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Poverty & the Environment: A Grist special series
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Log in or create an account to start a new discussion. I Wish I Knew How to Quit Minin' YouPosted by Grist at 2:29 PM on 16 Feb 2006 Most folks know coal mining is a dirty and dangerous business, triggering everything from miner's lung to deadly accidents. But the mountaintop-removal mining increasingly common in Appalachia poses dangers not just to miners but to whole communities already struggling to get by. In recent years, this hugely destructive process -- whereby the tops of mountains are sliced off to get at coal within, and the resulting rubble dumped in nearby streams and valleys -- has triggered lethal flooding, spurred a rash of illnesses in school kids, and even unloosed a massive boulder that tumbled down a hillside into a home and crushed a 3-year-old while he slept. Powerful coal companies resist any reforms, but fed-up locals are fighting back.
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Introduction to the series.
A virtual walking tour of polluted Columbia, Miss.
A portrait of Appalachia scarred by coal mining.
An investigation into why unhealthy food is cheap.
A look at the poultry farms ravaging the South.
Facts and figures on poverty in the U.S.
More stories on poverty & the environment.
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