The fight to end poverty and sickness from water pollution in Appalachia

Latest

Women’s March in Charleston, West Virginia, in January, 2017.
PHOTO/CHAD CARPENTER

Editor’s Note: Paula Swearengin, from Appalachia, is a leader in the fight for clean water. President Trump just signed legislation undoing laws intended to protect waterways from coal mining waste. Paula speaks below about the illnesses resulting from water pollution in her home state of West Virginia.
You wouldn’t believe the poverty and sickness here. I lived in Iroquois, WV. The Sweeny Watershed provided water to our community.  It was a thriving community before the decline of coal. That community is gutted now. The poverty and drugs are horrible. People can’t afford to move.
A lot of people in the community were plagued with illness because of the water pollution. Our water growing up was orange and had a blue and purple film. My little sister was born with a birth defect. She has a cyst at the base of her brain the size of a golf ball. We moved when I was 12 years old. I thought my hair was red until that point in my life. When it grew out, when I wasn’t washing my hair with the water, I discovered that I was a brunette.
Right after we left, the community got together and was able to get hooked into another municipality. Then it was discovered that there were high levels of Manganese in the water. God only knows what else was in the water. Manganese is only one thing I discovered when reading over some documents from the litigation for a new municipality.
Even after people get clean water; there’s still a lifetime of health impacts. My little sister, my Mom, cousin and me—everybody coming out of there—has stomach issues.  Since that time I have lived in other areas with questionable water contaminates.  I have witnessed that my neighbor’s children have cancer. I have lived in communities with cancer clusters and other diseases caused by coal mining. Most of my family worked in the coal industry. I have buried so many of my family members that our family’s theme song feels like Amazing Grace. I have heard it sung at more than my fair share of funerals.
Trump won’t bring back jobs. Most of the people here voted for him because they’re against Clinton, gay rights and abortion.  That and the false promise to bring jobs back. Race doesn’t seem like the biggest issue here, especially in the southern district. There’s more anger against those living off welfare and those on drugs.
Why I’m so connected to Detroit is because it seems like our struggles are the same except they’re mostly Black and we’re mostly white. Greed seems to discriminate against people of color or if you are poor. It’s past time for a united effort.  This is supposed to be America. Nobody should fall short in prosperity and opportunity in any area of this nation.

PT Logo collage
+ Articles by this author

The People’s Tribune opens its pages to voices of the movement for change. Our articles are written by individuals or organizations, along with our own reporting. Bylined articles reflect the views of the authors. Articles entitled “From the Editors” reflect the views of the editorial board. Please credit the source when sharing: peoplestribune.orgPlease donate to help us keep bringing you voices of the movement for change. Click here. We’re all volunteer, no paid staff. The People’s Tribune is a 501C4 organization.

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

Featured

ICE Raids Mean the Return of Brutal Family Separations

The separation of immigrant families at the border was barred by the 2023 settlement of a lawsuit, but the Trump administration has found a way to brutally reimpose family separations, by moving the practice away from the border and doing it through the ongoing ICE raids.

A Turning Point Worth Celebrating — The Night Voters Said Enough

The November, 2025 election was a win for the workers, renters, the forgotten, and dreamers. It wasn't just about beating the far-right. It was also about rejecting the stale Democratic politics that too often bends to corporate donors and Wall Street.

Couple Seeks Accountability After Mom In Active Labor Discharged

A Black couple from Illinois was discharged from an Indiana hospital while the mother was in active labor, forcing a roadside birth.

Poverty and Deportees on the Streets in Tijuana

In U.S. media, even progressive media, we pay little attention to what happens to people when they're deported. Many are dumped through the border gate, have no home to go to and live on the streets in cities like Tijuana.

No Tows Without Homes

At the same time that advocates for San Francisco’s vehicle-dwelling residents charged the City to protect RV and large vehicle residents from displacement by a parking enforcement program, City workers were removing trailers about five miles away.

More from the People's Tribune