Neha Patil (Editor)

Appalachian Voices

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Exec. Dir.
  
Tom Cormons

Founder
  
Harvard Ayers

Headquarters
  
Boone

Staff
  
30

Board Chair
  
James "Kim" Gilliam

Founded
  
1997

Budget
  
1.485 million USD

Appalachian Voices appvoicesorgimagesxheadermainjpgpagespeedic

Formation
  
1997; 20 years ago (1997)

Type
  
501(c)(3) nonprofit advocacy organization

Affiliations
  
The Appalachian Voice publication

Website
  
www.appalachianvoices.org

Motto
  
Bringing People Together to Protect the Central and Southern Appalachian Mountains

Similar
  
Chesapeake Climate Action Ne, Sierra Club, Earthjustice, Old Dominion Electric C, Rainforest Action Network

Profiles

2014 appalachian voices stanback grassroots internship


Appalachian Voices is an American environmental organization based in Boone, North Carolina. Their stated environmental concerns include eliminating air pollution, ending mountaintop removal, cleaning up coal ash pollution and promoting renewable energy and energy efficiency.

Contents

The organization also has offices in Charlottesville, Virginia, Norton, Virginia, Durham, North Carolina and Knoxville, Tennessee.

Appalachian Voices publishes "The Appalachian Voice," a 61,000-circulation, bi-monthly news publication covering environmental and cultural news in the central and southern Appalachian region.

History

The Appalachian Voice publication was started in Boone, N.C. in February 1996 by Harvard Ayers and Than Axtell as part of the now-defunct Southern Appalachian Highlands Ecoregion Task Force, a chapter of the Sierra Club. Ayers, seeing "a need for an advocacy organization that could focus exclusively on local issues related to Appalachia," officially founded Appalachian Voices as a 501(c)3 organization in July 1997.

Wise County coal plant campaign

In 2007, Appalachian Voices joined with four regional organizations in Virginia to fight construction of a 585-megawatt coal-fired power plant that the state’s largest utility was seeking to build in Wise County, Virginia. Along with Chesapeake Climate Action Network, the Sierra Club’s Virginia Chapter, the Southern Appalachian Mountain Stewards, and the Southern Environmental Law Center, the groups formed the Wise Energy for Virginia Coalition to oppose the plant.

The coalition’s focus on the Wise County plant made it “by any standard, the biggest environmental controversy in Virginia today,” according to the state’s largest newspaper, The Virginia Pilot. The coalition built a grassroots base of more than 42,000 Virginians who signed a “Mile-Long Petition” in opposition to the plant. Although the Virginia City Hybrid Energy Center was ultimately approved, the public pressure generated by the coalition led to dramatic reductions in permitted pollutant limits, including:

  • The most stringent mercury emissions limit for any coalfired power plant in the country, reducing emissions levels by ninety-four percent from those originally proposed;
  • An eighty-four percent reduction in permitted levels of sulfur dioxide;
  • Carbon offset measures that will decrease CO2 emissions from the plant by 1.1 million tons per year.
  • References

    Appalachian Voices Wikipedia