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WSWS : Workers
Struggles : Australia
: Mining
Australia:
Two accidents highlight worsening coal mine safety
By Noel Holt
22 July 1999
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Two incidents have again focused attention on the deadly conditions
in the mining industry in New South Wales, one of Australia's
largest coal producing states. Late on Tuesday evening, 50-year-old
Kevin Downes was crushed when a wall collapsed at the United Collieries
mine at Warkworth, near Singleton, in the Upper Hunter Valley.
Downes, who was supervising a team of miners extracting pillars
of coal some 200 metres below ground, lay unconscious beneath
a fallen rib for over five minutes before being freed. Paramedics
worked to reinflate a collapsed lung before flying him to hospital
by helicopter. The incident could have caused multiple deaths.
In May this year four miners were lucky not be have been killed
in an accident at the state government-owned Wyee coal mine, north
of Sydney. The four men were sent hurtling down the entrance shaft
when a rope on a draft transporter snapped as they headed underground
to start their shift. Three of the miners jumped clear. The fourth
rode the run-away transporter 150 metres down the steep slope
to the bottom. Miraculously he suffered only cuts and bruises.
Had the rope snapped on the next trip, 50 men would have been
in the transporter. Tests following the accident revealed that
the rope had a strength of only 12 percent of its capacity when
it snapped.
The rope's faulty condition had been reported to the mine management
in January. A local union check inspector had detected that it
was badly frayed. The specialist firm brought in to inspect the
rope advised that it should be replaced. However, nothing was
done.
Arguments immediately erupted over who was to blame. The Department
of Mineral Resources, which administers mine safety regulations
in NSW, claimed that it was never informed of the check inspector's
advice.
Northern District secretary of the United Mineworkers Federation,
Ron Land, anxious to deflect any blame from the union, said the
accident was another instance where the Department of Mineral
Resources had proved it was absolutely incapable of properly
administering mine safety.
Similar arguments have followed mine accidents in the past.
They are designed to give the impression that poor mine safety
is the responsibility of this or that individual or department
rather than a state of affairs that exists throughout the entire
industry.
In just over a year, three miners have been killed in mining
accidents in the Hunter Valley alone. Ron Land admitted that mining
conditions today were generally unsafe. He said that an Australian
coal miner now has a one-in-28 chance of being killed over a 40-year
period.
Following the Wyee accident, the Hunter region's daily paperthe
Newcastle Herald was quick to join the chorus and
to advance excuses to deflect criticism from the government, the
mine management and the mining union.
Its editorial comment placed all responsibility on the workers
themselves. In the mining industry every worker is responsible
for his or her mate's safety, it stated. This is commonsense
and it shouldn't take volumes of legislation to ensure this happens.
The fact is that whenever workers take any form of independent
action over safety, especially if it involves loss of production,
they are roundly condemned in the media as irresponsible and are
told to confine themselves to official channels.
Moreover, there is a widespread and worsening pattern. The
most recent figures provided by the NSW Joint Coal Board in its
annual report, Lost-time Injuries and Fatalities in New
South Wales Coal Mines 1997-98", show that safety is declining.
Section 2 of the report dealt with the number of lost-time
injuries per million employee hours worked, known as the Lost
Time Injury Frequency Rate (LTIFR). Over the last 12 months there
had been an increase of 11.2 percent in underground mines and
13.5 percent in open cut mines.
Of the 80 mines in NSW, 41 had on injury rate that remained
constant or showed an improvement. On the other hand, 39 showed
an alarming rate of increase. The average LTIFR increase of the
13 open cut mines in this group jumped 47.1 percent, from 29 to
55, and for the 26 underground mines in the group it jumped 29.7
percent, from 55 to 78.
There had also been a significant increase in the severity
of the accidents. This was revealed by the number of days an injured
worker was off workthe Duration Rate (DR). The DR average
over all mines climbed from 15 days per injury in 1992/93 to 23
days in 1997/98, a 25 percent increase.
The LTIFR and DR have climbed despite an industry campaign
to falsify these figures. Acil Economics, in a 1997 report, revealed
that it was common practice for mine management to drive seriously
injured workers to work to sign-on and then return home, so that
their absence was not recorded.
Since 1990, 33 miners have died in NSW, out of an average workforce
of 14,687. This is a fatality rate of one in 445 workers.
After every mine disaster, the concerns of the miners have
been then steered into sterile inquiries, which cover-up the underlying
causes and fail to bring about any real changes.
In 1997, the Carr Labor government, faced with growing hostility
in mining communities over the escalating number of deaths and
injuries, commissioned Acil Economics to conduct a review of the
mining industry. There had been 10 deaths in NSW coal mines over
the previous 18 months.
Acil Economics produced 44 recommendations. However, it was
deliberately vague. Not a single mine death or accident was concretely
examined. Even though the report acknowledged that dangerous conditions
were widespread and that mine managers were involved in a systematic
cover-up of work injuries, it did not recommend that any
charges be laid.
The government said it would implement the 44 recommendations
plus 40 recommendations from the Queensland Mining Wardens Inquiry
into the 1994 explosion at BHP's Moura underground mine that took
the lives of 11 miners. Unfortunately for the government, which
hoped that this would dampen down concern, another incident was
to highlight the lack of mine safety.
Four miners were killed at the Gretley Colliery, near Newcastle,
in November 1997.
A judicial inquiry found widespread and serious short
comings at every level of management at Gretley. The company
had failed to act on reports by a mine deputy (responsible for
safety) on three separate occasions in the two weeks leading up
to the disaster. It made another 43 recommendations.
Despite these inquiries and recommendations, mine safety has
continued to decline. None of the recommendations have touched
upon the root causethe drive for international competitiveness
and profits. It has created hothouse conditions in the mines.
Workers, reminded that a loss of markets could see mines close
and their jobs disappear, are driven to cut corners and take unacceptable
risks in order to boost production.
These conditions could not exist without the cooperation of
the union leaders, who agree with management that the future lies
in defending the market share of the Australian coal producers.
After every major disaster the unions are the first to call for
an official inquiry. The outcome is always the same, recommendations
are made and some legislation is passed, but the market prevails
and workers pay the cost.
See Also:
Another
death in an Australian coal pit
Hundreds turn out for miner's funeral
[25 July 1998]
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