In 1978, an attempt to incorporate Buffalo Creek
as a town failed by a vote of 816 to 546. Incorporation would have
qualified the area for federal and state rehabilitation grants.
Opposition to incorporation was backed heavily by coal companies,
which owned 60 percent of Logan County's land and wanted to be
excluded from incorporation property taxes.
The 1969 federal Coal Mine Health and Safety Act
had outlawed coal impoundments like those built by the Buffalo
Mining Company on Buffalo Creek. The disaster at Buffalo Creek
awakened the Mine Health and Safety Administration to the
importance of enforcing these federal regulations. In 1973, the
West Virginia Legislature passed the Dam Control Act, regulating
all dams in the state. However, funding was never appropriated to
enforce the law. In 1992, an official with the state Division of
Natural Resources estimated there were at least 400 hazardous
non-coal dams in West Virginia, many of which were owned by the
state.
"People here are not like they
used to be. Only people who were in the flood realize that it's not
rudeness when you have to ask them to repeat something simply
because you weren't listening, your mind was somewhere else. Or you
forget to ask them to come back again when they leave after a
visit. Or, as happens every day, you start to say something and
forget what it was, or just walk away while someone is still
talking to you. Or you start looking for something you know you
have and then remember, `That was
before.'"
-- quote from Everything in Its Path, by Kai T. Erikson