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To view the latest video from FACES of Coal. The video features stream biologist Ben Faulkner who explains why conductivity is a faulty standard for measuring stream health and breaks down the science of conductivity in easy-to-understand terms.
To watch the video, go to www.facesofcoal.org/facts/conductivity
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News Release Courtesy of the MTM Coaltion
CHARLESTON – Thursday’s announcement by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers of its decision to suspend the use of Nationwide Permit 21 (NWP 21) in the Appalachian region of six states is discriminatory and threatens the economy of the region. In a June 17 announcement, the Corps said they will immediately suspend the issuance of mining permits under the NWP 21 standards for the mining industry in West Virginia as well as Kentucky, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Tennessee and Virginia.The Corps said in a release that the suspension “will remain in effect until the Corps takes further action on NWP 21 or until the program expires on March 18, 2012.”
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Saturday will have the Live in Concert by The Charlie Daniels Band and Taylor Made, with special appearances by The Gold Knights Army Parachute Team and FOC spokesmen Coach Nehlen, Coach Pruett and Bass Master Jeremy Starks. Tickets ($15.00 advance & $20.00 day of show) for the Concert will go on sale May 1st at select WV & VA Marquee Cinemas and the Beckley-Raleigh County YMCA.
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In the face of a presidential call to break the country's dependence on fossil fuels such as coal, Gov. Joe Manchin III defended the state's premier export.
President Obama, in his first Oval Office address Tuesday, called the BP oil spill "the most painful and powerful reminder" that "the time to embrace a clean energy future is now." Manchin, in an interview with the Pittsburgh Tribune-Review hours before Obama's address, said coal remains the most important energy source in the country and pushed back against efforts to move away from it.
He said the Obama administration risks "self-inflicted economic pain" in its quest to curtail carbon emissions and spur renewable energy development.
"The bottom line is, they continue to try to over-regulate and over-tax," said Manchin, a Democrat. "I'm not being critical. I'm being very factual with what I see."
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The full U.S. Senate will vote later this year on a plan to give coal-fired power plants a two-year break from federal regulators intent on cracking down on gas emissions, Sen. Jay Rockefeller's office announced Thursday.
Rockefeller, D-W.Va., said Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., told Rockefeller a vote would happen.
"The majority leader has indicated publicly that the Senate will have a vote on my EPA bill this year, which is good news," Rockefeller said in a statement Thursday.
Bill Raney, president of the West Virginia Coal Association, said it's good that Reid intends to bring it to the floor, but wonders if the majority leader will manage to get Democrats behind it.
"The other aspect to that is Harry Reid going to help pass Rockefeller's bill?" Raney said.





