Last night, at an Illinois Environmental Protection Agency hearing about a water quality permit for the expansion of a Peabody Energy strip mine in Rocky Branch, IL, local residents made it clear that they’ve had enough of the coal industry’s destructive presence in their community.
According to writer Jeff Biggers,ย residents outnumbered Peabody supportersย four-to-one among those willing to make public comments, and they had one overriding message:ย โWe the people of Rocky Branch,โ one resident, Jennifer Dumberis, said, โwe will decide what happens to us and our civil rightsโnotย Peabody.โ
This is not the first time Illinois residents have taken their concerns directly to Peabody and the regulatory bodies who are failing to protect Illinois communities from the impacts of the company’s mining operations. Residents have presented ample evidence of what has been done to Cottage Grove township, which is adjacent to the strip mine Peabody is seeking to expand: blasting that is like โsmall earthquakesโ,ย toxic coal dust that seeps through cracks in their homes caused by the blasts, and polluted waterways that some residents fear will eventually make their homes uninhabitable altogether.
Peabody had already started clearcutting the area intended to become its Rocky Branch Mine, just south of the Cottage Grove strip mine, but federal regulators stepped in andย ordered Peadody to stop loggingย immedately because it was being done in violation of the law.
It’s unclear what, if any, benefits Peabody can offer the residents of Rocky Branch should its strip mine be allowed to expand. No jobs are expected to be created, and the state alreadyย loses an estimated $20 million annually to support the coal industry.
Citizen action to hold coal companies and regulators accountable is more important than ever in Illinois, as the coal industry does not seem to be waning in the state. Even while coal is losing market shareย across the country and renewable energies like wind power are rapidly achieving cost parity (in fact, wind is already cheaper than coal in Iowa, Illinois’ neighbor), Illinois just received a $1 billion grant from the U.S. Department of Energy to continue the controversial โclean coalโ projectย FutureGen.
Image via LA Progressive.
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