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Articles by Maria Gunnoe

Maria Gunnoe is from Boone County, W.Va., where her family has lived for generations. Her house and land now sit below a mountaintop-removal mine site; it has caused continual flooding and many other problems that led her to take a stand and begin to work against mountaintop removal. Through the Ohio Valley Environmental Coalition, she works to educate her community about the effects of mountaintop removal and what they can do to stop the practice. In 2009, Gunnoe was awarded the Goldman Environmental Prize.

Featured Article

Photo: Rainforest Action Network

Appalachia Rising will bring people from all over America together in Washington, D.C., on Sept. 27, 2010, to demand the abolition of mountaintop-removal (MTR) coal extraction in Appalachia.  

We are not visiting D.C. to attack coal, as its supporters would have you believe. Coal speaks its own truth through catastrophes such as the April 5 disaster at Upper Big Branch Mine. Coal speaks its own truth through the way it levels Appalachian mountains, and fills valleys with waste, and destroys ancestral and historic lands, and obliterates whole communities. Mountaintop-removal mining operations use nearly 3.5 million pounds of explosives each day in West Virginia alone. Coal speaks for itself.

We, the people of the Southern Appalachian Mountains, get the poisoned water, the polluted land, the silica-laden air, the bad health, and the diminished hope of ever having a future. Our communities are flooded and our water is poisoned just to keep the lights on. 

The previous administration’s Environmental Protection Agency rubber-stamped MTR mining permits in the name of “homeland... Read more