Mon Power Lands $5 Million Grant To Upgrade Grid In 3 Counties

The U.S. Department of Energy said Tuesday that it selected Mon Power as one of 19 recipients of federal funding from the Energy Improvements in Rural and Remote Areas program.

Mon Power could receive up to $5 million in federal funds to upgrade power distribution lines in three counties.

The U.S. Department of Energy said Tuesday that it selected Mon Power as one of 19 recipients of federal funding from the Energy Improvements in Rural and Remote Areas program.

The $5 million would go toward rebuilding 23 miles of grid infrastructure in Braxton, Clay and Pocahontas counties.

The upgrades would make service more reliable for 3,000 customers in those counties.

Other projects to receive some of the $78 million in total funds Tuesday include transmission line upgrades, wind, solar and battery storage projects, microgrids and energy efficiency improvements.

The program falls under the Office of Clean Energy Demonstrations, which recently selected a solar project on two former coal mines in Nicholas County for a grant of up to $129 million.

New Research Explores Thriving Plants On Former Coal Lands, This West Virginia Morning

On this West Virginia Morning, thousands of acres of land across West Virginia and surrounding states are covered in coal mines where not much grows. But some new research is looking at a plant that thrives in that environment.

On this West Virginia Morning, a WVU researcher is studying a plant that can help restore surface mine properties by creating missing topsoil and capturing carbon out of the air and storing it underground. The above ground plants can also be used as biomass which can be turned into biofuels or even particle board.

News Director Eric Douglas spoke with Jennifer Kane, a postdoctoral student in plant and soil sciences from the WVU Davis College of Agriculture, Natural Resources and Design. Kane is studying the plant Miscanthus. She grew up in Raleigh County and has first-hand knowledge of the abandoned mine lands she is looking to improve.

Also, in this show, an entire city in Jefferson County, Kentucky is slated to disappear, thanks to a relatively new law in the state. But few know the city of Poplar Hills even exists. WFPL’s Justin Hicks reports the city government went defunct years ago and now the state is trying to get rid of these so-called “ghost cities.”

West Virginia Morning is a production of West Virginia Public Broadcasting which is solely responsible for its content.

Support for our news bureaus comes from Concord University and Shepherd University.

Eric Douglas is our news director and produced this episode.

Listen to West Virginia Morning weekdays at 7:43 a.m. on WVPB Radio or subscribe to the podcast and never miss an episode. #WVMorning

Federal Judge Threatens Jail Time as Coal Company Flouts Court Orders

Coal company American Resources Corporation, which owns mines in Kentucky and West Virginia, is facing sanctions after failing to comply with a bankruptcy court’s orders, even after the company received $2.7 million in government aid meant for companies harmed by the coronavirus pandemic. 

 

Indiana-based ARC purchased coal mines and equipment from bankrupt coal company Cambrian for $1 last September. The purchase came with a heavy debt burden that included environmental reclamation obligations, employee wages and health care costs, and utility bills. 

Almost immediately, ARC failed to pay those expenses, leading Eastern Kentucky federal bankruptcy court Chief Judge Gregory Schaaf to impose monetary sanctions against the company. Lack of payment to employees at ARC subsidiary Quest Energy led some employees to protest this January by blocking a Pike County, Kentucky railroad. 

“It’s hard to go to work between two rocks and not get paid for it,” a Quest miner who asked to be kept anonymous said at the time. “There’s men that’s getting their power bills cut off and men’s children starving.” 

“There’s some concern that this is not an inability to pay, but an unwillingness to pay,” said Cambrian attorney Patricia Burgess in a May 14 hearing. 

ARC received $2.7 million in loans from the federal government this April through the Small Business Administration’s Paycheck Protection Program, which was intended for small businesses. 

ARC attorney Billy Shelton told Schaaf the slump in energy usage brought on by coronavirus-related shutdowns had interfered with ARC’s ability to turn a profit off the newly acquired mines, but the judge said ARC’s failure to pay began long before the pandemic. 

“I am at the end of my rope with your client,” Schaaf told Shelton in the same hearing. “And I guess you need to start by telling me why I should believe anything that ARC promises to the court.” 

The threat of jail time is a significant escalation in the efforts of bankruptcy judges to hold coal companies accountable for environmental and other liabilities, said Cornell University assistant visiting professor Josh Macey, author of “Bankruptcy as Bailout: Coal Company Insolvency and the Erosion of Federal Law” in the Stanford Review. 

“For over a decade, coal companies have been getting rid of non-productive mines by giving them away. In a number of cases, coal companies have even paid another entity to acquire the mine. The acquirer tends to be underfunded,” Macey explained. “These transactions look like a way of offloading burdensome cleanup and retirement obligations. This has worked out reasonably well for both the buyer and the seller but not for local communities.”

Macey has documented a pattern of misuse of the bankruptcy process by coal companies, in which environmental reclamation and miners’ health obligations are loaded onto companies that have no ability to pay them, so the original companies can continue operating without the burden of those debts.

“I would expect [ARC] to liquidate given current market conditions and available liquidity. There is just not enough cash right now for them to keep operating,” he said.

The Trump administration has come under fire over the allocation of PPP funding. The first round of funding was quickly used up, with loans of more than $2 million accounting for some 25,000 loans while thousands of family-owned businesses went without. 

Judge Schaaf is expected to decide later this week whether to kick the issue up to a higher court for adjudication.

WVU Awarded Federal Funding for Acid Mine Drainage Project

The U.S. Energy Department has selected West Virginia University for the second phase of research in a project that would recover rare earth elements from coal mine drainage.

U.S. Sens. Shelley Moore Capito and Joe Manchin announced the $2.7 million grant Thursday.

The West Virginia senators say in a statement that the project uses acid mine drainage solids to recover rare earth elements and other useful materials.

WVU says rare earth elements have numerous applications and are used in devices such as cell phones, medical equipment and defense applications. The university says conventional recovery methods are difficult, expensive and generate large volumes of contaminated waste.

Justice Urges Appalachian Coal Support of $4.5 Billion Yearly

Gov. Jim Justice says his proposed homeland security incentive for eastern U.S. coal mines would cost about $4.5 billion annually.

The West Virginia governor, elected as a Democrat last year, presented the plan to the Trump administration before announcing his switch to rejoin the Republican Party earlier this month.

It calls for paying power companies to burn steam coal mined in northern and central Appalachia.

It’s intended to ensure that energy source continues in the face of difficult market forces and could keep the eastern power grid operating during any emergencies affecting supplies of natural gas or coal mined elsewhere.

Justice, whose family owns mines, says keeping eastern coalfields open is “critical to national security.”

He last week said the White House was receptive though he didn’t have a commitment.

Mine Wars Museum Receives Grant for Anniversary Project

The West Virginia Mine Wars Museum has received a $30,000 challenge grant for a project to commemorate the 100th anniversary of the Battle of Blair Mountain in 2021.

The National Endowment for the Humanities announced the grant last week. The museum is located in Matewan.

The grant will enable the museum to hire a director to coordinate activities. The museum said in a news release the grant is also intended to increase fundraising capacity and connect with humanities organizations across southern West Virginia.

The Battle of Blair Mountain lasted five days, unfolding on the border of Boone and Logan counties. The Blair Centennial Project is planned to last five days with activities across the counties where the conflict took place.

Screenings of the film “Matewan” are planned in October, with proceeds to benefit the centennial project.

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