A New Day for the Coalfields, 4-page paper​
1-page summary handout
Partial wording of a law
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4-minute Video presentation​ 
5-minute Video of local effort in Utah

A bill which pays benefits to workers for 5 yrs, not 10, is Save Our Future
Comparison of bills in Congress
Similar ideas to cover all fossil fuel workers

Statements on transition from 
United Mine Workers of America
AFL-CIO
Liz Shuler, Secretary-Treasurer of AFL-CIO
Cecil Roberts, President of United Mine Workers
and $13 Billion to Support Coal Communities over 10 Years, if Most Mines Close

Would you sign a petition or email a message of support?
"Wage and benefit support for coal miners and their communities, like New Day for the Coalfields, are important for miners who lose work."


4-page paper  or  1-page summary handout   or  4-minute Video 

Members of Congress who've supported bills helping workers who lose jobs, or are on key committees
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The maximum cost would be if all 50,000 coal miners lost their jobs over 10 years. Supporting the workers and their communities would cost $26 billion over 10 years, comparable to the $28 billion in tax breaks for fossil fuels (table 13-1), and less than 1.3% of the $2 trillion to $4 trillion revenue over 10 years from various energy proposals. Administration can be done by existing Workforce Boards or other experienced groups. 

Oil and gas jobs are also in decline, though not as much as coal (see detail 2014-2017, summary 1985-2020).

Panel discussion June 2019 with speakers from West Virginia and Brookings Institution (DC).

Partial wording of a law

Letters to editors (write your own!): 


Next Steps:

People can ask their members of Congress to adopt A New Day for the Coalfields. You can give them the 4-page paper and the partial wording of a law

You can write a letter to the editor to local papers, where you ask readers to support this plan.

This is a draft plan to start discussions, written by people in West Virginia and Indiana. Please send ideas and reactions. Email: coal@yrr.info

Comparison of bills in Congress

Experience with past efforts to retrain workers

Comparison of pay in different energy jobs

Other sources for a transition for fossil fuel workers

State severance taxes on coal, gas & oil in 2004-7

Many members of Congress have sponsored transition help for fossil fuel workers:
A New Day for the Coalfields
Workers:

The United States has 46,000 coal miners. Coal jobs have declined (see coal graph) from automation and less coal for electricity. 82% of utility executives expect to use less coal in the next 10 years. Coal miners bear the brunt of the country's energy cycles. The areas where they live often have few other jobs. 

They deserve support when they're laid off, temporarily or permanently. A printable 4-page paper describes wage and benefit guarantees and other support needed by coal miners:
Click for video
​ Proposed Support for Coal Miners
$4.8 Million per 100 Miners per Year. Or if Most Mines Close, $13 Billion for Miners over 10 Years