Where have all the graves gone?
The following excerpts are from Brian Farkas, As W.Va. coal companies expand, graves go missing, Yahoo!News, March 9, 2009:
[Problems are coming to light in] West Virginia as small family cemeteries and unmarked graves get in the way of mining, timbering and development interests. Advocates are asking state lawmakers this year to enact regulations that would require better tracking of the graves and protect families who believed that their loved ones wouldn’t be disturbed. * * *
The graves get lost because sometimes, nearby mining makes it difficut for families to gain access to burial grounds. Sometimes, companies don’t give proper public notice before removing or disturbing the graves.
One measure being pushed by the coalition would triple the no-disturbance buffer zone around cemeteries from 100 feet to 300 feet. Another would delete seemingly contradictory language in a law intended to protect human remains, grave artifacts and markers. Currently the law says it isn’t meant to “interfere” with normal activities by landowners, whether they be farmers, developers or coal operators. * * *
A third proposal would require coal companies to explain ahead of time how proposed surface mines would affect nearby cemeteries. And a fourth would allow West Virginia University’s extension service to use Global Positioning System to map and plot small cemeteries near mountaintop removal mines.