Sunday, July 24, 2011

Update from Appalachian Voices

Submitted by Willa Mayes, Appalachian Voices

I grew up with the privilege and right to use Appalachia’s rivers and streams. Now, being a grandmother, it is important to me that my grandchildren can be safe while enjoying the same privilege.
Riverkeepers testing dirty water
Our Appalachia Water Watch team fights for clean water through community education, water testing
and litigation.

But across the country, our water is under attack. The threat is not from a complex environmental phenomenon, nor from groups outside our own country. The threat comes from our own politicians and polluting industries in our own backyards.
Current federal regulation already provides loopholes that allow coal companies to pollute our water causing real risk to human health. New legislation, such as the Clean Water Cooperative Federalism Act, will only make it easier for these companies to damage our environment and put our families at risk.
Appalachian Voices is defending water through multiple avenues, including Clean Water Act lawsuits and community-based water testing. The polluting violations identified in our lawsuits against three Kentucky coal companies show that mountaintop removal results in very real damage to our health.
We need your help to defend clean water.
House Moves to Gut Clean Water Act
Last week, the House of Representatives passed a bill strip 40 years of baseline protections for our nation's waters- and would spell disaster for our country, especially in states where mountaintop removal coal mining is practiced. While we are hopeful that the bill won't pass when it gets to the Senate, we will need your help to make sure it doesn't.  [ Get more info on our Front Porch Blog. ]
The Last MountainCOMING TO A THEATER NEAR YOU: The issue of mountaintop removal coal mining has already hit national theaters and moved audiences nationwide since The Last Mountain--an Official Sundance Festival Selection--was released in June. Appalachian Voices will be at select screenings to encourage movie-goers to join the movement to save our mountains. [Find a screening in your area]

MUSIC ON THE MOUNTAINTOP:
Tickets are now on sale for the fourth annual Music on the Mountaintop festival a two-day musical extravaganza near Boone, NC on August 26-27 featuring Sam Bush, Acoustic Syndicate, Greensky Bluegrass, Railroad Earth, among many others. Appalachian Voices receives a portion of the proceeds from this festival, so come enjoy great tunes and help save mountains.

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