[Congressional Record Volume 158, Number 128 (Thursday, September 20, 2012)]
[House]
[Pages H6157-H6158]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
ENERGY CLOSURES AND LAYOFFS
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentleman from
Pennsylvania (Mr. Thompson) for 5 minutes.
Mr. THOMPSON of Pennsylvania. Mr. Speaker, this week another American
energy-producing company announced plant closures and worker layoffs,
citing the Obama administration's authoritarian regulatory regime in
part as a rationale for its decision.
Yesterday Alpha Natural Resources announced closures of eight coal
mines in three States, one of which is located in the Fifth
Congressional District of Pennsylvania, which I'm proud to represent.
Company officials, in announcing the closures, cited ``a regulatory
environment that's aggressively aimed at constraining the use of
coal.''
The decision will result in layoffs of 1,200 workers and an immediate
400 jobs lost in Virginia, West Virginia, and Pennsylvania.
The fact that the coal industry is facing tough times isn't news.
They have other energy competitors, including natural gas, and
challenges with coal transport costs, energy, and labor costs. The
issue that's newsworthy is the additional burden being placed on
American employers during such difficult and tough economic times.
The administration's announced intentions to eliminate coal, our most
abundant natural resource, from our fuel mix, with no clear plan to
replace it with any effective alternative, has taken a significant toll
on employers and individuals across my home State.
Here are several news headlines of closures and layoffs in my home
district from the past several months:
September 18 headline: ``Alpha Natural Resources closing eight coal
mines.'' Twelve hundred companywide layoffs and an immediate 400 jobs
cut in Virginia, West Virginia, and my home State of Pennsylvania.
August 30 headline: ``Another round of Joy workers laid off,'' The
Derrick:
In August, Joy Mining Manufacturing in Franklin, Venango
County, Pennsylvania, posted another round of employee
layoffs, and 43 employees were notified they had been
furloughed from their jobs. The week before that, 19 others
were laid out. Joy Mining is the largest private-sector
employer in Venango County.
February 9 headline: ``Local Officials Respond to Shawville Power
Plant Closure'':
GenOn Energy has about 80 employees at its plant in
Shawville, Clearfield County, and contributes roughly
$225,000 dollars annually in local taxes. GenOn offers jobs
not only through its plant but through Amphfire coal and
trucking firms, which means a loss of 100 to 200 workers in
it is next several years.
January 26 headline: ``FirstEnergy Shutting Down 6 Sites in Ohio,
Pennsylvania, and Maryland'':
In January, FirstEnergy announced that the new
environmental regulations led to a decision to shut down six
older coal-fired power plants in Ohio, Pennsylvania, and
Maryland, affecting more than 500 employees.
Coal operations are closing, forcing more workers into unemployment
as countless indirect coal jobs have been put at risk because of the
President's unwavering commitment to end coal. Our most abundant
natural resource is a source of domestic energy.
In the aftermath of all these closures and job losses in my district,
along with numerous across my State and the country, it is becoming
increasingly clear that this administration expects the consumers of
Pennsylvania to bear the costs of a poorly thought out, poorly defined,
and poorly explained environmental agenda.
But it's not just a war on coal, it's a war on electricity and jobs.
The shuttering of a record number of coal-fired power plants threatens
thousands of
[[Page H6158]]
the 555,270 direct and indirect coal-related jobs that help supply
America with nearly half of its generated electricity and pay $36
billion in wages.
The nonpartisan U.S. Energy Information Administration has all but
confirmed the President's aggressive push against coal development with
a report detailing a record number of coal-fired power plants to be
closed this year, largely because of the burdensome regulations and
other compliance costs. That's why this week the U.S. House will pass
H.R. 3049, to push back on the President's commitment to end coal as a
source of domestic energy and protect the countless jobs that have been
lost or put at risk as a result of his politics.
H.R. 3049 includes the following package of bills: The Coal Miner
Employment and Domestic Energy Infrastructure Protection Act, which
bars the Environmental Protection Agency from issuing any regulation
before December 31, 2013, that would adversely affect coal mining
employment.
The Coal Residuals Reuse and Management Act, which establishes State-
level permitting programs for the storage of coal combustion residuals
under the Solid Waste Disposal Act, which is now primarily used to
regulate the management of municipal solid waste landfills and sewage
landed fills.
{time} 1040
The Energy Tax Prevention Act, which prevents the EPA from regulating
greenhouse gases and any effort to address climate change.
The Clean Water Cooperative Federalism Act, which prohibits the EPA
from issuing a new or revised water quality standard when a State
standard has already been approved by the EPA.
The Transparency in Regulatory Analysis of Impacts on the Nation Act,
or the TRAIN Act, which creates an interagency committee to examine the
effects of current and proposed Federal regulations on U.S. energy and
manufacturing industries, U.S. global competitiveness, U.S. and energy
prices.
Again, it's not just a war on coal; it's a war on the use of carbon-
based fuels--coal, oil, natural gas--which supply over 80 percent of
our energy.
____________________