Majority Oppose Mountaintop Removal Mining; Find Protecting Environment Good for Economy
The first nationwide poll to test voters’ opinions on mountain top removal mining is clear; voters in every region of the country are against mountaintop removal mining (MTR).
Upon hearing that “more than 1,200 miles of streams in Appalachia already have been buried or destroyed by mountaintop removal coal mining,” fully 85% of voters say they are concerned about the effects of MTR.
In addition, the poll clearly shows that two-thirds of American voters oppose the Bush administration’s recent efforts to repeal the Stream Buffer Zone Rule. The Stream Buffer Zone rule prohibits coal mining within 100 feet of permanent and seasonal streams. The repeal of the buffer zone would allow the proliferation of MTR by legalizing the process of mining near streams, and would subsequently result in burying our nation’s streams under mining waste.
Debunking the age-old division between protecting the environment and securing jobs, the poll showed that voters believe environmental protections are good for the economy by more than a 2:1 margin. A plurality (47%) believe environmental protections are good for the economy and another 23% believe such protections have no impact on the economy.
Memo detaining the survey findings <http://www.earthjustice.org/library/references/memo-on-mtr-poll.pdf> (PDF)
Information on poll methodology <http://www.earthjustice.org/library/references/mtr-presentation.pdf> (PDF)
2 Responses to “Majority Oppose Mountaintop Removal Mining; Find Protecting Environment Good for Economy”
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October 31st, 2008 at 3:52 am
If this is a picture of Carr Fork it is a old one because the same mining that is seen on one side of this reservoir has happened on the other side also. Just think this is the water source for lots of communities.
October 31st, 2008 at 9:22 am
The ecological renewal rate is tha amount of time required to regenerate a renewable natural resource or restore and stabalize biological, chemical, or physical conditions altered by use or pollution. with mountain top removal, the natural resource is lost forever, plus exposing water reserviors to polluted containment runoffs.