
A David vs. Goliath story:
How did a few neophyte activists from Appalachia get the rest of America and Congress to care about the ostensibly hyper-local issue of mountaintop-removal coal mining?
Background: It’s cheaper for energy companies to extract coal from the earth by slicing the tops off mountains than it is to tunnel underneath them. The result: over 470 mountains in Appalachia have been demolished, leading to a host of environmental problems: destruction of natural habitats, flooding, pollution, etc.

At first, spreading the word was done via old-school Web 1.0 websites, earned media coverage, and face-to-face organizing by local and regional organizations.
Problems with that approach:
- Hard to convery scale of mining
- National face-to-face organizing costs a lot
- Missing an organizing presence
- National legislation needs a national network
Solution: iLove Mountains.org — a Web 2.0-tricked out resource center and action center
Check out the highlights of the site after the jump…
Web site elements
Multimedia initiatives:
- National memorial for the mountains — audio and video clips of communities affected by mountaintop removal
- Used online maps to document all ~470 mountains that had been destroyed. Asked people to contribute stories about destruction. Took best 22, called them featured mountains.
- Sprout widgets embedded with those videos and custom RSS feeds
Spread the word initiatives:
- ‘Forward Track Map’ — tool for tracking someone’s impact in campaign: On a map, you see bubbles representing each person who you successfully referred to sign a pledge to spread the word; you see how many people those people got to sign, and so on, up to 5 degrees of separation.
- Similar to the above, bloggers who sign up can see the nationwide impact of their posts about the issue
- ‘Contact your rep’ to prod them to co-sponsor legislation against mountaintop removal
- Embeddable badges
Google map-powered initiatives:
- My Connection: Put in your zipcode, see a Google map of how your locality is connected to a power plant fed by coal mined from Appalachian mountains.
- Created Google Maps layers (KML files) that show mountain areas before and after their destruction — and overlayed familiar elements like skyscrapers and the Golden Gate bridge to give people a sense of the massive scale of the destruction.
- Google used the layers to demonstrate the power of user-generated layers (KML files).
Cost of campaign:
Initial launch: 80K for design, tech issues (not including staff time, 3-4 staffers working part time)
Result: the Clean Water Protection Act (which would limit mountaintop removal) has 140 sponsors in the U.S. House. 150 is usually a tipping point — which would trigger action in the Senate, and then, on to the president’s desk.
CATEGORIES: Ethics
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