A political power play overruled West Virginians

A political power play overruled West Virginians in the path of the Mountain Valley Pipeline. They still feel betrayed.

[ THIS COULD BE YOU ]

Mountain State Spotlight
Sarah Elbeshbish
October 20, 2024


Randy DuPre built the workshop on his Monroe County, WV property by hand. He feeds and cares for the three dogs and two horses that quietly roam and graze on the land near the home he has shared with his wife for 23 years. While thereโ€™s much Randy enjoys about his home, the peacefulness is his favorite.

โ€œI love it here,โ€ he said.

But now, Randy and his wife are leaving.

โ€œI donโ€™t want to, but I have no choice,โ€ he said.

For years, the couple dealt with the construction of the Mountain Valley Pipeline, which limited the roaming and grazing area for their animals. Arietta DuPre fought against the pipeline from the beginning. She helped organize meetings, supported otherย affected landownersย and wrote letters to federal officials as well as her local, state and congressional leaders voicing her objection.

She and the other opponents of the project were winning.

The 4th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals ruled at leastย eight timesย that the pipeline didnโ€™t follow the law. The court found that federal and state agencies had awarded the Mountain Valley Pipelineย permits despite violationsย and those same agenciesย bent or rewroteย their own rules to advance the project. The developers were not able to comply with rules protecting endangered species, public forests and fragile water crossings.

Thenย Sen. Joe Manchinย stepped in.

In a deal with the Biden administration, Manchinย promised his voteย for a major climate change bill in exchange for the White Houseโ€™s agreement to acquire the remaining permits the pipeline still needed. And through a provision in an emergency bill to keep the government from shutting down in June 2023, Manchin got what he asked for.

The provision said that Congress declared that the completion of the pipeline was required in the national interest, and, therefore:

Congress hereby ratifies and approves allย authorizations, permits, verifications, extensions, biologicalย opinions, incidental take statements, and any other approvals orย orders issued pursuant to Federal law necessary for theย construction and initial operation at full capacity of the Mountain Valley Pipeline

The last-minute addition to the bill guaranteed the remaining approvals needed to complete the pipeline as well asย stripped the authorityย of all courts to consider any legal actions against the project. It also granted the D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals sole judiciary authority over whether the provision was constitutional.

West Virginians in path of MVP torn on next steps โ€” and faith in the political system

Now, the DuPres are headed right across the state line to Virginia, leaving their Wayside home behind. Part of their decision to go is fueled by their outrage over the role their congressional representatives played in rushing the pipeline through and bypassing their ability to do anything about it.

โ€œIโ€™m pissed,โ€ Arietta said. โ€œTheyโ€™re there to do for the people, and they did nothing for the people. Nothing.โ€

Manchin celebrated in aย press releaseย following the passage of the June legislation, announcing that they had โ€œfinally secured the completion of the Mountain Valley Pipelineโ€ after working โ€œtirelessly to build consensus and garner the support necessaryโ€ for more than nine months.

Sen. Shelley Moore Capito also applauded the move in aย statementย following the passage, noting that expediting the completion of the pipeline was something she โ€œpersonally fought to include.โ€

As the West Virginians in Washington celebrated their win, some back home were appalled.

โ€œIt was when that bill passed, the fact that they actually slipped it in, I was like, โ€˜I donโ€™t believe this,โ€™โ€ Arietta said. โ€œI just gave up. There was no use fighting anymore.โ€

While the provision marked the end for Arietta, it motivated others to fight harder.

โ€œI thought we could strike it down,โ€ said Maury Johnson, a farmer from Monroe County who is among the most vocal opponents of the pipeline. โ€œA lot of people gave up. I said, โ€˜No. This ainโ€™t over. Thereโ€™s still lots of fight left.โ€™โ€

Johnson thought that someone, at least one of the environmental groups that previously challenged the pipeline, would also challenge the constitutionality of Manchinโ€™s provision. But more than a year later, no such case has emerged.

โ€œItโ€™s just infuriating,โ€ Johnson said. โ€œYou kind of wonder how our government got in this kind of a shape that they allow these kinds of things to happen.โ€

Johnson is not finished. He still drives the path of the pipeline, submitting reports and findings of violations and other observations to the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission, which is responsible for regulating the pipeline. Johnsonโ€™s activism has grown beyond just the pipeline as he continues to document other potential environmental issues.

The whole experience has changed Johnsonโ€™s level of confidence in the system though.

โ€œItโ€™s shaken a lot, but itโ€™s the system we have to use,โ€ he said. โ€œThere is nothing else, and the only way to change it is to use the system. The way we fought this pipeline was using their own rules against them.โ€

Manchinโ€™s potential successors voice support for Mountain Valley Pipeline deal

And as the November election approaches, West Virginiansโ€™ will send someone besides Manchin to Washington. He isnโ€™t running for reelection. While Gov. Jim Justice is likely to win the stateโ€™s Senate seat, heโ€™s been challenged by Democrat Glenn Elliot.

Elliot said the provision in the debt-ceiling bill was a necessary component of the deal between Manchin and the White House for the senatorโ€™s support for the 2022 landmark climate legislation.

โ€œItโ€™s just one of those things where you have to weigh it against, not the perfect, but the good,โ€ Elliot said. โ€œI think the net gain to West Virginia from getting these renewable investments and from opening up some economic opportunities with natural gas production is a net win, recognizing that some people are going to be angry.โ€

Justice did not respond to a request for comment on the handling of the situation. However, he did previouslyย voice supportย for the congressional intervention and even appealed to the U.S. Supreme Court to uphold the provision passed by Congress.

โ€œWe absolutely need that pipeline to go,โ€ Justiceย saidย during a July 2023 briefing. โ€œWe donโ€™t need any more delays and everything, and things just held up. It is ridiculous. Thatโ€™s just all there is to it.โ€

A 1971 Ford Pinto sits on Becky Crabtreeโ€™s property in Monroe County displaying a sign that says, โ€œStop MVPโ€.ย  When the controversy over the pipeline still raged in 2018, Crabtree propped her car up on wooden blocks, on a worksiteย  where workers were installing a section of the 42-inch pipeline. She settled herself inside the car, and chained herself to it โ€”- blocking the path of the pipeline. She was later arrested, charged and let go.

Now, natural gas flows through the pipeline underneath the 25 acres that were once meant for the homes of her children.

โ€œThey beat us. Itโ€™s in the ground. We live knowing that weโ€™re in the evacuation zone,โ€ she said. โ€œItโ€™s very painful, and we gave it our best shot.โ€

Now that โ€œMVP has won,โ€ Crabtree said, sheโ€™s going to change the sign on the car to read โ€œJesus wept.โ€

โ€œThatโ€™s the only thing I can think of to sum up my feelings,โ€ she added.

But, for Crabtree, thereโ€™s a silver lining. While opposing the pipeline, she connected with other protesters and developed a community around their efforts.

โ€œOut of this, out of the horrors of it all, there has been camaraderie and a group of people who have come together,โ€ she said. โ€œAnd if you need something, or if thereโ€™s another something to face โ€“ oh my, weโ€™ll be organized.โ€


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