Newspaper urges protection for Benham & Lynch | Kentuckians For The Commonwealth

Newspaper urges protection for Benham & Lynch

 

An editorial in today's Lexington Herald-Leader urges Governor Steve Beshear to consider the homes and health of people in Benham and Lynch before allowing destructive surface mining there.

lynchAccording to the article, two coal operators and their associates spent more than $500,000 to get Beshear re-elected last fall – the largest private-sector donors to Beshear's campaign.

One donor, James C. Justice II of A&G Coal, plans to mine near Benham and Lynch, threatening the community's water supply and quality of life. The Beshear administration has given preliminary approval. From the editorial:

With coal money talking so loudly and directly into his ear, the governor should try extra hard to hear average Kentuckians whose homes, health and future are imperiled by the coal industry's most destructive practices.

The ridges that cradle Lynch – and are at risk of being destroyed – are part of Black Mountain, Kentucky's highest point, which school children fought to save from strip-mining in the late 1990s.

You can't put a price tag on the history and possibilities that will be lost if Beshear sacrifices this little corner of Kentucky.

The other donor, James Booth of Cambrian Coal, has a permit to mine in Pike County that a judge attempted to block before Beshear’s Energy and Environment Secretary Len Peters overruled him and allowed the permit to go through.

Cambrian's plan to chop 400 feet off a mountain near Elkhorn City in Pike County will pollute tributaries of the Russell Fork that were already seriously degraded by earlier mining.

The editorial follows an analysis of campaign contributions in The Courier-Journal by Tom Loftus. To read that article, click here.

To read the full Lexington Herald-Leader editorial, click here.

To learn more about Benham and Lynch residents' efforts to protect their community, click here.

 

 

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