Upstream Considerations...
Posted: Wed Aug 17, 2011 12:34 am
A beautifully done piece that brings back down to a human level the difficult choices that we often find ourselves in. And, of course, a glaring reminder of the "upstream" costs of many things we take for granted, like electricity. A piece that doesn't take sides and just tells a story. Cause we're all better when we each get to unravel the yarn.
Thought of y'all the other day when I heard this... especially in light of the recent conservation controversies...
http://www.npr.org/2011/08/11/139547261 ... ain?live=1
From the intro:
James "Jimmy" Weekley has lived in Pigeonroost Hollow in West Virginia for 70 years. He grew up surrounded by family and friends, part of a tight-knit community in the state's southern mountain valley. Like his grandfather, father, uncles and sons, Weekley worked as a coal miner. And like most West Virginians, Weekley saw coal as the economic lifeblood of his community.
But in the 1990s, Arch Coal moved into Weekley's area and began work on the Spruce No. 1 mine. Spruce No. 1 was one of the largest mountaintop removal mining sites ever proposed, spanning more than 3,000 acres. It also happened to be right in Weekley's backyard.
Weekley and his wife, Sibby, found themselves surrounded by mining activity: dust, noise and blasting from the nearby site.
Thought of y'all the other day when I heard this... especially in light of the recent conservation controversies...
http://www.npr.org/2011/08/11/139547261 ... ain?live=1
From the intro:
James "Jimmy" Weekley has lived in Pigeonroost Hollow in West Virginia for 70 years. He grew up surrounded by family and friends, part of a tight-knit community in the state's southern mountain valley. Like his grandfather, father, uncles and sons, Weekley worked as a coal miner. And like most West Virginians, Weekley saw coal as the economic lifeblood of his community.
But in the 1990s, Arch Coal moved into Weekley's area and began work on the Spruce No. 1 mine. Spruce No. 1 was one of the largest mountaintop removal mining sites ever proposed, spanning more than 3,000 acres. It also happened to be right in Weekley's backyard.
Weekley and his wife, Sibby, found themselves surrounded by mining activity: dust, noise and blasting from the nearby site.