Marsh Fork Elementary School Will Escape the Mass of Toxic Coal Sludge
Awhile back, I ranted on about how I was haunted by this photo of Marsh Fork Elementary School in Sundial, West Virginia, sitting as it is vulnerable beneath a giant toxic coal slurry pond and nextdoor to a coal-dust-spewing loading silo.
The balance of the project's $8.6 million cost has already been committed by the state's School Building Authority ($2.6 million). Massey Energy, which is responsible for the slurry pond and the loading silo that are forcing the move, is reluctantly coughing up about $1 million, which begs the question: Why does it come down to the generosity of a private citizen and foundation when there's a wildly profitable company (with revenues in the $700 million per year ballpark) that is immediately responsible for the problem? Three cheers for Annenberg. Shame, shame, shame (yet again) on Massey.