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The following statement is from Kentucky Coal Association President Bill Bissett in response to the Environmental Protection Agency’s announcement today that the Spruce Mine Permit in West Virginia has been vetoed.
LEXINGTON -- “Today’s action by Administrator Lisa Jackson and the EPA is not surprising, but it is unfair and unprecedented,” said Bissett. “By vetoing an existing federal water permit that was approved by the federal government previously, you have appointed bureaucrats literally throwing coal miners out of work. Hundreds of Kentucky coal operations and thousands of our miners depend on these same permits to go to work every day. Additionally, every other worker who depends on a federal permit for his or her livelihood - from agriculture to road construction - needs to pay attention to this veto. Today’s action by the EPA sends a clear message that following the law means nothing to this administration. It is our hope that our elected leaders in both Kentucky and Washington will hold these bureaucrats accountable for their actions and work to protect Kentucky jobs and our economy.”
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Charleston Daily Mail - January 14, 2011
CHARLESTON, WV--West Virginia political, union and business leaders fumed Thursday after federal environmental regulators revoked a permit for a massive mountaintop mining operation in Logan County.
The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, in a long-expected decision, vetoed a 4-year-old permit for the Spruce No. 1 mine, which is owned by an Arch Coal subsidiary.
The EPA, which has stepped up its enforcement of mountaintop mining operations since President Barack Obama took office last year, said after a 15-month review that the project would simply do too much damage to the environment.
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"Today's EPA decision is not just fundamentally wrong, it is an unprecedented act by the federal government that will cost our state and our nation even more jobs during the worst recession in this country's history," Senator Joe Manchin, D-WV.
“I’m not going to say it’s political, but it’s a stance they have taken policy-wise that I think is extremely harmful to the United States of America and definitely to West Virginia. This is not just an assault on the coal industry. It's an assault on every job market in the U.S. economy. It might be West Virginia and the coal industry today. It will be your industry tomorrow." Senator Joe Manchin, D-WV.
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At full production the mine would have employed 235 miners and created another 300 indirect and induced jobs in the area.
The jobs created by the Spruce permit would have been high-paying, long-term employment opportunities. These jobs would pay approximately $70,000 annually with full benefits.
Total economic impact of this operation was estimated at approximately $150 million annually.
The permit is the most scrutinized mining permit in history in West Virginia or the Appalachian region.
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Yesterday’s decision by the Obama Administration and the U.S. EPA to revoke the permits for Mingo-Logan’s Spruce Mine shows an unbelievable arrogance and a total disregard for the impact this decision will have on the lives of West Virginia’s families.
The people of West Virginia deserve better treatment from their federal government. Time and again, the State of West Virginia and the Corps of Engineers have affirmed the issuance of this permit. For the EPA to ignore the needs of West Virginia communities represents malicious arrogance on the part of an agency determined to cripple Appalachian coal production.





