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Mining Town's Drinking Water 'Too Toxic to Touch'

Rob Perks

Posted December 18, 2008 in Curbing Pollution, Health and the Environment, Saving Wildlife and Wild Places, Solving Global Warming

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We, as Americans, tend to take water for granted.  When we turn on the tap we simply expect that it is clean enough for washing, bathing and drinking.  Even though some may prefer to drink filtered or bottled water, my guess is that most people generally don't think twice about the quantity, quality and especially the safety of their local water supply.

Unfortunately, that's not the case if you happen to live in West Virginia's coal country, ground zero for the most extreme form of strip mining -- mountaintop removal

In my travels to Appalachia I've met many folks whose health has been adversely affected by reckless mining that is ravaging their communities, but to me the most shocking threat they face is poisoned water.

Now come reports from a town I've visited -- Prenter Hollow in Boone County --  that local residents have well water which is not fit for human consumption because it is "too toxic to touch."  This community of about 300 homes is now trying raise money so they can get barrels of clean water delivered.

As reported in the Charleston Gazette, the contaminated water has caused widespread health problems, including high rates of gallbladder and kidney disease.  People also suffer from unexplained urinary tract infections and tooth decay.  Indeed, residents blame the toxic well water for dissolving children's teeth.  "There's a 5-year-old with a full set of dentures," local nurse Pam Johnson told the Gazette.  Most shocking of all, a health survey conducted by Johnson found that 98% of adults interviewed in the area have gallbladder disease.

Stop and think about that.  Can you believe this is happening here in this country?  More to the point, how can any of us stand by and let this happen to our fellow Americans?

Although the coal companies deny it, most folks in Prenter believe coal slurry injections from abandoned mines contaminated the groundwater -- beginning back in 2003.  They say blasting at nearby mountaintop mines have made the problem worse. 

Apparently, local health authorities have applied for a state grant to build a water line to Prenter but that project would take more than a year.  Meantime, residents either have to go without a stable supply of available, affordable water or continue risking their health with well water poisoned with heavy metals.

The immediate need the people of Prenter have is money to help pay for the delivery of 55-gallon barrels of fresh water to their homes twice a month for a year.  Please consider making a tax-deductible online donation to the Prenter Water Fund or send a check to: Prenter Water Fund, c/o Coal River Mountain Watch, P.O. Box 651, Whitesville, WV 25209.

The over-arching need, of course, is to put a stop to mountaintop mining that is destroying not just the Appalachians but also the lives of the people who call this region home. 

 

 

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Comments

Maria LambertDec 18 2008 08:19 PM

Actually the water was bad before this 2003 date but it was around that date we noticed the black, pink and orange goo getting worse in our water lines, commodes and icemakers.

Global PatriotDec 19 2008 12:03 AM

There is profit to be made while poisoning the population at large, and when we have an administration that preaches profit first, and people second, such stories as documented above are the result.

Rob PerksDec 19 2008 09:56 AM

UPDATE!!

This just in from Mathew Louis-Rosenberg, with the Prenter Water Fund:

"We are desparate for more data in Prenter. So far we have some government testing which nobody trusts, and a VERY limited set of independent water tests by Ben Stout of Wheeling Jesuit University. These limited tests have shown levels of antimony, lead, iron, manganese, barium, beryllium, aluminum and hydrogen sulfide gas all exceeding EPA DWS. We need more good water testing data both so that the citizens of Prenter can have accurate information about what they have been exposed to and to build a case proving the source of the contamination. Metals testing is what we have a small amount of and that's the easiest thing to do. Organics testing is harder and we have none. There is an RN doing health surveys among Prenter residents and we have limited (12 person) hair sample testing. We have the opportunity to get another 50 hair samples tested but we lack the necessary funding - approx. $2700. More detailed health work to connect these health problems, which tend to occur in relatively tight clusters, to specific contaminants is needed. I can keep going but that's probably enough for now.

"As you know, we also need the funds to actually GET water delivered. Probably 15-20k would cover us for a year, but our immediate goal is an additional $1500 to insure we can cover the first month or two as we pursue more stable funding."

If you are able to pitch in, please make a tax-deductible donation to www.prenterwaterfund.org.

John LiffeeDec 19 2008 10:09 AM

Can you believe this is happening here in this country?
I'm having a hard time processing this one -- it's disgusting, outrageous. Don Blankenship should be making his kids' spaghetti with this water.

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