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Celebrating 25 Years of Organized Voices and Empowered Communities

Beauty and the Coal Beast

 Clean Elections, Coal, Mountaintop Removal  No Responses »
Mar 092013
 

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A March 8 post in “Grounded,” The State Journal’s energy blog, vice president of the West Virginia Coal Association, and notorious funny man, Chris Hamilton was quoted saying that some West Virginia delegates might not know “the difference between a dragline and a drag queen.” He made these remarks at a recent coal industry conference where he and his fellow industry officials trotted out their bought and paid for members of the West Virginia House of Delegates.

The blog reads:

Hamilton said “It’s a hell of a lot easier” when someone passionate about the industry not only listens, but seeks industry support on legislation. Hamilton said in addition to passion, these delegates bring a knowledge of the industry. He said sometimes a “teacher” or “librarian”delegate speaks up to a coal-related bill and might not even know “the difference between a dragline and a drag queen.”

But we got to wondering, does Chris even know the difference?  After all, draglines are huge and hideous and drag queens are fierce, beautiful, and fabulous people.  They shouldn’t even be compared in the same sentence together.  And to the best of our knowledge, there has never been a 260 ft. tall drag queen that has destroyed an entire mountain while poisoning Appalachian streams and making people sick. We don’t think many drag queens would knowingly and willingly put people’s lives at risk for profit.  No, that would be the coal industry and their ugly giant mechanical beasts like the dragline. How could anyone not know the difference, right?

Silly Guy! Sometimes Chris, things you say could almost be funny… almost.

Why do legislators continue to listen to coal industry lobbyists who insult their intelligence and the LGBT community?

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 Posted by Dustin at 5:21 pm  Tagged with: Chris Hamilton, coal, dragline, Mountaintop removal, West Virginia Coal Association, West Virginia State Legislature

Call for the Streams and Health Today

 Coal, Mountaintop Removal  No Responses »
Mar 082013
 

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2 p.m. update: HR2579 has passed in the House.  An identical bill, SB 472, will be considered by the Senate. Please call your senators to tell them not to support SB 472.

HR2579 is being fast tracked in the West Virginia House of Delegates under the guise of “stream protection,” when in fact this bill will weaken current selenium standards and allow the coal industry to discharge more selenium from mountaintop removal sites into streams. This bill is scheduled for its third reading in the House soon and may be voted on possibly as early as today.  This bill is a blatant disregard for life and safety, in another attempt by state legislators to appease the coal industry.

Proponents of this bill claim there is no evidence of selenium impacts on West Virginia waters, yet a study published in the peer-reviewed Early Edition of the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences in 2011 and a 2010 report from the WV Department of Environmental Protection(among others) show evidence that selenium is having major adverse effects on West Virginia streams.  We cannot afford to weaken selenium regulations.

Excessive amounts of selenium can harm aquatic life. When animals absorb or accumulate extremely high concentrations of selenium, that can cause reproductive failure and birth defects.

In humans, health impacts can vary from brittle hair and deformed nails, to rashes, heat, swelling of the skin and severe pains. When selenium ends up in the eyes people experience burning, irritation and tearing. Selenium bioaccumulates in the body tissues of organisms, magnifying up the food chain.

Please call your delegate today to tell her or him  to vote no on HR2579, to protect human health and safety.  Remind your delegate s/he is supposed to work for the people, not the coal industry.

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 Posted by Dustin at 12:13 pm  Tagged with: selenium, water pollution, West Virginia State Legislature

Micro Power to the People

 (Click images for hi-res), Renewable Energy  No Responses »
Feb 262013
 
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The Janowski’s log home.
Photo by Mickey Janowksi.

A letter to the editor alerted me to my chance to finally see a microhydro system. On January 18, Vivian Stockman and I visited Mickey and Jennifer Janowski, who live at an elevation of 2,250 feet in Webster County, W.Va.

We didn’t go to admire their log home, which they built themselves — but we did that, too, while we were there. They’ve had an off-grid solar power system since the 1970s, but it was minimal: 500+ watts with a less-than-ideal exposure. However, they live on a lovely, reliable creek. So, with help from Matt Sherald, owner of Power In My Backyard (PIMBY), Janowski recently built a microhydro system to supplement the solar power system. They used a turbine called the Stream Engine, created by Paul Cunningham of Energy Systems and Design.

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The screen that filters out debris. Janowski built the box on which the screen rests. He says he made the box with the front overflow less than an inch above the top of the 4″ intake pipe. But now he realizes the box needs to be deeper, creating a deeper water reservoir, That will prevent air from entering the intake. Air in the intake reduces the water pressure during some flow conditions. It is a minor tweak to the system that Janowski will make in drier summer weather.
Photo by Vivian Stockman.

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The upper end of the system.
Photo by Mickey Janowksi.

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Construction of the upper end of the system.
Photo by Mickey Janowski.

The upper end of the system is a concrete weir in the creek, a sort of dam with the water channeled through a box in the center of a spillway. The box has a screen that filters out debris . The screen was designed and fabricated by Marvin Woodie and Larry Agnew from Conn-Weld Industries in Princeton, W.Va. Water seeps through the screen into the box, where it is channeled into an intake pipe. A concrete pillar nearby holds the intake pipe steady in the sometimes-turbulent creek.

In order for the water diverted from the stream to the pipe to have enough energy to turn the Stream Engine turbine, it had to course along a hefty drop in elevation. Janowski buried more than 500 feet of four-inch PVC pipe from the intake right below his home to a little building, the powerhouse, where the turbine is housed. That gave him a 47-foot drop and 750 watts of power — power that, unlike solar, runs 24 hours a day. If there’s a long summer dry period, the turbine will produce less power, but that’s when the sun picks up the slack.

In fact, the Janowskis have a small heater on the basement wall that automatically runs when the power is too much for the six L-16 batteries that store the fossil-fuel-free power their system generates.  Windmills work this way also, while with solar, you need not keep a steady load as the charge controller just opens the circuit when the batteries are fully charged.

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In the powerhouse, Janowski shows Wildfire the lower end of the microhydro system. Water rushes through the pipes into the turbine.
Photo by Vivian Stockman.

In the powerhouse, the arriving water splits into two curving arms and a third, narrower pipe that goes straight — this one is just a diversion for draining the system to avoid freezing and normally is shut off. From the two curving arms, water shoots from both directions at the wheel in the turbine, spinning it to produce electricity. Janowski says having two nozzles increases the power. There are monitors in this house measuring temperature, gallons per minute at the outflow (150 when we were there) and power (it was producing 35.5 amps) The power travels as AC current up to the house.

Janowski says that, at first, he looked at his system every day, but it had been five weeks since he’d last looked at it — it doesn’t need regular attention. However, if the water pressure drops a lot (as in summer dry periods) he needs to tighten the nozzles so as to maintain pressure.

The power system cost about $12,000, not counting burying the pipe, but Janowski said it could have been done less expensively, especially for someone who borrows from the lessons other microhydro installers have learned.

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Janowski at the controls. Don’t worry, it is all automated.
Photo by Vivian Stockman.

Thanks again to the Janowskis for showing us their nifty power system and their beautiful house, as well as for serving us an excellent lunch! Their system illustrates the fact that solar panels are not the only feasible way to produce your own power.

Editor’s note: This article will appear in the March edition of OVEC’s Winds of Change quarterly newsletter. in early February, Janowski noted that every day since he installed the microhydro system, more than 100 days, the system has generated more electrical power than his household can use.

Janowski also notes that the cost could be significantly lower for folks who can have their powerhouses closer to their dwellings. Costs savings would come from using less water-transporting pipes and from using DC power. For people who need more details, please e-mail vivian@ohvec.org and she will pass along your questions to Janowksi, who will answer as he can.

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 Posted by Mary Wildfire at 11:10 am  Tagged with: microhydro, solar

Reality TV Show? How About a Taste of This

 Clean Elections, Mountaintop Removal  No Responses »
Feb 252013
 

The New York Times reported that Senator Joe Manchin (D-W.Va.) said, “Economic growth is what is going to make mountaintop removal palatable.” Since becoming a West Virginia public figure Manchin has been the state’s mouthpiece for the coal industry, shouting from the flattened mountaintops the praises of the industry. When a lie is big, one [...]

 Posted by Tammy Marie Rose at 3:30 pm  Tagged with: Congress, Reality TV, Senator Joe Manchin

Sign the Clean Elections Petition

 Clean Elections  No Responses »
Feb 222013
 

We need clean elections and fair courts now. The West Virginia legislature needs to make permanent the successful program for a public campaign finance option in state Supreme Court elections.  No more Don Blankenships! That’s why I created a petition to the West Virginia State House, the West Virginia State Senate, and Governor Earl Ray [...]

 Posted by Dan at 10:25 am  Tagged with: Supreme Court, West Virginia

One Thing One Man Can Do

 Mountaintop Removal  No Responses »
Feb 222013
 

Empowering ourselves on an issue in today’s noisy world requires work.  I have been addressing mountaintop removal  strip mining (MTR) since 1998, and am convinced the next two years are very important in bringing this issue out of our comfort zone and just as firmly into national consciousness as possible.  We’ve been terribly nice in [...]

 Posted by Al Justice at 9:33 am  Tagged with: Mountaintop removal, White House

#Forward on Climate ~ Fight Like Hell For the Living

 Coal, Coal Ash, Coal Dust, Energy Efficiency, Faith, Health, Keystone Pipeline, Mountaintop Removal, News, Renewable Energy  No Responses »
Feb 142013
 

Several OVEC members and staff are heading to Washington D.C. for the largest climate rally in history, happening this Sunday, February 17. If you can’t join us in person, please join the rally online. Hashtags in use for the rally include #forwardonclimate, #f17. With your tweets please include #(your zip code), so we get a [...]

 Posted by Vivian at 10:49 am  Tagged with: 350.org, Bill McKibben, Climate change, Daryl Hannah, Maria Gunnoe, Mary Anne Hitt, Mountaintop removal, President Obama, Sierra Club

A Statement from OVEC’s Executive Director about the ACHE Act, HR 526, introduced Congress, Feb. 6, 2013

 Health, Mountaintop Removal, News  2 Responses »
Feb 072013
 

The Ohio Valley Environmental Coalition (OVEC) applauds the sponsors of the Appalachian Community Health Emergency Act, H.R. 526, (ACHE) just introduced into Congress and supports the ACHE campaign.  After nearly two decades of organizing citizens to oppose this brutal mining technique and after reviewing all the published, peer-reviewed studies, it is clear not only that [...]

 Posted by Janet at 3:13 pm

What Took You So Long?

 
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