Article 4QKMF Laid off and owed pay: the Kentucky miners blocking coal trains

Laid off and owed pay: the Kentucky miners blocking coal trains

by
Michael Sainato
from on (#4QKMF)

The protest has endured for more than six weeks, gaining national attention and support from Bernie Sanders

Harlan county, Kentucky, earned the nickname "Bloody Harlan" from a series of labor strikes and violent confrontations in the 1930s led by coalminers and union organizers against coal corporations and law enforcement. In 1973, Harlan's coalminers went on strike for 13 months when contract negotiations with Duke Power Company broke down after miners voted to form a union.

There are no longer any unionized mines in Kentucky, but Harlan's miners are currently continuing the region's legacy of labor struggles against wealthy and powerful coal corporations: they are blocking the coal trains from leaving a mine that laid them off.

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