News

As work on the Mountain Valley Pipeline winds down for another winter ... blow to our precious resources and our communities,” David Sligh, conservation director of Wild Virginia, said.
The on-again, off-again pace of building the Mountain Valley Pipeline ... said David Sligh of Wild Virginia, one of eight environmental groups fighting the pipeline in court.
SINKING CREEK — With a mountain ... David Paylor said in a statement the following week. The lead contractor hired by Mountain Valley for much of the work in Virginia is Precision Pipeline ...
ELLISTON — A crowd of nearly 100 crashed a construction site early Monday morning, loudly voicing their opposition to the Mountain Valley Pipeline. When police arrived at the scene off U.S. 460 ...
Pipeline opponents point to Mountain Valley’s environmental track record, which in Virginia includes nearly 400 violations of erosion and sediment control regulations and fines of more than $2 ...
The Mountain Valley Pipeline has been in service nearly a year, transporting natural gas from West Virginia to Virginia. A ...
Mountain Valley Pipeline is fighting back against landowners in Franklin County who have denied surveyors access to their property. Last week, the company filed a lawsuit against a Cahas Mountain ...
A jury ordered Mountain Valley Pipeline to pay $523,327 Thursday for a prime piece of Bent Mountain real estate that it took, against the owners’ wishes, using its power of eminent domain.
“This is my pipeline monster,” Wenger said. Wenger was one of about 50 people who gathered Thursday at the birthplace of organized opposition to the proposed interstate Mountain Valley ...
Federal regulators are allowing construction to resume along most of the Mountain Valley Pipeline’s 303-mile route through West Virginia and Southwest Virginia. The authorization from the ...
The Mountain Valley Pipeline slipped deeper into doubt Friday, when an appellate court declined to reconsider its decision striking down a vital permit for the deeply divisive project. In a brief ...
When a company building the Mountain Valley Pipeline first selected a route, cutting directly through James and Kathy Chandler’s “slice of heaven” atop Bent Mountain, it offered them $89,343.