--from the billion-dollar firms of tireless clean energy campaigners like Bobby Kennedy, Jr and Al Gore and Google, among others--going to come to the coalfields?
President Obama called for the end of subsidies to the oil industries in his State of the Union last January. Why can't we end subsides to the coal industry and shift those monies into real investment for clean energy manufacturing, reforestation and energy efficiency programs in besieged coalfield regions?
To be clear: As the beloved anti-mountaintop removal godmother Judy Bonds told me many times, it's not the role of besieged coalfield citizens to provide new jobs to coal miners in order to stop mountaintop removal mining. Here's the truth: Mountaintop removal and reckless strip-mining operations that forcibly displace and terrorize American citizens with the blasting fallout, contaminate waterways, and obliterate our nation's natural heritage are criminal and should be abolished immediately.
Sure, protesting mountaintop removing mining in central Appalachia is still important--lord knows I've covered every direct action over the past several years. And lobbying efforts in Washington, DC and the coalfields state capitals for new strip-mining laws remain indispensable--devastating strip-mining operations are expanding in Alaska, Alabama, Mississippi, Illinois, Montana and in nearly 20 other states, not just central Appalachia.
But mountaintop removal is NOT a new phenomenon, as is often misconstrued, and the truth is that the EPA has gone as far as it can in "regulating" this nearly half-century abomination. Nor do any meaningful legislative efforts to halt mountaintop removal mining have any chance of passing in our current Republican-controlled US House of Representatives. (The first federal bill to end strip-mining was introduced by my Illinois Senator Everett Dirksen in 1940!)
In 1969, after serving 46 years as a coal miner, Elias Bailey stood in the state capitol in Charleston, West Virginia to testify before a hearing on the ravages of strip-mining. Stricken by black lung disease, Bailey declared: "I'm just a broke down miner now," whose tiny cattle farm and streams had been destroyed by strippers. Here's a clip of Bailey's lobbying efforts in the 1969 film, Before the Mountain Was Moved:
Bailey's poignant plea in West Virginia in 1969 makes me feel like we're stuck in a time warp--protesting the same outlaw ways of Big Coal, educating uninformed outsiders and exposing Big Coal-bankrolled politicians.
We need to move on. We need to get one step beyond "beyond coal" and not only set out a roadmap for a just transition to clean energy, but badger our friends, as the coal miner in southern Illinois chided me, in investing in the clean energy jobs in the coalfields.
We need to find investors to get Judy Bonds' Coal River Mountain Watch and Bob Kincaid's Head-On Radio operations off the grid in the coalfields of West Virginia.
We need to listen to brilliant coal country analysts like Rory McIlmoil, from Downstream Strategies in West Virginia--and fund their studies on the true costs of a declining coal industry in every state.
Or, as the heroic Kristin Tracz of Appalachian Transitions notes: Green jobs are not just for blue states.
The good news: This process has already started. In a breakthrough effort last month, former coal miners installed 46 solar panels in the heart of West Virginia coalfields, thanks to the determined work of the JOBS Project, which will launch the first wind farm later this month.
If we had a JOBS Project in every coalfield community, we could actually transition from strip-mining in a few years--and not just protest about it.
Love mountains and miners?
Show me the money. Campaign for a Coalfields Regeneration Fund.
A 42-year-old coal miner in southern Illinois recently asked me a question I couldn't answer: Who took Van Jones' job in the Obama administration as the green jobs administrator?
Anxious to find a job in another field in a depressed town with no industry (but cross-country truck driving opportunities), my coal miner friend recognized that Van Jones understood, as a I wrote a year ago, that strip-mining operations have blindsided any progress for sustainable or diversified economic development and clean energy jobs in coal mining regions from Appalachia to Alaska.
Van Jones, alone in Washington, had included coal miners in his green jobs crusade.
Love mountains and miners? Want to end mountaintop removal strip-mining and get floundering labor, greens and jobs-scared coal-rich state Democrats at the same table?
It's time to campaign for a joint public/private Coalfields Regeneration Fund.
Or, as my coal miner friend in southern Illinois badgered me, if the federal and state governments can provide billions of dollars in subsidies for multinational coal corporations during record years of profits, why can't we establish a specific fund to assist impoverished coalfield communities into clean industries?
This coal miner, like many I have interviewed over the past decade, can't wait to find another job. Just one problem: While the rest of the nation is booming in green jobs development, coalfield communities have been left behind and stuck in the annual ritual of fighting over more Big Coal mines.
When are the visionary venture capitalists--from the billion-dollar firms of tireless clean energy campaigners like Bobby Kennedy, Jr and Al Gore and Google, among others--going to come to the coalfields?
President Obama called for the end of subsidies to the oil industries in his State of the Union last January. Why can't we end subsides to the coal industry and shift those monies into real investment for clean energy manufacturing, reforestation and energy efficiency programs in besieged coalfield regions?
To be clear: As the beloved anti-mountaintop removal godmother Judy Bonds told me many times, it's not the role of besieged coalfield citizens to provide new jobs to coal miners in order to stop mountaintop removal mining. Here's the truth: Mountaintop removal and reckless strip-mining operations that forcibly displace and terrorize American citizens with the blasting fallout, contaminate waterways, and obliterate our nation's natural heritage are criminal and should be abolished immediately.
Sure, protesting mountaintop removing mining in central Appalachia is still important--lord knows I've covered every direct action over the past several years. And lobbying efforts in Washington, DC and the coalfields state capitals for new strip-mining laws remain indispensable--devastating strip-mining operations are expanding in Alaska, Alabama, Mississippi, Illinois, Montana and in nearly 20 other states, not just central Appalachia.
But mountaintop removal is NOT a new phenomenon, as is often misconstrued, and the truth is that the EPA has gone as far as it can in "regulating" this nearly half-century abomination. Nor do any meaningful legislative efforts to halt mountaintop removal mining have any chance of passing in our current Republican-controlled US House of Representatives. (The first federal bill to end strip-mining was introduced by my Illinois Senator Everett Dirksen in 1940!)
In 1969, after serving 46 years as a coal miner, Elias Bailey stood in the state capitol in Charleston, West Virginia to testify before a hearing on the ravages of strip-mining. Stricken by black lung disease, Bailey declared: "I'm just a broke down miner now," whose tiny cattle farm and streams had been destroyed by strippers. Here's a clip of Bailey's lobbying efforts in the 1969 film, Before the Mountain Was Moved:
Bailey's poignant plea in West Virginia in 1969 makes me feel like we're stuck in a time warp--protesting the same outlaw ways of Big Coal, educating uninformed outsiders and exposing Big Coal-bankrolled politicians.
We need to move on. We need to get one step beyond "beyond coal" and not only set out a roadmap for a just transition to clean energy, but badger our friends, as the coal miner in southern Illinois chided me, in investing in the clean energy jobs in the coalfields.
We need to find investors to get Judy Bonds' Coal River Mountain Watch and Bob Kincaid's Head-On Radio operations off the grid in the coalfields of West Virginia.
We need to listen to brilliant coal country analysts like Rory McIlmoil, from Downstream Strategies in West Virginia--and fund their studies on the true costs of a declining coal industry in every state.
Or, as the heroic Kristin Tracz of Appalachian Transitions notes: Green jobs are not just for blue states.
The good news: This process has already started. In a breakthrough effort last month, former coal miners installed 46 solar panels in the heart of West Virginia coalfields, thanks to the determined work of the JOBS Project, which will launch the first wind farm later this month.
If we had a JOBS Project in every coalfield community, we could actually transition from strip-mining in a few years--and not just protest about it.
Love mountains and miners?
Show me the money. Campaign for a Coalfields Regeneration Fund.