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Kentucky
Related: About this forumHow Coal Mining and Years of Neglect Left Kentucky Towns at the Mercy of Flooding
How Coal Mining and Years of Neglect Left Kentucky Towns at the Mercy of Flooding
The region, one of the poorest in the country, is full of modest, unprotected homes and decaying infrastructure. Some residents say they wont return.
By Rick Rojas, Christopher Flavelle and Campbell Robertson
Aug. 4, 2022
Updated 8:30 a.m. ET
FLEMING-NEON, Ky. This sliver of land wedged between the thick woods and Wright Fork creek has been the home of Gary Moores family for as long as there has been a United States. The burial plot for an ancestor who fought in the Revolutionary War, he said, is a mile away. Mr. Moore himself lives in a mobile home across from his fathers house; the house where his grandmother lived is next door. ... All of that was wrecked in last weeks flooding.
This is kind of like the final straw, Mr. Moore, 50, said as he looked out at a new terrain of shredded homes, crushed cars and endless debris. Were gradually losing it that bond we had. Its slipping away. People are getting out of here, trying to get better jobs and live better lives. Im leaning in that direction myself.
For much of the last century, the country was powered by the labor of coal miners underneath the hills and mountains of southeastern Kentucky. But the landscape that was built to serve this work was fragile, leaving the people here extraordinarily vulnerable, especially after the coal industry shuttered so many of the mines and moved on. What remained were modest, unprotected homes and decaying infrastructure, and a land that itself, in many places, had been shorn of its natural defenses.
Last week, when a deluge of rain poured into the hollows, turning creeks into roaring rivers, overwhelming old flood records, killing at least 37 people and destroying countless homes, that vulnerability was made brutally manifest. ... When you have a century of billions of dollars and resources leaving, very little of it staying to create the infrastructure necessary for people to live lives, and its neglected as long as it has been, said Wes Addington, a lawyer with the Appalachian Citizens Law Center in nearby Whitesburg, whose law office is now a flooded wreck, when thats combined with a really insane flood, its a catastrophe.
{snip}
The region, one of the poorest in the country, is full of modest, unprotected homes and decaying infrastructure. Some residents say they wont return.
By Rick Rojas, Christopher Flavelle and Campbell Robertson
Aug. 4, 2022
Updated 8:30 a.m. ET
FLEMING-NEON, Ky. This sliver of land wedged between the thick woods and Wright Fork creek has been the home of Gary Moores family for as long as there has been a United States. The burial plot for an ancestor who fought in the Revolutionary War, he said, is a mile away. Mr. Moore himself lives in a mobile home across from his fathers house; the house where his grandmother lived is next door. ... All of that was wrecked in last weeks flooding.
This is kind of like the final straw, Mr. Moore, 50, said as he looked out at a new terrain of shredded homes, crushed cars and endless debris. Were gradually losing it that bond we had. Its slipping away. People are getting out of here, trying to get better jobs and live better lives. Im leaning in that direction myself.
For much of the last century, the country was powered by the labor of coal miners underneath the hills and mountains of southeastern Kentucky. But the landscape that was built to serve this work was fragile, leaving the people here extraordinarily vulnerable, especially after the coal industry shuttered so many of the mines and moved on. What remained were modest, unprotected homes and decaying infrastructure, and a land that itself, in many places, had been shorn of its natural defenses.
Last week, when a deluge of rain poured into the hollows, turning creeks into roaring rivers, overwhelming old flood records, killing at least 37 people and destroying countless homes, that vulnerability was made brutally manifest. ... When you have a century of billions of dollars and resources leaving, very little of it staying to create the infrastructure necessary for people to live lives, and its neglected as long as it has been, said Wes Addington, a lawyer with the Appalachian Citizens Law Center in nearby Whitesburg, whose law office is now a flooded wreck, when thats combined with a really insane flood, its a catastrophe.
{snip}
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How Coal Mining and Years of Neglect Left Kentucky Towns at the Mercy of Flooding (Original Post)
mahatmakanejeeves
Aug 2022
OP
doc03
(36,675 posts)1. They will vote for Mango Mussolini though. Union coal
miners make over $100,000 a year. But southern WV and Kentucky had non union miners living in poverty. What I don't get is why someone that worked in a coal mine would want their sons and daughters working in one.
global1
(25,916 posts)2. Don't Worry Kentucky Mitch & Rand Will Take Care Of You....
NOT!!!!!!!!