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Full-Text Articles in Law
A Miner's Bill Of Rights, L. Thomas Galloway, J. Davitt Mcateer, Richard L. Webb
A Miner's Bill Of Rights, L. Thomas Galloway, J. Davitt Mcateer, Richard L. Webb
West Virginia Law Review
No abstract provided.
The Federal Mine Safety And Health Amendments Act Of 1977: Closure Encounters Of The Third Kind, Edmund J. Moriarty, Mark M. Pierce
The Federal Mine Safety And Health Amendments Act Of 1977: Closure Encounters Of The Third Kind, Edmund J. Moriarty, Mark M. Pierce
West Virginia Law Review
No abstract provided.
Unauthorized Work Stoppages--Stranger Pickets In The Coalfields, S. Benjamin Bryant
Unauthorized Work Stoppages--Stranger Pickets In The Coalfields, S. Benjamin Bryant
West Virginia Law Review
No abstract provided.
The Federal Coal Leasing Waltz, Brian E. Mcgee, Gerald E. Dahl
The Federal Coal Leasing Waltz, Brian E. Mcgee, Gerald E. Dahl
West Virginia Law Review
Few Americans will deny that if we are not already immersed in an energy crisis, we are at least on the brink of a very serious energy crunch. Consequently, it is critical that we reassess our present and future energy resources, our escalating consumption of finite reserves, and. our commitment to energy conservation. Pivotal to such an assessment is the development of our nation's vast western coal deposits and the vital part that federal coal can play in this tableau. Just one short year ago, the nation was primed to embark upon a new era of federal coal leasing as …
Legal Problems Relating To Ownership Of Gas Found In Coal Deposits, Patrick C. Mcginley
Legal Problems Relating To Ownership Of Gas Found In Coal Deposits, Patrick C. Mcginley
West Virginia Law Review
No abstract provided.
Commonwealth V. Barnes & Tucker Co.--The Burden Of Treating Acid Mine Drainage, Michael E. Winck
Commonwealth V. Barnes & Tucker Co.--The Burden Of Treating Acid Mine Drainage, Michael E. Winck
West Virginia Law Review
On February 28, 1977, the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania decided the case of Commonwealth v. Barnes & Tucker Co. That decision resolved a lengthy controversy over the issue of responsibility for the abatement of acid mine drainage emanating from an inactive deep coal mine which was owned and once operated by Barnes and Tucker Co. The Supreme Court's decision, requiring the company to bear the responsibility for the treatment of the discharge, is significant. It illustrates not only the strength of Pennsylvania's commitment to a clean environment, but also the ability of the state to act in furtherance of that …