The Obama administration’s increasingly expansive environmental
policy is bringing about serious challenges to West Virginia. With new proposed
EPA regulations redefining navigable waters, Chesapeake Bay mandates, and recently imposed greenhouse gas
rules threatening the state’s largest economic driver, people throughout the
State are scratching their heads wondering what on earth the President has
against them. Many are not just wondering, but are visibly and rightfully angry
at what they claim to be a highhanded and undemocratic exercise of power. Furthermore, policymakers throughout the
Mountain State are beginning to ask exactly how the US Executive Branch intends
to offset the economic blow that will most certainly hit West Virginia hard in
response to such policy changes.
It has been said that West Virginians do the heavy lifting.
As a matter of fact, West Virginians for decades have carried the burden of
supplying the nation with its greatest source of power. Our people have taken
on incredibly taxing physical labor, endured adverse health conditions both in
its laborers and in their families and children, and have allowed its mountains
and water supply to be exploited in an effort to fuel the nation. Is it too much to ask in return that that
same nation pay proper tribute to the effects that these new policies will have
on those who have endured for so long in loyalty to this great country? Is it
too burdensome to request that our national and state policymakers consider
that West Virginia has been there for them and their constituents, quietly
serving in some of the toughest jobs in the land in an effort to keep the
lights on for its neighbors in the US and even in the world?
I want to encourage the people of West Virginia to raise
their voice with respect to this debate. The Putting People First campaign has recently published a survey
imploring people like you to make your opinions known. It is a grassroots
effort, but one that seeks input right at the level where the impact of these
changes will be felt most, in YOUR home and with YOUR family and friends. These
efforts have not been in vain. In just the first 48 hours of publishing the
survey online, we have received over 70 anonymous responses weighing in on
issues including the EPA’s proposed rule to the Clean Water Act, the Chesapeake
Bay mandates, mountaintop removal mining, hydraulic fracturing, and drill waste
deposits, to name a few.