Kanawha Eagle Mine
Eagle Mine is an underground coal mining operation in Kanawha County, West Virginia, operated by Kanawha Eagle Coal's Newtown Energy and owned partly by Peabody Energy's Patriot Coal.
According to Patriot Coal's website, "The Kanawha Eagle complex, which is contractor-operated, is located in southern West Virginia and is sourced by three underground mines. All three mines utilize continuous mining methods. Processed coal is sold on both metallurgical and thermal markets and is transported via CSX rail directly to the customer or by private line railroad to the Kanawha River and placed on barges. Coal is produced from the Coalburg and Eagle seams."[1]
Ownership
Kanawha Eagle Coal, LLC, is a joint venture which owns and manages underground mining operations in Central Appalachia. Peabody Energy owns a 49% interest, as part of Patriot Coal.[2]
Union organizing efforts
Local clergy, miners, spouses, and supporters held a prayer vigil outside the 49% Peabody owned Kanawha Eagle coal mine on December 5, 2006, in support of miners organizing a union with the United Mine Workers of America.[3]
The prayer vigil was organized by Religious Leaders for Coalfield Justice, commemorated the one-year anniversary of the public launch of the campaign.[3]
During the vigil, participants prayed for Peabody Energy to embrace religious teachings calling on employers not to interfere in their workers’ decision to organize and prayed for God to strengthen the miners in the face of interference from Peabody management.[3]
“It takes spirit, God-given spirit to organize,” said the Reverend Jim Lewis, a Charleston, West Virginia, Episcopal priest and founding member of Religious Leaders for Coalfield Justice (RLCJ). “Miners know they have to organize for their safety, job security, family and community. And nobody better get in their way or try to stop them. Spirit-filled miners have power.”[3]
Over 600 religious leaders signed a statement calling on Peabody Energy “to refrain from intimidating, threatening and firing miners who are working to organize a union,” and “to be truly neutral with respect to employees’ rights to form or join a union and to voluntarily recognize a union when a majority of their employees sign authorizations.”[3]
"I have no choice but to stand with the miners who seek to organize a union at Peabody, because their right to organize has been denied by the company," said the Reverend Dennis Sparks, Executive Director of the West Virginia Council of Churches and member of RLCJ. "As a Christian, it is an issue of justice. My prayer is for a reconciliation between miners and the company."[3]
Mine Data
- MSHA ID: 4608759
- Operator: Newtown Energy Inc, Kanawha Eagle Coal
- Controller: Robert E Ellis, Patriot Coal
- Union:
- County: Kanawha
- State: WV
- Latitude: 38.15
- Longitude: -81.56
- 2007 Production (short tons): 1,233,721
- Coal Type: Bituminous
- Mining Method: Underground
- Mine Status: Active
- Average No. of Employees: 176
Articles and resources
Related GEM.wiki articles
- Capitol Power Plant
- Peabody Energy
- West Virginia and coal
- U.S. coal politics
- Coal and jobs in the United States
- Coal phase-out
- Headquarters of U.S. coal mining companies
- Global list of coal mining companies and agencies
- Proposed coal mines
- Existing U.S. Coal Plants
- Coal
To see a listing of coal mines in a particular state, click on the map:
References
- ↑ "Appalachia Operations" Patriot Coal, accessed April 2011.
- ↑ "Appalachia Coal Operations," Intierra Resource Intelligence, accessed December 2008
- ↑ 3.0 3.1 3.2 3.3 3.4 3.5 "Religious Leaders Hold Prayer Vigil Calling for Justice at Peabody," Justice at Peabody News, 12/5/06
External links
- "Major U.S. Coal Mines," Energy Information Administration
- Beth Gorczyca Ryan, "Coal company works to comply with laws," The State Journal, March 9, 2006