On July 29, coal miners in
Cumberland, Kentucky began blocking a train carrying more than $1
million worth of coal to protest their former employer, Blackjewel
LLC, which declared bankruptcy on July 1. According
to CNN,
the company wrote bad checks to 350 miners in Harlan County alone,
prompting the workers to stage the protest to demand their paychecks.
Holding signs that say, “No pay, we stay,” the coal miners have
been buoyed by community support, with churches and restaurants
donating food and supplies. They say they will stay on the tracks
until they get the wages they’re owed for the work they’ve
already done. While Harlan County stands as the site of militant
coal-miner labor struggles in the 1930s and 1970s, these workers are
non-union.
This dramatic action underscores
the need for a “just transition”—a key demand of today’s
climate movement. Developed 20 to 30 years ago by environmental
justice, labor and Indigenous movements, the proposal rests on the
principle that, as we shift away from a fossil fuel economy, we must
ensure workers in those industries are taken care of. That includes
retraining workers and providing new, well-paying union jobs while
protecting their pensions and and ensuring they play a role in
shaping the economic transformation as we shift to a zero-emissions
economy.
As the coal industry declines, it's
becoming increasingly clear that a just transition is not a far-off
goal post: People are losing their jobs now. If climate
campaigners are serious about building trust with workers, and
ensuring they lead a just transition away from the fossil fuel
economy, now is the time to engage with coal miners’ struggles to
survive a transition they did not choose. Josh Holbrook is a
36-year-old coal miner and former employee of Blackjewel, where he
worked as a third-shift foreman. He is now helping his fellow workers
block the coal train in Cumberland. Currently living in the small
town of Fleming-Neon, Kentucky, Holbrook has been working in coal
mines for 18 years.
In an interview with In
These Times, Holbrook says
that the coal miners are in dire need of solidarity, and he’s open
to the idea of transitioning into a new job. But he needs proof that
a just transition is a serious proposal. “Bring jobs in,” he
says. “Money talks.”
Sarah Lazare: Can you tell
me what’s happening right now with the protest against Blackjewel?
Josh Holbrook: The
train is still blocked. We still have miners on the track. They’re
not moving until we get paid. We are owed the last two paychecks. The
last time we got a valid paycheck was June 14. The last day I worked
was July 1. I’ve been working a different job, but I’ve been
helping block the tracks. I actually preached there yesterday. We had
a church service.
Sarah: What do you think of
the idea of a “just transition” put forward by climate and labor
activists?
Josh: I
haven’t heard of a just transition.
Sarah: It’s this idea
that, in order to curb climate change, we need to stop extracting
fossil fuels, including coal. But if we’re going to do that, we
need to make sure the workers in those industries are taken care of.
This can mean job retraining so that coal miners can become renewable
energy workers. It also means protecting the healthcare and pensions
of coal miners who lose their jobs.
Josh: It
makes sense to me. We care about the environment. I think it needs to
be a global standard.
I’ve been in coal mines for 18
years. Where I come from, that’s all we have. I’m pro-coal. I’d
also like to see some kind of infrastructure come in here, like
factories. We don’t have high-paying jobs. We have no factories
where I grew up.
Solidarity would be great. It would
be great if a set of jobs came in. It’d be great if the nation
banded together and helped us out right now. I’m not in as bad a
shape as some people. There are a lot of honest, hardworking men
whose kids can’t buy clothes for school. It’d be great to see
solidarity.
People think we have a grudge
against the environment because we’re coal miners. We love the
environment. I’m not sure about the impact coal has on the
environment. Can you say a bit more about that?
Sarah: Unfortunately, coal
is a pretty big problem. It’s one of the most polluting fossil
fuels out there and the biggest contributor
to climate change. One
study found that, to prevent the worst-case climate change
scenario, 82 percent of coal reserves must stay in the earth. There’s
not really a way around the fact that, to prevent a climate
emergency, coal mining jobs would have to go away. But the idea of a
just transition is that those jobs can be replaced with new jobs, and
that workers can be retrained. Some are calling for a jobs guarantee,
and a universal basic income, to make sure not a single person falls
through the cracks.
Josh: We
would love to see jobs come into our area—decent-paying
jobs—because this is predominantly a coal town. That’s what it’s
depended on. That’s really the only job you can have except Walmart
or a fast food restaurant. There are no well-paying jobs. The mining
industry is up and down, it’s like a roller coaster. It’s not
stable. I moved to Alabama for four years in 2012, just chasing the
dollar, trying to keep a job in a coal mine.
I was talking to someone the other
day, he’s probably my age and has been working in the coal mines a
similar length of time. I said we’re probably not going to be able
to retire in the mines. You have the issue of climate change, and
most companies don’t care about us in the end, all they care about
is the dollar. It’s a really bad situation.
Sarah: It’s true that the
coal industry is already declining. There are a lot of climate
activists out there talking about supporting coal and other fossil
fuel workers through the transition, whether jobs are being lost as a
result of recession, or meeting the needs of climate change, or both.
What could climate activists do right now to show that they’re
serious about helping coal miners out?
Josh: It’d
have to be support. Help us out. Standing on the tracks is one thing,
but standing somewhere else where they’re hurting even more is good
too. For a month, no one said nothing about the issue, then we made a
media frenzy by blocking the train and got attention. Before that, we
were in the dark.
Job training would be great, but
you could have all the training in the world and if there’s not
jobs here, we have to move away. Without factories or plants or
something of that nature, training wouldn’t be very effective.
Climate activists can get together
and understand our struggles on the matter. This is the only thing we
got. It’s a livelihood. It’s how we put food in our kids’
mouths. We’re not doing it in a corner trying to destroy the world.
We’re trying to provide for our families. We are honest,
hardworking people trying to put roofs over our heads.
People can donate to help. We’re
not asking for a handout or nothing like that. But there’s children
without food. We have a GoFundMe.
Anything anyone could do to help. Right now, we need school supplies,
shoes.
Sarah: What is your
impression of climate activists?
Josh: I’m
not really familiar with what climate activists believe. All I’ve
seen is the, “No coal, shut coal mines down.” I’m not really
familiar with what they actually believe and what they want done.
Sarah: You mentioned
earlier that a lot of coal companies don’t care about workers.
There’s also reason to think they don’t care about the
environment. Is it possible that coal miners and climate activists
have a common enemy?
Josh: There’s
some operators I’ve worked for that actually care for their men.
You’ve got good ones out there. They’re few and far between. I
wouldn’t call it an enemy. I’m a minister of the gospel. I like
to have no enemies.
Sarah: What if we used
different wording? What if we talked about the harm the companies are
doing?
Josh: The
Blackjewel CEO, Jeff Hoops, is doing a lot of harm to a lot of
families. You got some good ones and some bad ones. I don’t think
it’s their direct intent to harm the environment. I think they want
to get rich and that’s the way they can do it.
If they want to see how coal miners
operate, they can look at the facts, how different vendors come out
and give free food to the miners on the tracks. People are showing up
and helping every day. At the end of the day, it’s not about
whether you are pro-coal or anti-coal, it’s about whether you’re
pro-man. We do this because it’s what we gotta do. It’s how we
make money.
I hate the stereotype that we don’t
like the environment. We love the outdoors. Where we live is some of
the most beautiful territory in the United States. I’m sure climate
activists think someone is against them, they think we’re doing an
injustice. We don’t put people down over what they do for their
livelihood.
Sarah: Are you getting
support from your community?
Josh: Community
is helping, rolling through. Churches are getting together, trying to
buy school clothes for people. Most miners haven’t had a valid
paycheck. The community is really helping and supporting the coal
miners, it’s coming together. I found another mining job in Pike
County, an hour and 10 minutes away.
Sarah: Have you ever been a
labor activist before?
Josh: I
just consider myself someone who likes to tell the truth. We started
blocking the train last Monday. There were some people supporting
from day one. Once we started blocking the train, that’s when the
big support came in. That’s when people took notice. There were
people here who were trying to help us. There are about 150 people in
my town employed by the company.
We mined the coal, and company says
they don’t have money to operate. But they’re selling the coal.
And they can’t pay us?
I see us blocking the trains until
we get paid. I’m sure when we get paid, we’ll let it go. But like
the signs say, “No pay, we stay.”
What do you think about
labor unions?
We’re non-union. I haven’t
worked in a union mine, and I don’t know a lot about it. I couldn’t
comment.
Sarah: What would you think
if there were a just transition that meant you would get new training
and be able to switch jobs into a different field, for the purposes
of addressing the climate crisis? Assuming there was follow-through,
and a similarly-paying job was waiting for you, how would you feel?
Josh: I
would be sad to leave. When you mine coal, it’s a lifestyle. I know
it’s a clichĂ©, but it gets in your blood. You’ve got such
comradery and solidarity with the men you work with. You’re
together 10, 12 hours a day. You’re miles under a mountain. It’s
dark. Every move you make, you do it to help your brother out. It’s
a good environment. It’s a good workplace. It’s muddy, it’s
dark, sometimes it’s miserable. But it’s an honest way to make
your money.
I’d be sad. But if I could find a
job making good money, at the end of the day, it’s about making
enough money to survive, and making enough money for your children.
I grew up poor. We didn’t have a
lot. My dad was a coal miner, but he got hurt when I was young. After
that, my mom worked at Walmart. We didn’t have much. I went to
school and saw kids wearing nice things. Their daddies were coal
miners. So that’s what I wanted to be—a coal miner.
>> The article above was written by Sarah Lazare. It is a shortened version that originally appeared in In These Times.
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