Residents Suddenly Left Without Clean Water in Dispute with Mine Company

In May 2016, a jury found that a coal company owned by then-candidate for governor, Jim Justice, wasn’t responsible for contaminating the water wells of several Wyoming County residents. Still, an order requiring the firm to provide temporary fresh water stayed in place, and the water kept coming — until recently, when it abruptly stopped. 

More than 30 families in the Cedar Creek community have accused the nearby surface mining operation, then run by Dynamic Energy Inc. and its parent company Mechel Bluestone Inc., of tainting their water, which the residents said contained arsenic, lead and other pollutants.

Despite the verdict, a judge kept a court order in place requiring the mine company to provide water to the families — a directive the company violated when it stopped paying the vendor to deliver it. Residents said it stopped coming about a week before Christmas.

“Having it just cut off with no warning, not letting us be prepared, that was not right,” said Debbie Browning, who tapped back into her old well for bathing and washing clothes, despite the risks she cited. “I’m just thankful that I was able to use my water, even if it was iron and rust and all [the] brown stuff that’s in it. I’m just thankful I was fortunate enough to turn it back on.”

Scientists from the state Department of Environmental Protection found no correlation between the mine and the wells in question at trial. Kevin Thompson, an attorney for the families said the DEP geologist who testified “told the truth about the science [but] fudged the conclusion.”

The surface mine in question is currently run by CM Energy Operations LP, which is not affiliated with Mechel Bluestone. But the families are appealing the civil case against Mechel Bluestone, still owned by Justice, and asking it to resume paying for water delivery.

Check Bounces

Dynamic Energy and Mechel Bluestone spent about $1 million fulfilling the court order so far, but can no longer afford it, according to one of its attorneys, Billy Shelton. He told the West Virginia Supreme Court of Appeals last month that a check written to the water vendor bounced. While they await word on an appeal, the families’ attorneys took this matter to court. In a response filed Feb. 5, defense attorneys asked the court to dismiss the order, saying there is “no basis” to continue providing water when the mine company prevailed at trial.

The money spent so far “should reflect the good faith on the part of the [company] to comply with the water replacement orders and clearly establish to this court that if were not the current financial situation of the [company] they would still be complying with the water replacement costs,” the response said.

Each of the initial 16 families who sued were receiving 10, 5-gallon jugs and a tank of water each month since December 2014, paid for by the coal company. Ten more families signed on and began getting water in 2016.

Resident Jason Walker said he dips into the creek now and treats the water with pool chemicals to flush the toilets at his house and his mother’s place next door. He fills used water containers at the auto parts store where he works one of his two jobs and hauls them home. Depending on the weather, the drive to his uncle’s house where he showers can take up to 25 minutes.

“We do have water, it’s just we just can’t use it like you do like you would normally do on a normal daily basis. … If I’m working here at home, say changing my my own oil, I get dirty, I have to go 10 miles to take a bath,” he said.

His family has had water issues in the past, he said, but they had always been manageable. Then about four or five years ago — around the time he said the coal company started blasting — he could no longer treat the water with his usual methods, such as a salt filter.

Shelton said he couldn’t discuss a pending lawsuit, but noted “we always disputed the claims of the plaintiffs that the mining operation had affected their residential water supplies.

“This position was confirmed by the ladies and gentlemen who served on the Wyoming Circuit Court jury, who listened to all the testimony and evidence in the four-week trial and who unanimously decided the case in favor of the my clients,” he said in an email. “We expect those unanimous verdicts to be affirmed by the West Virginia Supreme Court of Appeals very soon, putting an end to this matter.”

Still Supporting the Governor

Justice has failed for years to pay off various debts associated with his companies. He sold the mine in question to Russian mining and metals company Mechel OAO in 2009 and bought it back in 2015, after the initial water complaints. (CM Energy Operations took over ownership last year.) Justice didn’t respond to requests for comment through representatives. But he can count Browning and Walker among his supporters.

“As a governor, I think he’s doing a good job. I like him myself, I voted for the man,” Browning said. “So I’d appreciate it if he’d just take care of our water situation, you know? That’d be nice.”

Like many in the area, both families have connections to the mining industry.

“None of us in this lawsuit is against the coal mining company. I mean, that’s the way of life here in West Virginia,” Walker said. “Only thing we have a problem with is they’re damaging our resources to our natural water, and we want them to clean the mess up.”

Warren McGraw, the Wyoming County circuit judge who issued the court order, couldn’t be reached for comment. His order reinforced laws requiring mine companies that contaminate a residential water supply to provide temporary water and work toward a long-term solution. Thompson posited that the judge left the order unchanged after the trial “based on the evidence.”

“He kept it in place because he knows those people need water, plain and simple. … Gov. Justice thinks he’s above the law and he doesn’t have to follow this injunction,” Thompson said.

Walker said he soon plans to drill a new well, hoping to find a new seam of water. His current well is full of sediment, and he has to replace the filter system that’s gone bad from being idle. But even then, he said, he’s taking a risk.

“Clear water might be contaminated, you just never know what you’re going to drink,” Walker said.

Attorneys expect the Supreme Court to issue a response this week concerning the water delivery. A decision about the appeal is likely to come this spring.

This story has been updated to clarify the mine’s current owner.

Molly Born is a corps member with Report for America, an initiative of The GroundTruth Project.

Hemp Farmers Face Rocky Road in Diversifying Eastern Kentucky’s Economy

As the number of coal mining jobs continues to decline in central Appalachia, hemp is getting a lot of attention as one way to diversify eastern Kentucky’s post-coal economy. But the region’s burgeoning hemp industry is also riddled with uncertainty. The lack of land suitable for growing hemp, and its association with marijuana pose some significant challenges.

Neil Spears is a resident of Pikeville, Kentucky. He’s one of the pioneers in Kentucky’s burgeoning hemp industry.

On a hot Friday afternoon in September, Spears drives off a paved road, through a creek, and up to his friend’s hemp farm near Pikeville. It’s nestled among the ancient mountains of Appalachia.

“I used to tell everyone in Colorado, they’d talk about the mountains in Colorado, well, you all got majestic mountains, we’ve got beautiful mountains. That’s two different things. Awe-inspiring and beautiful are two different things,” he says.

Spears has a goatee and hair that brushes his shoulders. He walks through the five-acre plot in his beat-up straw hat, watching out for rattlesnakes.

Credit Brittany Greeson / The GroundTruth Project
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The GroundTruth Project
Hemp grown for CBD production and testing is seen at the Robinson Center for Appalachian Resource Sustainability in Quicksand, Ky., on Monday, September 25, 2017.

It’s not easy to see the hemp plants. Most of this year’s crop has been choked out by weeds.

“It’s not what I dreamed of,” Spears said as he walked through the field. “But first year out, you’ve got a crop up. Albeit a small crop, we’ve got a crop up.”

Spears grew up in Pikeville, pursued a career as a singer-songwriter, and eventually left to work in the marijuana industry in Colorado.

“A good friend of mine said, ‘Do you want to come home and get ready for what’s coming and start growing hemp?’ I said yeah. So came back last November and here we are.”

Hemp can be used for a wide range of products —  plastics, health foods, biofuels. Spears and his friend plan on selling the fiber part of the crop to a processing facility in North Carolina later this fall.

But the most lucrative product is cannabidiol oil, or CBD oil. Spears is excited about their plan to build a 10,000 square-foot greenhouse to start growing hemp specifically for CBD oil.

CBD is different from THC, or tetrahydrocannabinol, the chemical in marijuana that gets you high. But some studies suggest it can be used to treat epilepsy, anxiety and depression. All these claims need more scientific research, but in the meantime, there’s a growing market for CBD oil.

“I’d like to see eastern Kentucky to be a big grower of hemp, you know, as a whole. This is something that can start making some people some money. I’m interested in helping whoever in eastern Kentucky wants to grow hemp, grow hemp,” Spears said.

But for hemp growers wanting to cash in on CBD oil, there’s risk involved. The hemp strains with the highest CBD levels also have higher levels of THC. And if the THC content is more than three-tenths of one percent, state law requires the grower to burn the crop.

Credit Brittany Greeson / The GroundTruth Project
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The GroundTruth Project
A highway is seen from the top of a mountain in Pike County, Ky., on Wednesday, September 27, 2017.

About an hour and a half away from Pikeville, in Jackson, researchers at the University of Kentucky are experimenting with creating hemp varieties more suitable for growing in the state.

University of Kentucky agronomist David Williams inspects one of his hemp research plots at the Robinson Center for Appalachian Resource Sustainability. The spindly, green stalks and the arrow-shaped leaves give off an earthy, slightly sweet smell.

“I don’t know how tall this plant is, but it was planted at the end of June. How tall would it be if it were planted 60 days earlier? We’ll find out next year,” Williams says as he examines a hemp plant. “The most important part about our work is determining which varieties are best adapted to our latitudes and our climate for optimum yields.”

This research would have been illegal a few years ago.

Hemp has a long history in the United States.

From the sails and rigging on the USS Constitution — America’s oldest naval ship — to the canvas on covered wagons heading out west, hemp is deeply tied to our nation’s past.

And Kentucky has played a vital role in that. While some was originally grown on small family farms, the majority of the nation’s hemp was produced in the Bluegrass Region of central Kentucky as a plantation crop.

“Hemp production is very tedious, very labor-intensive. One needs not look very deeply to understand that, that history is inextricably connected to slavery,” Williams said.

Hemp production in Kentucky dropped off after slavery was abolished and cheaper imported fibers became available. Except for a short-lived revival during World War II, hemp production was discouraged and finally banned because of its connection to marijuana.

Although CBD oil from hemp cannot get you high, it was still grouped in the same category as marijuana and heroin.

Then came the 2014 Farm Bill, which allowed certain states to grow hemp for the first time in about six decades. A number of Kentucky lawmakers said hemp would create thousands of jobs, and the Kentucky Department of Agriculture launched an aggressive research program.

“By most measures, Kentucky leads the nation in industrial hemp research,” said David Williams, the University of Kentucky agronomist. “The Kentucky Department of Agriculture has done a fantastic job managing what anyone would consider a very complex situation.”

And it is complex.

Those who want to grow or process hemp need a license from the Drug Enforcement Administration. And hemp seeds and plants cannot be taken across state lines.

Still, there were about 200 approved growers this year in Kentucky who – in total – planted almost 3,000 acres of industrial hemp. Some was for fiber, which includes everything from T-shirts to dashboards, but most of it was for CBD oil.

Almost all the hemp production was in central and western Kentucky, where the average farm is much larger — 100 acres or more. In the eastern, more mountainous side of the state, farms are smaller than 10 acres.  

“We can’t expect eastern Kentucky and West Virginia to become major contributors to hemp as a commodity crop,” Williams said. “That being said, plant breeding or certified seed production [create] situations where you don’t have to have hundreds of acres to be profitable.”

In other words, Williams says eastern Kentucky doesn’t have the terrain to grow hemp for large-scale industrial products. But producers in the region could potentially grow hemp for the seeds or seedlings, and sell those to farmers in the central and western part of the state.

Credit Brittany Greeson / The GroundTruth Project
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The GroundTruth Project
The remains of a strip mine are seen from a mountain top in Pike County, Ky., on Wednesday, September 27, 2017.

With limited flat land, some entrepreneurs thought former strip mines could become farms.

Nathan Hall is president of Reclaim Appalachia – a nonprofit working to develop economic opportunities on former coal mining land.

“Hemp has this reputation of being a hardy plant that grows just about anywhere … there’s a big difference between a plant that will technically grow anywhere versus a plant that you can get profitable production per acre anywhere based on the type of soils you’re working with,” Hall said.

He tried growing hemp on an old strip mine site, but it didn’t go well.

“There is no topsoil at all. You’re planting into rock,” he said.

Hall says despite the small size of farms in mountainous eastern Kentucky, growing hemp for CBD oil in the fertile valleys could be economically viable … with a couple of caveats.

“We need to get clarity around the legal issues surrounding CBD; that still seems to be a bit undecided in terms of whether we can sell across state lines, with the current Administration where things like CBD might be deemed illegal at some point, there’s just a lot of uncertainty. There’s a lot of risk,” he said.

Despite those risks, Neal Spears from Pikeville is willing to bet on it.

“This is about helping people,” he said. “This is about making people better and making this region better.”

This story came to us from Crossing the Divide, a cross-country reporting road trip from WGBH and The GroundTruth Project. Rachel’s on a team of five reporters exploring issues that divide us and stories that unite us. Follow their trip across America at xthedivide.org.

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