Blankenship on Trial: Prosecution Begins Connecting the Dots

In this week’s episode of “Blankenship on Trial,” host Scott Finn discusses the latest witness to take the stand, Performance Coal President and Upper Big Branch mine operator Chris Blanchard, with West Virginia Public Broadcasting’s Ashton Marra and former Assistant U.S. Attorney Mike Hissam. 

As he took the stand Thursday, Blanchard began connecting the dots between what was going on in the mines, the lack of regard for safety and the advanced notice given to miners when federal inspectors were on site, and former CEO Don Blankenship himself. 

Blanchard twice testified to specific conversation with Blankenship in which he was directed to skirt safety regulations or notify miners.

Former Upper Big Branch miner Stanley “Goose” Stewart shared an emotional testimony with jurors this week, detailing the “code of silence” between the miners at UBB who refused to report the unsafe working conditions they were in.

President Obama Announces New Federal Drug Policies During Charleston Visit

The nation’s substance abuse epidemic is taking center stage after President Obama announced new federal policies to combat the issue Wednesday. The president announced those changes during a trip to Charleston.

Obama held a forum at the Roosevelt Community Center on the city’s East End that included a panel of both federal and local leaders.

“I didn’t grow up with a desire to use drugs. I didn’t even know what they were until I heard kids in high school talking about them, but when I heard my friend broke his toe and wasn’t taking his prescription, curiosity took over,” Jordan Coughlen told the crowd gathered at the forum.

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Coughlen described himself as an addict in long term recovery. After years of struggling with an addiction to opioids, Coughlen accidentally overdosed and spent five days in a coma.

“The only reason I am here today is because treatment is effective and recovery does happen,” he said.

Now, Coughlen works at a recovery center in Wheeling helping others in his community that struggle with the disease to overcome it. After introducing the president Wednesday, Obama thanked Coughlen for sharing his story and called him living proof that treatment does work.

The President’s trip to the state coincided with an announcement of changes in federal substance abuse treatment policies, policies designed to get a hold on an epidemic that’s quickly spreading across the nation.

“More Americans now die every year from drug overdoses than they do from motor vehicle crashes. More than they do from car crashes,” he said. “The majority of those overdoses involve legal prescription drugs.”

Since 1999, sales of prescription painkillers in the country have increased by 300 percent. The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services says in 2012, there were enough painkillers sold to give every American adult their own bottle of pills, and the increase in sales has corresponded with increased numbers of overdose deaths.

That’s why President Obama says he’s working on the issue now, hoping to shed some light on the substance abuse epidemic.

It’s no coincidence the President chose to announce his policy changes in West Virginia, the state with the highest overdose rate in the nation. Thirty-four of every 100,000 West Virginians die from overdoses each year, nearly three times the national average.

The Obama administration’s new policies are aimed at reducing those numbers and helping addicts gain access to the treatment they need to overcome the disease.

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WV Public Broadcasting

The first policy deals with prescriber training- teaching medical professionals how to appropriately deal with a patient’s pain while still providing them with the treatment they need.  

“I talk to many physicians who talk about the fact that they receive little to no training on safe and effective opioid prescribing,” Director of National Drug Control Policy Michael Botticelli said on a conference call with reporters Wednesday morning, “and so what we want to make sure is that physicians and other prescribers feel comfortable not only prescribing these, but in essence not prescribing them or monitoring people along the way.”

Aside from funneling resources into proper training, the President is also working to expand access to medication assisted treatment options. Those are programs that use methadone, suboxone and newly approved vivitrol combined with counseling to wean an addict off of a drug.

West Virginia has seen limited success using these types of treatments through the state’s drug court programs, but the President wants to put funds toward training more prescribers to use the method.

Obama has also directed the Department of Health and Human Services to locate barriers in the nation’s healthcare system that would prevent expanded access and come up with actionable plans to start breaking down those barriers.

The policies are meant to bring about a change, Obama said, a change not just in the number of people abusing drugs, but also in the culture of treating addiction.

“When people loosely throw around words like junkie, nobody wants to be labeled in that way,” he said, “and part of our goal here today is to replace those words with words like father or daughter or son or friend cause then you understand there’s a human element behind this.

“This could happen to any of us, in any of our families. We can’t fight this epidemic without eliminating stigma.”

Hunters Can Donate Deer to Program to Feed Families

West Virginia’s Division of Natural Resources says hunters can donate deer to a program that benefits needy families.

Hunters can deliver legally harvested deer to the nearest meat processor participating in the Hunters Helping the Hungry program. A list of processors is available at www.wvdnr.gov/Hunting/HHH.shtm .

Venison is deboned, ground and frozen in two-pound packages. Food banks pick up the venison and distribute it to more than 500 food programs throughout West Virginia.

Since its inception in 1992, Hunters Helping the Hungry has provided nearly 900,000 pounds of venison for more than 1.2 million family-style meals.

Ordered to Drop Politics, Ex-Coal CEO Shows Views on Trial

An outspoken critic of President Barack Obama charged with conspiring to violate mine safety rules before a deadly explosion is under orders not to tell jurors he’s being persecuted by Democrats.

The federal judge also warned former Massey Energy CEO Don Blankenship that safety rules are not on trial.

But Blankenship hasn’t checked his Republican politics at the courtroom door, and criticizing the inspectors remains key to his defense.

Blankenship’s attorney William Taylor has argued that the U.S. Mine Safety and Health Administration inspectors targeted Massey’s mines after Obama took office, spending twice as long in Upper Big Branch in 2009 as in 2007, under President George W. Bush.

He also said regulators demanded ventilation changes “almost impossible to implement” before an explosion killed 29 miners in 2010.

Obama Announces US will Tackle Prescription Drug Abuse

President Barack Obama says prescription drug abuse is exacting a terrible toll across the country and causing pain for millions of families.

Obama was in West Virginia on Wednesday to highlight the problem. He announced new steps to help improve doctor training and ease access to drug treatment.

He says sales of powerful prescription pain medications have skyrocketed by 300 percent since 1999.

And in 2012 alone, doctors wrote 259 million prescriptions for these highly addictive drugs. Obama says that was more than enough to give a bottle of pills to every American adult.

But he says the federal government alone can’t solve the problem.

West Virginia has the highest rate of overdose deaths in the U.S., more than twice the national average.

Coal Forum Rally Blasts Obama's EPA, Blames Substance Abuse Issues on Coal's Decline

Although the motivation for the President’s visit to Charleston was to focus on combating substance abuse around the country, others thought he should be…

Although the motivation for the President’s visit to Charleston was to focus on combating substance abuse around the country, others thought he should be more concerned with the decline in West Virginia’s economy–specifically in the coal industry.  

The West Virginia Coal Forum held a rally Wednesday morning, focusing on Obama and his administration’s stances on energy and emissions.

Chris Hamilton of the West Virginia Coal Association kicked off the rally at the State Capitol Complex, explaining why he, members of the Coal Forum and federal and state leaders were on hand before the president’s visit.

“When it was announced last week that the President was coming to Charleston, our phone lines and computer began to light up. Social media began to run wild and the question began to flow,” said Hamilton.  

“‘Are we going to rally? Are we going to protest? Are we going to the line the streets with laid off coal miners?’ Today’s event is in direct response to those inquiries,” he added.

  

While speakers like Sen. Shelley Moore Capito, Senate President Bill Cole and House Speaker Tim Armstead did acknowledge the President’s reason for visiting Charleston, they also put the blame on Obama for the decline in the state’s coal industry. Attorney General Patrick Morrisey blames that decline–at least in part–for West Virginia’s problems with drug abuse and addiction.

“I think [the decline in the coal industry and West Virginia’s issues with substance abuse] is completely related,” said Morrisey.

“One thing that we’ve seen is that this president’s policies have led to a vicious cycle of poverty, hopelessness and despair–and he is at least partially responsible for that.”

Morrisey’s sentiments were echoed by others at the rally, including the West Virginia Coal Association President Bill Raney.

“We’ve got 8,000 coal miners, multiple thousands of support jobs that have been taken out of the equation here in West Virginia –because of federal policies and power plants closing,” said Raney.

 

“When people have unemployment, when they don’t have a job, when they have uncertainty–that’s fertile ground for substance abuse. You can’t come down and think you’re going to solve one problem and not pay attention to the other.”

When asked about a recent report that showed an increase in employed miners testing positive for drugs, Raney and other speakers said they believe that comes from an uncertain future for coal mining.

Reports from West Virginia Public Broadcasting produced in May, stemming from data made available by the state health statistics center, show that West Virginia’s highest overdose death rates since 2001 have been in Cabell, Jefferson and Brooke Counties. All three counties produce little to no coal.

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