Dec
24
2008

Water Delivered! A Day to Celebrate

Posted by: mat in Categories: Uncategorized.

Wonderful news!

Today marks the very first delivery of water to folks in Prenter!  We filled about 30 barrels on today’s run, with many more to come tomorrow.  This Christmas, clean drinking water is the best gift of all.

We got some more coverage in local TV news and there will be another article in tomorrow’s Charleston Gazette. You can read it here now.

Thanks so much to everyone that helped make this possible.  We can’t tell you how happy and grateful we are.

Hopefully, we will have pictures and video up soon, but for now Merry Christmas and three cheers for water!

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Dec
18
2008

Please forward this message to all of your networks

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Hi Everyone,

We have had some fantastic progress with the Prenter Water Fund in the past couple of months. (If you have lost our initial email or never got it, you can get it here.) Thanks to some hard work and the support of folks like you, we now have all the equipment required for the water delivery project! We have installed 101 barrels at 74 households throughout the Prenter community, and the enthusiasm for the project has been incredible. We have also gotten some amazing media coverage. Check out this front page headline article in the Charleston Gazette, West Virginia largest newspaper, and this excellent TV story from CBS local affiliate WOWK. But we need your help now more than ever.

The only thing preventing water delivery from beginning tomorrow is a lack of funds to pay our driver and the ongoing costs of the project. With as little as $1500, Prenter residents won’t have to wait one more day for clean, safe drinking water. If you considered giving to the project and haven’t gotten around to it, please give today. If you have donated to us in the past, you have our deepest gratitude and please consider giving just a little more. Our goal is to have clean drinking water at people’s homes in time for the holidays. The greatest gift you give this season can be the gift of life-saving water.

Click here to donate online now or mail a check to:

Prenter Water Fund

c/o Coal River Mountain Watch
PO Box 651
Whitesville, WV 25209

Thank you so much for your support and happy holidays,

The Prenter Water Fund Staff

www.prenterwaterfund.org

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Dec
17
2008

More of Prenter in the news

Posted by: glen in Categories: Uncategorized.

Here are some recent news stories concerning the issues in Prenter

Channel 13 WOWK

Community Works to Ease Water Burden

The Charleston Gazette


Water is “to toxic to touch”  in Boone County town.

Prenter residents import water, say groundwater contaminated

Residents of a northern Boone County community say their well water is “too toxic to touch,” so they’re trying to raise $15,000 to deliver barrels of clean water to about 300 homes.

By Eric Eyre



WSAZ ch 3

Has a short video up on thier front page


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Dec
16
2008

Press Release

Posted by: glen in Categories: Uncategorized.

This morning we launched our press release. Here it is. You can send it to any media outlets you have contacts With.  Thank you.

FOR IMMEIDIATE REALEASE

Contact Glen Collins or Mathew Louis-Rosenberg at 304-854-1937

email glen@prenterwaterfund.org

West Virginians start fund for emergency clean water

Toxic well water creating deadly health problems in mining communities

PRENTER, W.VA. – Worried that slow government response to their pleas for clean water is needlessly causing more community-wide illness, residents of Prenter, W.Va., have organized the Prenter Water Fund. They are encouraging all West Virginians to donate to the fund.

The fund will allow community residents to truck in emergency clean water to the community, where well water has become too toxic to touch. The emergency water could help save lives until the Boone County Public Service District (PSD) brings a water line to Prenter. Phase One of the water line project is supposed to begin within one year. But, a significant proportion of the community has devastating health effects now, which are sometimes lethal.

The Boone County PSD, Boone County Commission and the West Virginia Department of Environmental Protection all agree that the water in Prenter is not fit for human consumption.

“Some have stopped their little girls from having a bath because they were getting symptoms of having urinary tract infections as young as 18 months, and as soon as they stopped with baths or took them elsewhere to bathe the UTI problems stopped,” Prenter resident Maria Lambert said. “We had a friend in Laurel Creek pass away recently after a short bout with cancer and a couple more diagnosed just in the past few weeks. We never know who will be next.”

Residents suspect that blasting at nearby strip mines has changed groundwater chemistry and flow, causing injected toxic coal slurry waste to contaminate the wells. To “dispose” of slurry, a multi-billion-gallon byproduct of washing coal for market, coal companies either inject it into abandoned underground mines or impound it behind very large earthen dams. Residents noticed their water going bad as early as 2003.

“This coincides with the periods of heavy blasting and similar accounts of other people in the community,” said Bobby Mitchell, who has spent extensive time gathering information on Prenter’s water problems. “They spoke of their water not flowing for days at a time. Then, when the flow would come back, it would be degraded or running red or black.”

“The tragedy in Prenter and other Appalachian communities is that folks had good water, then over a period of time their water gradually degraded to the point where it is obviously not fit for bathing, much less drinking and cooking,” said Dr. Benjamin M. Stout, III, biology professor at Wheeling Jesuit University who has tested well water in Prenter. “During that period of degradation, from good to obviously unfit, they have been unknowingly exposed to high levels of metals that have well-known human health consequences.”

Stout has tested ten wells out of an approximate 250 households. Tests indicate levels of antimony, lead, iron, manganese, barium, beryllium, aluminum and hydrogen sulfide gas, among other toxins, that far exceed safe drinking water standards. Arsenic and lead are the top two substances on the American Toxic Substances and Disease Registry’s list of priority pollutants, and hair tests of local residents show astronomical numbers. Some homes have such a high concentration of hydrogen sulfide that electrical outlets need to be replaced every two years due to corrosion.

Cancers, gallbladder disease, kidney failure and corroding teeth are a fraction of the problems found in Prenter.

“Ninety-eight percent of the people I’ve seen on Prenter Road have gallbladder disease; children’s teeth are dissolving,” said Pam Johnson, R.N., who is doing a health survey of area residents. “Before I went down there I thought that people were exaggerating their problems, but when I got there, I realized that they were underreporting their health problems. There’s a five-year-old with a full set of dentures.”

“If you can stop them from drinking the water,” Johnson said, “you can stop people from getting worse.”

To cover start up costs, the Prenter Water Fund secured a donation from the Vivian and Paul Olum Charitable Foundation. The fund bought 150 55-gallon barrels and hand pumps, as well as a tank to haul the water. A local resident has been hired to drive the delivery truck. A total of $15,000 in future donations will cover the operating costs of the emergency water project for one year.

To make a Tax-deducitble donation to the Water fund. visit www.prenterwaterfund.org,  send to Prenter Water Fund c/o coal river mountian watch P.O. box 651, whitesville, WV 25209 or call Matt ot Glen at 304-854-1937. the project is a collaborative effort of residents of Prenter and Coal River Mountian  Watch . all dontaions designated  for the prenter water fund go toward getting and delivring water.

# # #

to view a PDF of this release click here

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Dec
09
2008

Prenter in the news

Posted by: glen in Categories: Uncategorized.

Check out this article printed in the Coal valley News about the history of Prenter

Prenter’s rich history shadowed by water woes

The year was 1742, and the nation was about to discover coal. The location was none other than Boone County, West Virginia….

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Dec
07
2008

Barrels Delivered and More Good News

Posted by: glen in Categories: Uncategorized.

We are full of good news in the Coal River Valley!

The barrels and hand pumps for the project were delivered a few weeks ago to Prenter and as of today, we have 102 of the 150 installed at homes all around the hollow. We get more requests from folks everyday. The enthusiasm for the project within the community has been incredible.

Mat and Glen installing barrels

Mat and Glen installing barrels

Barbara Sebok and here new barrel

Barbara Sebok and here new barrel. photos by Jen Osha. Click on image For more photos from Aurora Lights

In other news, we have hired Curtis Adkins of Seth (the town at the mouth of Prenter hollow) to be our delivery driver.  With that completed and a clever solution to our problem of the water in the barrels freezing thanks to Lowe’s in Kanawha City we are almost ready to begin water delivery!

We currently have enough funds to cover all the necessary start up costs.  Thanks so much to all who have generously donated to the project.  However, we still need your help to pay the delivery driver’s wages and transportation costs!  We need a little more than a thousand dollars a month to keep the program running.  Any money received in addition to that will be put towards to purchase of more barrels should we run out or to help pay for additional water and hair sample testing for Prenter residents.

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