RECLAIM Act is approved by U.S. House committee
After reintroduction in April, the bipartisan RECLAIM Act was debated and voted on during the May 1 House Natural Resources Committee markup, where the bill was passed out of committee on a bipartisan basis.
The RECLAIM Act would invest $1 billion in projects that clean up abandoned coal mines and waters polluted by them, and would catalyze community development projects on or near reclaimed sites.
Support for the bill is rooted in communities struggling with abandoned mines and the decline of coal jobs, including in east Kentucky where people have been calling for the initiative since 2013. The re-introduction of the House bill earlier this month and today’s passage in committee underline the serious momentum the bill has garnered in recent weeks.
Action Needed
U.S. Rep. Hal Rogers is the lead Republican cosponsor of the RECLAIM Act (HR 2156), and Rep. John Yarmuth is a cosponsor. However, Kentucky's other four members of the U.S. House have failed to get behind this needed economic revitalization legislation.
Please contact Reps. James Comer, Brett Guthrie, Thomas Massie and Andy Barr and ask them to support coal communities and become a RECLAIM Act cosponsor. Contact Reps. Rogers and Yarmuth and thank them for their support.
Rep. James Comer, 1st District
(202) 225-3115 – Washington
(270) 487-9509 – Madisonville
(270) 408-1865 – Paducah
(270) 487-9509 – Tompkinsville
Rep. Brett Guthrie, 2nd District
(202) 225-3501 – Washington
(270) 842-9896 – Bowling Green
Rep. John Yarmuth, 3rd District
(202) 225-5401 – Washington
(502) 933-5863 – Louisville
(502) 582-5129 – Louisville
Rep. Thomas Massie, 4th District
(202) 225-3465 – Washington
(606) 324-9898 – Ashland
(502) 265-9119 – LaGrange
(859) 426-0080 – Crescent Springs
Rep. Hal Rogers, 5th District
(202) 225-4601 – Washington
(606) 679-8346 – Somerset
(606) 886-0844 – Prestonsburg
(606) 439-0794 – Hazard
Rep. Andy Barr, 6th District
(202) 225-4706 – Washington
(859) 219-1366 – Lexington
“Being from a family whose men have worked in the coal industry for generations, this bill is of great importance to me. It’s a way to stimulate the economies of the communities hit hardest by the decline of the coal industry. These communities need help now. RECLAIM will provide it by putting miners back to work reclaiming the land and creating new businesses,” said Sarah Bowling, who grew up in Pike County and is a long-time proponent of RECLAIM.
"Supporters in coal-impacted communities and across the country have provided 10,000 petition signatures, thousands of calls, hundreds of postcards, and local governments have passed more than 50 resolutions, all urging Congress to pass this bill,” said Wes Addington, Executive Director of Appalachian Citizens’ Law Center.
The act, if passed, would provide an immediate economic boost by employing thousands of people in reclamation jobs across the country. Many people in Central Appalachia possess the earth-moving skills necessary for this type of reclamation work, including laid-off coal miners and others.
Fred Jackson, the president of a reclamation contractor based in Clay County, said, “If you’ve got more work going on, then you’ve got to have more workers to do them. If you’ve got 20 million extra dollars coming into the state, the reclamation contractors are here and will be needing extra workers for those cleanup jobs. People here value their homes like everyone else does. Home is home. Abandoned mines are affecting people’s livelihoods like people’s houses or people’s access to the community. It would be a good thing to get more money stirring in this area and do the reclamation that needs to be done.”
RECLAIM’s re-introduction earlier this month followed a March 28 House Energy and Mineral Resources subcommittee hearing at which ACLC’s Senior Coordinator of Policy and Community Engagement Eric Dixon and two other witnesses testified in support of RECLAIM. After passage in committee, the next step for the legislation is a vote before the full U.S. House of Representatives.
The RECLAIM Act could be a first step toward a more diverse, sustainable economy in the mountains, though other issues remain. Congress must ensure coal companies pay their fair share to compensate miners with black lung and clean up the huge abandoned mine problem that will remain even if RECLAIM passes. Congress should pass RECLAIM immediately, and should also extend the black lung tax slashed on January 1, 2019 and reauthorize the Abandoned Mine Land (AML) program.
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