Environment & Energy
Related: About this forumTrump is still courting coal workers. This county shows why it matters.
Trump is still courting coal workers. This county shows why it matters.
A fading coal town in Pennsylvania is struggling to replace the jobs and money that the fossil fuel industry once offered.
By Maxine Joselow
June 24, 2024 at 6:30 a.m. EDT
With the shuttered Homer City Generating Station in the background, a worker moves coal refuse in Center Township, Pa., on June 12. (Scott Lewis for The Washington Post)
INDIANA COUNTY, Pa. Biden administration officials came here this month with an upbeat message for residents: We will help you navigate the nations transition away from fossil fuels. During a roughly two-hour meeting in a stuffy conference room, officials assured the audience that the federal government hasnt forgotten about this spot about an hour east of Pittsburgh, where coal mines began closing in the 1980s and the states largest coal-fired power plant shut down last year.
Then the venting started. Several residents stood up and expressed frustration that the federal government has forgotten about a place struggling to replace the jobs and tax base that the coal industry once offered it. We get overlooked all the time, said LuAnn Zak, assistant director of the Indiana County Office of Planning and Development.
Theres nothing being put out to help energy workers, said Aric Baker, president of the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers Local 459, which had represented roughly 120 workers now laid off from the Homer City Generating Station.
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To win Pennsylvania, Biden will need to convince voters in communities like this one that they wont be left behind as the nation shifts to cleaner sources of power than coal, the dirtiest fossil fuel. But many residents here support Donald Trump, who has vowed to ease environmental regulations if he returns to the White House, in the hopes the former president could resurrect the Homer City Generating Station.
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The Homer City plant struggled to compete economically with cheaper natural gas and renewable energy even before Biden set tough new limits on pollution from power plants. But some locals are confident that Trump can revive it. I think if he gets back in, youll see this coal plant open back up, said Tom Roser, 72, who worked at the plant for roughly 40 years before retiring in 2014.
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Clara Ence Morse contributed to this report.
By Maxine Joselow
Maxine Joselow is a staff writer who covers climate change and the environment. Twitter https://x.com/maxinejoselow
DJ Synikus Makisimus
(785 posts)with an extremely high tax on coal barons. Oh, and stick those coal oligarchs for every dime of cleanup (including the health costs of the miners). The coal industry middle management can find a job at some other part of the pollution industry, until we end that too.
Botany
(72,602 posts)
. coal to natural gas and they are not going back to coal. Lots of miners and coal driven workers
worked on those coal to gas conversions and they know that coal is dying industry.
VMA131Marine
(4,676 posts)There are over 500,000 workers in renewable energy.
Make it make sense!
twodogsbarking
(12,230 posts)Easy and cleaner reserves have been depleted. Other fuels are cheaper and cleaner. Coal is dying on its own.
Ain't nobody gonna stop dat.
cyclonefence
(4,873 posts)Coal "mines" consist of scraped-off mountain tops, using big machines that require one operator, replacing any number of actual miners. The miners' beef ought not to be with government regulations but with mine owners, who destroyed their jobs along with the environment, contaminating the air and water where the miners and their families live. Coal mining has not been a real occupation for at least 20 years.