These young people are pioneering Appalachias post-coal economy
By Joe Solomon
The coal industry, which in many counties has dominated the economy for more than a century, is not providing the jobs it used to. Coal reserves are dwindling, mechanization has made it easier to pay fewer workers to extract more coal, and theres new competition from cheap natural gas. In Boone County, W. Va., for example, about 40 percent of coal jobs have disappeared since the end of 2011, according to research firm SNL Financial. And the same trend is going on across the region.
You could say Appalachia needs an army of real-life Katnisses and, luckily, its found them. The Highlander Center, a training center for social movements with deep roots in the South, just launched its Appalachian Transition Fellowship a program to mentor and support 14 young Appalachians as they work on economic development projects throughout the region. Their goal is to accelerate the creation of a diverse economy by working on projects that create jobs and livelihoods in the wake of coals decline.
Through this fellowship, Highlanders fellows will spend a full year working on economic transition projects in Tennessee, Kentucky, West Virginia, Virginia, Ohio, and North Carolina.
I recently had a chance to meet the Appalachian Transition Fellows as they took a kick-off tour through the region. We talked about how they got interested in economic transition and what their fellowships will look like. Heres what a few of them had to say....
Read their stories at
http://grist.org/climate-energy/these-young-people-are-pioneering-appalachias-post-coal-economy/