VIEWS » DECEMBER 12, 2019
The industry sees its
employees like it sees the Earth: Just another resource to exploit.
BY SARAH LAZARE
After key environmental
protections were rolled back by the executive order of President Donald Trump
in March 2017—including the Obama-era Clean Power Plan—coal magnate Robert E. Murray cheered the
news. “I think it’s wonderful, not just for the United States coal industry,
our miners and their families, but it’s wonderful for America,” said Murray,
then-CEO of Murray Energy, the largest privately owned coal company in the
United States. Murray had aggressively lobbied for the rollbacks, and In
These Times published photos of his secret meeting, earlier that
month, to deliver a four-page rollback wish list to Energy Secretary Rick
Perry. It was sealed with a hug between the two.
Murray has portrayed himself
as a champion of coal miners against environmentalists. “I live among these
people,” he told the Guardian just before Trump signed the
order. “These are the people who fought the wars and built our country and they
were forgotten by Democrats who had gone to Hollywood characters, liberal
elitists and radical environmentalists.”
But Murray Energy’s 2019
bankruptcy filings tell a different story. Authored by Murray’s nephew and new
CEO, Robert Moore, they point to other coal companies that “used bankruptcy to
reduce debt and lower their cost structures by eliminating cash interest
obligations and pension and benefit obligations.” Reneging on workers’
hard-earned pensions and benefits has left competitors “better positioned to
compete for volume and pricing in the current market.”
The language suggests Murray
Energy intends to follow the example of companies like Westmoreland Mining and
Blackjewel, using bankruptcy to evade coal miners’ healthcare and pension
costs. In a particularly dastardly case, in 2007, Peabody Coal created Patriot
Coal, a doomed-to-fail spinoff company, and dumped 10,000 retirees there; they
lost their pensions after Patriot promptly filed for bankruptcy. But these
bankrupt companies still manage to make good on their debts to banks and hedge
funds.
Gary Campbell, 37, a member of
United Mine Workers of America (UMWA) and worker at the Murray Energy-owned
Marion County Coal Company in West Virginia, is scared for fellow workers who
have retired. “The retirees are too old to go back to work,” Campbell says. “So
what happens when they can’t afford their house payment or car payment or
medical bill? They’re being thrown to the curb. It’s horrible to see people
treated like this.”
There’s no question that coal
workers face an uncertain future, but a phaseout of coal is a necessity: Coal
is the highest carbon-emission fuel source. A 2015
study found that to prevent the worst effects of climate change, the
vast majority of fossil fuels—including 92% of U.S. coal reserves—must stay in
the ground. That precarity will be felt most by the poor and working class who,
unlike Robert E. Murray, won’t be able to retire to a secluded mansion when
heat and natural disasters threaten their homes.
The way to champion coal
workers is not to save the industry from environmental regulation, as Murray
would like us to think, but to ensure a just transition from a fossil fuel
economy—something coal companies have no interest in, but environmentalists and
labor unions do. The Green New Deal resolution put forward in February 2019 by
Rep. Alexandria OcasioCortez (D-N.Y.) and Sen. Ed Markey (D-Mass.) calls for
the United States “to achieve netzero greenhouse gas emissions through a fair
and just transition for all communities and workers.” Such a shift could bring
coal miners dignified, union jobs in another sector—whether it’s coal cleanup,
renewable energy, public transportation, healthcare or another field.
Stanley Sturgill, a retired
UMWA coal miner and climate justice activist, advocates a just transition away
from fossil fuels as part of a Green New Deal. “As far as a just transition,
the only way to look at it is you have to find something equal or better paying
than [the jobs] they’ve got right now,” Sturgill says. And it will be workers,
not companies, who become the critical leaders in this process.
The just transition can start
immediately: Sara Nelson, president of the Association of Flight Attendants-CWA
and a vocal supporter of the Green New Deal, has repeatedly called on climate
activists to support the 2019 American Miners Act (AMA), supported by UMWA. It would
protect the pensions of more than 100,000 coal miners whose retirement fund was
depleted by the 2008 crash and rescue the healthcare of miners whose companies
went bankrupt.
The AMA is only a first step.
In a just world, a full transition would include not only the dignified union
jobs called for by the Green New Deal resolution, but shut down the coal
companies and redistribute their assets to workers before they can go bankrupt
and abandon their obligations—or further harm the climate.
At the very least, the Robert
Murrays of the world should be recognized for what they are: enemies of the
working people who, as Campbell puts it, “made them their fortune.” Coal
companies treat their workers just as they treat the earth: something to
extract value from, then discard.
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