Trump's Push To Save The Fading Coal Industry Gets A Warm Embrace In West Virginia

trumps push to save the fading coal industry gets a warm embrace in west virginia

The winner of this year's West Virginia Coal Festival teen beauty pageant walks among the ruins of a community abandoned 70 years ago and imagines the rusted remains of coal tipples and processing plants coming back to life.

Ava Johnson knows West Virginia coal will not ever be what it once was. But as she makes her way along overgrown railroad tracks near the abandoned Kay Moor mine in the New River Gorge National Park looking for spikes for her collection, the 16-year-old history buff says she has heard people talking with hope about the future of an industry that has brought good-paying jobs to her state for the better part of two centuries.

"You can't appreciate being a true West Virginian unless you realize that people risk their lives every single day to make ours better," she said.

Much of that renewed sense of hope is based on the actions of President Donald Trump , who earlier this month issued new executive orders aimed at reviving an energy source that has long been flagged by scientists as the world's most polluting fossil fuel, one that directly contributes to the warming of the planet.

Trump, who has pledged since his first run for the presidency in 2016 to 'save coal," issued orders to allow mining on federal land and to loosen some emissions standards meant to curb coal's environmental impact.