Tag: books

  • Appalachia in the Dark: How Data Centers and Rising Energy Costs Threaten Virginia’s and other Appalachian states Most Vulnerable

    In 2024, according to research from the Energy Justice Lab at Indiana University, Dominion Energy disconnected electricity service from a staggering 339,000 households across Virginia for nonpayment. Appalachian Power, covering much of Southwest Virginia, severed power to another 43,000 customers. These are not just numbers; they represent families across urban centers and in the Appalachian…

  • Appalachian Public Schools Left Behind as Vouchers Shift Money to Private Education

    The new school year has begun across Tennessee and much of Appalachia, and with it, a strikingly uneven playing field has taken hold inside classrooms. The universal voucher programs that lawmakers pushed through are now active, delivering thousands of dollars per student to families who choose private schools. But many of the children who remain…

  • Bill Williams and Appalachia: A Voice for the Forgotten, Has Passed Away.

    On March 22, 1934, Bill Williams was born into a world that he would one day influence in profound and lasting ways. Over the course of his long life, and especially through his work as a journalist and television anchor at WBIR in Knoxville, Tennessee, he became a champion for the people of Appalachia. When…

  • Healthcare in Appalachia

    Healthcare in the Appalachian region continues to face serious challenges that contribute to a persistent gap in health outcomes compared to the rest of the United States. Studies show that Tennessee and neighboring Appalachian states consistently rank lower across various measures of healthcare quality, access, and outcomes. Tennessee, for instance, ranked 44th in the nation…

  • “Beans in the Jar” an Appalachian Winter Prediction

    Every August, as the early morning mist settles over the valleys and the sun begins to rise behind the ridgelines, some Appalachian families start counting fogs. Not because they are keeping track of weather for its own sake, but because each fog means something. One fog, one bean in a jar. And by the end…

  • Environmental Concerns in Appalachia: A Region at a Crossroads

    Appalachia is a place of deep roots, hard work, and long memories. The mountains stretch across West Virginia, Kentucky, Virginia, and beyond, home to generations of families who have weathered both opportunity and exploitation. Today, the region is facing an environmental reckoning that has been building for decades. Abandoned mines, shrinking federal support, threats to…

  • What Saved Appalachia from Disaster Will Surprise You

    The Appalachian Regional Commission will continue its work across 13 states after Congress restored its full funding. The agency had faced a proposal to eliminate nearly all of its budget. Now, rural communities across the Appalachian region can continue to move forward with projects that improve infrastructure, develop the workforce, and support local economies. The…

  • The Healthcare Timebomb No One’s Talking About: How Appalachia Could Be Hit Hardest by the ACA Crisis

    The Affordable Care Act (ACA) is entering a period of significant change, and for communities across Appalachia, the consequences could be both immediate and long-lasting. Recent developments including projected premium increases, legislative changes introduced in the “One Big Beautiful Bill,” and the potential expiration of enhanced premium subsidies are converging in a way that may…

  • Small Appalachian Virginia Town Stops Massive Gas Plant and Data Center in Shocking Upset

    In a sweeping victory driven by determined grassroots organizing, residents of Pittsylvania County, Virginia, have successfully blocked Balico LLC’s proposal to build what would have been Virginia’s largest natural gas power plant at 3,500 megawatts alongside a hyperscale data center campus spanning 750 to 2,200 acres. Their resistance highlights deep concerns over air pollution, health…

  • How Marsha Blackburn Sold Out the Appalachian Mountains

    When it comes to the majestic Appalachian Mountains, those ancient ridges that define the landscape and heritage of East Tennessee, residents expect their elected officials to protect the land that feeds their identity, economy, and culture. Yet, for years, Senator Marsha Blackburn has offered little more than political lip service. While the Appalachian region faces…