I
know what it's like to depend upon coal to feed a family.
Many
years ago, I worked at an Ohio steel mill. My job was at the coke plant where
West Virginia coal was turned into coking coal for the blast furnace. The top
of the coke ovens was an area the size of a football field where monstrous
machines funneled coal into the ovens.
We
called it the smell of money because it paid the bills.
As
soon as I got a chance to escape the coke ovens, I took it. I got a job on a
crew at the blast furnace. But I couldn't escape the coal. Like the devil or a
bad check, coal will find you. It followed me to the blast furnace.
Big railroad cars full of coking
coal arrived at the blast furnace every two or three hours. In the winter it
would get as cold as twenty below zero and the coal would freeze solid into one
huge mass. The company said that under no circumstances were we to climb into
the open-top railroad cars to break up the coal. But the company also made it
clear we better hurry up and get that coal offloaded.
So
in we went, carrying big torches to heat the coal and pry bars to break it up.
We prayed that it wouldn't loosen all at once, given the danger that we might
go down the chute with it. Many times on a cold winter night I had to gaze at
my sleeping babies to motivate myself to leave for work on a midnight shift.
There
was a small group of environmentalists in town who were hollering about the
pollution from the steel mills. I got their point. But since they didn't even
give lip service to our need to feed our families, I dismissed them. In fact, I
hated them and feared the changes they might be able to bring about. Jobs or
the environment? That's an easy choice. Jobs are more important.
Eventually,
I was permanently downsized from the mill. The loss of my job caused severe
dislocation for my family. It also made me see things in a new light. Facts and
events that had once gone in one ear and out the other suddenly registered.
Global warming. Poisoned rivers and oceans. Black lung disease. Hurricane
Katrina. Oil spills. Coal-fired power plants spewing acid and deadly metals
into our air.
Slowly
and not always surely, I began to realize that the environmentalists I had once
rejected as extremists were correct when they said that fossil fuels are
destroying the earth. Coal and oil aren't just causing some problems we can
learn to live with in pursuit of economic survival. They are going to make it
impossible for humans to live on this planet.
Jobs
or the environment? Posing the question that way eliminates any chance of
coming up with answers. It ignores the people who live at ground zero of the
debate. I know first-hand what goes through the minds of coal miners as they
sit at the kitchen table facing a pile of bills. "Yes, I know what some
people say. They may even be right. But just give me one more month on this job
so I can pay the rent, along with the electric and the credit card bills."
Jobs
or the environment? Soon it will be too late and we'll have neither. Unless we
come together under the banner of both.
Lee Ballinger is the West Coast Editor of Rock & Rap
Confidential and the author of Lynyrd Skynyrd: An Oral History. He can be
reached at rockrap@aol.com.
Distributed via OtherWords (OtherWords.org)
Distributed via OtherWords (OtherWords.org)