'No Pay, We Stay': 23 Days Into Train Blockade Protest, Kentucky Coal Miners Demand Stolen Wages With Support of Progressives Nationwide

As of Wednesday, coal miners in Cumberland, Kentucky are now 23 days into a train blockade that they say will go on until their former company pays them.

The miners suddenly lost their jobs in the middle of a shift on July 1 when their company, Blackjewel, announced it had gone bankrupt. The company wrote two weeks’ worth of bad checks for a total of 1,700 coal miners, including 350 people in Harlan County, Kentucky. The company owes a total of $5 million to its former employees—about $3,000 per person.

“It’s no different from robbing a bank,” miner Jeffrey Willig told the New York Times this week.

The miners’ outrage deepened on July 29 when the company attempted to send a $1 million coal shipment to their clients via train. Several miners and their families organized a blockade, holding signs reading, “No Pay, We Stay” and camping out on the train tracks.

“We mined the coal, and company says they don’t have money to operate,” one miner, Josh Holbrook, told Sarah Lazare of In These Times earlier this month. “But they’re selling the coal. And they can’t pay us? I see us blocking the trains until we get paid.”

Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) sent 18 pizzas to the miners last Friday, and local churches and restaurants have also offered support to the group. A group of truckers also showed solidarity with the miners last week with a brief highway blockade.

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A number of unions and labor rights advocates have pledged solidarity with the workers.

In Lexington, Kentucky, the local Democratic Socialists of America (DSA) chapter announced that it would hold a rally on Thursday in support of the miners.

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