UK hosts daylong conference on coal in Kentucky
On Thursday November 5, KFTC members Vanessa Hall and Suzanne Tallichet participated in A Forum on Coal in Kentucky. The daylong event hosted by the University of Kentucky Department of Mining Engineering and the Center for Visualization and Virtual Environments sponsored the event as "a balanced discussion regarding the past, present and future impacts of coal on our state’s economy and environment.â€
Set up as a debate between those supporting the coal industry and environmentalists against coal, the "discussion†was presented through four daytime sessions, Economics and Coal in Kentucky, People and Coal in Kentucky, Aspects of Coal in Kentucky, Environment and Coal in Kentucky and the evening session, Impact of Coal, Today and Tomorrow.
Along side the presentations of the experts in economic, science and research was the highly charged political views of coal, which often crept over as in the case of Kentucky Historian Ron Bryant, "Pollution, land destruction, that can be studied; I want you to think positively about coal and the future of Kentucky.†In presenting the history of coal in Kentucky, Bryant failed to mention the effects of the broadform deed or the citizen led movement residing in a constitutional amendment abolishing it.
Leading coal politicians such as former Governor Paul Patton, Pike Co. Judge Executive Wayne B. Rutherford and House Majority Leader Rocky Adkins played to the majority of the 300 attendees supporting the industry, painting the industry as the object of a vast conspiracy plotting its downfall. "Coal is not the villain, coal should be the hero of this country,†railed Rutherford, "We have to give coal the credit it deserves!†Governor Patton pronounced, "Coal is the favorite whipping boy of the media,†adding that Kentucky’s, "central location, hard-working people, and cheap electricity makes Kentucky attractive to economic activityâ€, alleging that the states in the northeast of the country want to destroy Kentucky and West Virginia’s economic edge.
Jason Bailey of MACED, Suzanne Tallichet and Vanessa Hall brought compelling and often unwelcome reasons to the audience for Kentucky to question many assumptions about coal and Kentucky’s economic future
The PowerPoint presentations of the various research and economic experts can be seen at www.coalinkentucky.com. The speeches of Patton, Rutherford and Adkins are unavailable.
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