This week, we’re talking about traditional ballads - how they tell stories and connect us to the past. These old tunes can mean so much. They can tap into difficult emotions and give feelings space to be heard. Some songs may even be too uncomfortable to sing.
More Coal To Make Electricity Could Mean Higher Bills In Coal Country
Mary West has solar panels installed on her home in Beckley.Curtis Tate / West Virginia Public Broadcasting
Listen
Share this Article
President Donald Trump wants the country to use more coal, a fuel utilities have turned away from in recent decades. One exception: West Virginia, which produces and consumes a lot of coal. That’s made electricity more expensive there. Some residents have turned to alternative ways to power and heat their homes.
Mary West is an Army veteran who lives in Beckley, in southern West Virginia’s coalfield. She used to work in the mines locally, in about 1980.
West called it hard and dangerous work. An injury put an end to her brief career in mining.
“They released me to go back to work, and I told them I was not going to go back, because the Lord hid it underground for a reason, and didn’t intend for my crazy butt to keep going down there, finding it,” she said.
Her past in coal isn’t obvious when looking at her red-brick home. The roof is lined with solar panels. Most months, she pays nothing for electricity.
For others, it’s a struggle. Tom Moseley is a retired postal worker.
“Most families in Raleigh County are living to pay bills,” he said. “They can’t go out and enjoy life. They can’t go out and spend money at the movies. Every dollar they make is to pay their bills.”
“We think under this new political leadership and with the industries and government working hand in hand,” he said, “we can get back to that 165 million tons of coal.”
He says with power plants burning more coal, they should become more efficient, which in turn could lower electricity costs.
Other state leaders say coal is needed to power the growth of data centers. West Virginia Republican Sen. Shelley Moore Capito was at the White House when Trump championed coal.
“It also helps us with that baseload energy that we so much need when we hear about energy shortages for AI, data centers and the creation of a more electrified economy,” she said.
Utilities plan for the next 40 years, he says, not the next four.
“I do not see a coal plant, a new coal plant ever being built in the United States,” Wamsted said. “They’re too expensive.”
A $500 Bill
The major utility in southern West Virginia, Appalachian Power, is asking regulators to raise rates to make up for inflation and storm repair costs. Residents, meanwhile, are finding ways to save money.
Gary Bolen, a disabled Navy veteran who lives on a fixed income, tries to use power sparingly.
“I keep my thermostat set at 65 so I don’t have a power bill that high,” he said.
And he switched his heating source.
“I had to transfer it over to gas because the electric heat was running way too high,” Bolen said. “At one time, I had a $500 bill.”
West, the former coal miner, says she’d encourage anyone to switch to solar in West Virginia.
“Well, you know, God’s sun is out every day,” she said.
State regulators will consider Appalachian Power’s rate increase this summer.
Mary West has solar panels on her rooftop. Most months, she pays nothing for electricity.
Sen. Capito welcomed the removal of red tape but expressed concern that West Virginia would be required to have to redo significant portions of their application.
Twenty state attorneys general have sued to stop cuts to a federal low-income heating assistance program. West Virginia is not among them.
Many West Virginia households struggle with the cost of heating...