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- Black Mesa: Coal against Water
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- Philippe Boucher
NRDC 's Daniel Hinerfeld reports on efforts to protect the sacred water of Black Mesa.
The main source of water for many Hopi and Navajo in northeastern Arizona is the pristine Navajo aquifer beneath Black Mesa. Its water is so pure that you can drink it straight out of the ground.
But according to a new report by the Natural Resources Defense Council, the aquifer is in trouble.
Decades of pumping by coal mining giant Peabody Energy are taking a toll. And now Peabody wants to pump out 50 percent MORE water to move coal through a pipeline in the desert.
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Piece Description
NRDC 's Daniel Hinerfeld reports on efforts to protect the sacred water of Black Mesa. The main source of water for many Hopi and Navajo in northeastern Arizona is the pristine Navajo aquifer beneath Black Mesa. Its water is so pure that you can drink it straight out of the ground. But according to a new report by the Natural Resources Defense Council, the aquifer is in trouble. Decades of pumping by coal mining giant Peabody Energy are taking a toll. And now Peabody wants to pump out 50 percent MORE water to move coal through a pipeline in the desert.





John Biewen
Posted on July 12, 2006 at 06:38 PM | Permalink
Review of Black Mesa: Coal against Water
Here's an interesting question for station programmers: to run, or not to run, news stories that openly express the views of, and in fact are produced by, advocacy groups. For most "mainstream" public radio stations, it's not a question at all. This is a report on a water pollution issue by "NRDC's Dan Hinerfeld," meaning, I guess, that Mr. Hinerfeld works for the National Resources Defense Council. For stations that maintain basic standards of journalistic independence, it would be no more appropriate to air this report than to run a piece on the Brady Bill by a correspondent from NRA Radio.
That said, for stations with a clear political identity and an audience that expects as much (such as Air America, which airs the environmentalist-funded Ecotalk show for which this piece was produced), this is fair game. Stylistically, this is a news-magazine-style piece. It explores allegations that a company is polluting an important (and, to Native Americans, sacred) acquifer beneath the Hopi and Navajo reservations. It's an important story, clearly told. Not surprisingly it suffers from being one-sided. We hear only from a former Hopi leader and one of the reporter's colleagues at NRDC, though we're told that federal regulators and the accused corporation declined to comment.