Citizens Coal Council

Citizens Coal Council Our mission is to inform, empower and work for and with communities affected by the mining, processing and use of coal.

In 1972 three coal-waste dams at a Pittston Coal operation on Buffalo Creek in Logan County, West Virginia collapsed. By the time the flood was over, 125 people were killed, another 1,100 were injured, and about 4,000 were left homeless. This event galvanized the grassroots movement in support of better regulation of the nation's coalfields. After a decade of grassroots pressure and spurred by the

Buffalo Creek disaster, Congress passed the Surface Mining Control and Reclamation Act (SMCRA) in 1977, one of the most pro-citizen environmental laws ever passed. Even though advocacy efforts to pass SMCRA were a major success, it became apparent that the law alone was insufficient without an organized coalition to enforce it; the federal and state governments were not enforcing the permitting, mining, and reclamation provisions effectively. Thus, in 1989 groups from Kentucky, Illinois, Tennessee, Pennsylvania, Virginia, the Rocky Mountain Region, and the Navajo Nation, formed Citizens Coal Council (CCC), a coalition designed to give a national unified voice for all coalfield citizens.

04/23/2026

The Pittsburgh Post-Gazette captured one of the country’s most competitive awards for health care reporting for its 2025 investigative series, Deadly...

04/21/2026

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
April 20, 2026

CONTACT
Dan Radmacher, Media Specialist, (276) 289-1018, [email protected]
Christine Ho, Sierra Club, [email protected]
Aimee Erickson, Executive Director, (724) 470-3982, [email protected]
Emily Tolliver, Kentucky Resources Council, [email protected]

Groups Sue Trump’s Office of Surface Mining Over Rollback of Coal Mining Oversight Rule

Washington, D.C. — Appalachian Voices, Citizens Coal Council, and Sierra Club are suing the Trump administration over a new rule making it harder for individuals and communities impacted by coal mining to hold state regulators and mining companies accountable for environmental and public safety violations. The lawsuit, filed today in the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia, challenges the Office of Surface Mining, Reclamation, and Enforcement’s final Ten-Day Notice Rule.

The Surface Mining Control and Reclamation Act of 1977 established the Ten-Day Notice (TDN) process, which allows citizens to report potential violations of mining laws and regulations to federal regulators. The notification process established by Congress gives state regulators 10 days to inspect and take “appropriate” action to correct the problem before federal regulators must step in to inspect and enforce the law. Community members have successfully used the TDN process for decades to address violations ranging from landslides to water pollution to loss and contamination of water supplies. The rule is crucial for communities that are harmed by coal companies when state regulators fail to enforce laws that protect human health and the environment — a scenario that occurs all too often in states where the coal lobby has an outsized influence over government officials.

The new TDN rule published on Feb. 19, 2026, weakens the TDN process and protections for coalfield residents and the environment. The rule delays notification and excludes violations caused by state regulatory failures, such as flawed permitting decisions that result in on-the-ground violations. As a result, violations could go uncorrected for a longer period of time until they pose imminent hazards, particularly where systemic failures in state programs are involved.

This is the second time the groups have sued over the Trump administration’s attempts to weaken the TDN process. They challenged the Trump administration’s 2020 rule, which was replaced by a 2024 rulemaking by the Biden administration that restored communities’ ability to secure federal assistance for mine site violations. The Biden-era TDN rule was challenged by several coalfield states, and the groups have intervened to defend that rule. That case is pending in the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia and has been stayed until May 2026. The 2026 Trump TDN rule challenged in this filing rescinded the Biden TDN rule and has again proposed the changes adopted in 2020 and challenged in 2021.

Statement by Matt Hepler, Central Appalachian Environmental Scientist for Appalachian Voices:
“This new rule will force members of the public impacted by harmful coal mining violations to go through a longer and more complex process that was never designed to be a substitute for immediate action to correct all violations. This new rule means problems such as drinking water contamination, subsidence and erosion will be dragged down by a slow, indeterminate and politically fraught process. The result is predictable: Unlawful and damaging coal mining practices will continue on the ground while state and federal agencies cycle through years of conferences, hearings and negotiations instead of taking action to help deserving people.”

Statement by Bonnie Swinford, Campaign Organizing Strategist for the Sierra Club:
“For decades, the Ten Day Rule has allowed communities to protect their residents. But now, coal companies will be able to leave coal mines spilling toxins into the air and water. This is simply the latest move from the Trump administration to strip the public of our power to hold big coal mining corporations accountable. We deserve leaders who will fight to protect us from toxic mines, not leave us defenseless for the sake of corporate handouts.”

Statement by Aimee Erickson, Executive Director, Citizens Coal Council:
“The Ten-Day Notice process is often the only accountability tool coalfield residents have when state regulators fail to act. Weakening federal oversight doesn’t strengthen states — it weakens protections for families living with mining impacts. In longwall mining communities, we’ve seen cracked foundations, lost water supplies and streams permanently altered. When those impacts are minimized or delayed at the state level, federal oversight is supposed to be the backstop. Communities deserve a system that enforces the law as written.”

The plaintiffs are represented by Tom FitzGerald, of counsel with Kentucky Resources Council, a nonprofit environmental advocacy organization. KRC has been representing coalfield communities in defense of the full and fair implementation of the 1977 Surface Mining Control and Reclamation Act since 1984.

03/12/2026

The Trump administration is weakening a rule that allows communities to seek federal assistance at problematic mine sites.

03/10/2026

In March 1976, two explosions over two days rocked the Scotia coal mine in Eastern Kentucky, killing 26 men. Fifty years later, it’s worth remembering.

01/06/2026

Send a message to the Environmental Protection Agency: No more delays – time to force power plants to finally clean up their toxic waste.

01/05/2026

Today, the House Appropriations Committee released an updated “minibus” appropriations bill with bipartisan support that includes a proposal to withdraw $500 million from the Office of Surface Mining Reclamation and Enforcement’s Abandoned Mine Land funds allocated as part of the 2021 Bipartis...

Today on Giving Tuesday, we’re celebrating the strength and resilience of coalfield communities.Every action you take—ev...
12/02/2025

Today on Giving Tuesday, we’re celebrating the strength and resilience of coalfield communities.

Every action you take—every share, every donation, every conversation—helps advance justice and protect the places we love.

Together, we can build a future where no community is sacrificed.

Donate today at http://www.donorbox.org/fuelchangenotcoal

Communities shouldn’t have to fight this hard for basic protections.But with OSMRE’s staff slashed to historic lows- and...
11/26/2025

Communities shouldn’t have to fight this hard for basic protections.

But with OSMRE’s staff slashed to historic lows- and the Ten-Day Notice rule under legal attack- coalfield residents are being left without the safeguards they rely on when mining threatens their homes, water, and health.

That’s why Citizens Coal Council is standing up in court to defend the TDN rule and make sure families aren’t ignored when regulators fail to act.

If you believe every community deserves protection, join us today.

➡️ Fuel Change, Not Coal: www.donorbox.org/fuelchangenotcoal

🚨 Giving Tuesday is almost here — and coalfield protections are under attack.OSMRE- the agency meant to protect coalfiel...
11/25/2025

🚨 Giving Tuesday is almost here — and coalfield protections are under attack.

OSMRE- the agency meant to protect coalfield families- has been gutted to only around 200 staff nationwide. And now, 14 states are suing to dismantle the Ten-Day Notice rule, one of the only ways residents can get action when mining harms their land, water, or homes.

Citizens Coal Council is fighting back. We’ve joined partners to defend the TDN rule in court- but we need your support.

Your Giving Tuesday gift helps protect coalfield communities when no one else will.

➡️ Donate: www.donorbox.com/fuelchangenotcoal

Fuel change, not coal.

🚨 Speak Up to Stop Coal Ash Pollution! 🚨On Friday, September 12th, from 9 AM–1 PM (ET), the EPA will hold a Virtual Hear...
09/09/2025

🚨 Speak Up to Stop Coal Ash Pollution! 🚨

On Friday, September 12th, from 9 AM–1 PM (ET), the EPA will hold a Virtual Hearing on a dangerous proposal to delay critical coal ash cleanup protections.

Coal ash is toxic waste loaded with heavy metals like arsenic, lead, mercury, and more—chemicals linked to cancer, heart disease, and neurological harm. Across the U.S., 91% of coal plants are contaminating groundwater. Communities living near coal ash dumps have already suffered decades of unmonitored leaks into their water, soil, and environment.

Now, the coal industry is pressuring the EPA to extend compliance deadlines by up to 27 months—delaying urgently needed monitoring, inspections, and cleanups until at least 2031. That’s nearly a decade more of toxic pollution. Every day of delay puts frontline communities at greater risk.

👉 This is our chance to speak directly to the EPA and demand immediate protections.

Sign up to testify at the September 12th Virtual Hearing and make your voice heard!

🗣 Together, we can stop this reckless rollback and protect our communities from coal ash pollution.

📌 We’ll share a link to simple talking points in the comments to make testifying easy.

Sign up here: https://register.gotowebinar.com/register/2482635032636071514

Address

130 Friend Road
Washington, PA
15301

Opening Hours

Monday 9am - 5pm
Tuesday 9am - 5pm
Wednesday 9am - 5pm
Thursday 9am - 5pm
Friday 9am - 5pm

Telephone

+17244703982

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