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WSWS : News
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America
Two workers killed in Ohio coal mine collapse
By Jerry White
28 September 1999
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Two coal miners were killed and three others injured last Friday
in a roof collapse in an underground mine scheduled to close in
southeastern Ohio. William Florence, 49, and Gerald Elbe, 57,
were removing drainage pipes 700 feet below the surface when the
ceiling collapsed and crushed them. The accident occurred at Consolidation
Coal Company's Powhatan No. 4 mine, in Clarington, Ohio, just
across the Ohio River from West Virginia.
Funerals for the two miners are scheduled for Wednesday.
A week before the roof collapse the mine had been declared
safe by inspectors from the Ohio Division of Mines and Reclamation.
Another routine inspection was scheduled for Friday, and the inspector
was en route to the mine when its roof collapsed, the state agency
said. State and company officials said they have not determined
the cause of the collapse.
The Powhatan mine was one of the state's largest mines until
Consol announced its shutdown in March. Only a small crew of 34
miners are on duty to remove coal and equipment before the mine
is permanently shut down. Company officials say the 28-year-old
mine, which once employed hundreds of workers, is being shut because
environmental concerns have reduced the demand for high-sulfur
coal.
Pittsburgh-based Consol, the fourth largest coal company in
the US, is currently downsizing in order to boost its falling
share values. Wall Street firms, such as Merrill Lynch and JP
Morgan, have advised the company to close older mines and shift
production to more cost-effective sites. The company, which is
majority-owned by German conglomerate RWE AG and DuPont, has suffered
a sharp fall in share values because of the unseasonably warm
weather and the economic crisis in Asia, which has depressed exports
around the world.
The miners who were killed were members of the United Mine
Workers of America. The union has made no public comments about
safety conditions at the mine. This is not surprising since the
UMWA jointly oversees health and safety with management, and if
any safety violations were present, it would be complicit in the
death and injury of the miners. Moreover, the UMWA has directly
contributed to the erosion of safety in the mines by collaborating
with management to boost productivity, cut costs and increase
profits.
The same month Consol announced the shutdown of the Powhatan
mine, the company said it would lay off another 550 workers at
three mines in West Virginia and Virginia. Workers at one northern
West Virginia mine got the bad news when they arrived at work
and found a note saying the mine was closed. At the time UMWA
District 31 President Rich Eddy said, we produce a tremendous
amount of coal and break all kinds of tonnage records, and this
is the thanks we get.
In 1998 there were 29 fatalities in the nation's coal mines.
Thirteen were the result of roof falls, the leading cause of coal
mining accidents. Twenty-two of the fatal coal mining accidents
occurred at underground mines, while seven took place at surface
mines. The total number of deaths in US coal mines has fallen
for three consecutive years, but the lower numbers do not indicate
improved safety as much as they do the continued shutdown of mines
and the loss of tens of thousands of jobs. Since the early 1980s
UMWA membership has fallen from 120,000 to well below 40,000 miners
today.
See Also:
The impact of globalisation
on health and safety at work
[23 July 1999]
America's workplacesamong
the deadliest in the industrialized world
[13 February 1999]
Dissident
miners attacked at United Mine Workers rally
[9 April 1998]
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