How the West Virginia coal industry changed federal endangered species policy
Source: Washington Post
How the West Virginia coal industry changed federal endangered species policy
By Juliet Eilperin May 10 at 1:34 PM
LENORE, W.Va. Donna Branham was grilling steaks in her backyard when she felt the tremors. She was two miles away from the coal mine, but she could feel the blasts.
Oh my god, not again, she thought.
In 2017, blasting at the surface mine had cracked her ceiling, her mirrors and her fireplace. When the mine was shut down amid complaints that its waste was encroaching on crayfish, a threatened species, she thought she had caught a break.
Now the mine is back in business, thanks to the intervention of Trump appointees at the Department of the Interior and West Virginia officials who allowed the resumption of drilling at Twin Branch and about a half-dozen other mines under a June 2017 policy, according to documents obtained under the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA).
President Trumps pro-coal stance is not surprising, but the documents offer a rare glimpse into how state and industry officials have tapped the presidents political appointees to advance their economic interests over the objections of the agency charged with protecting endangered wildlife in this case, two crayfish species that help keep the states creeks and rivers healthy.
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Read more: https://www.washingtonpost.com/national/health-science/how-the-west-virginia-coal-industry-changed-federal-endangered-species-policy/2019/05/10/56d28de0-4bf0-11e9-b79a-961983b7e0cd_story.html