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New accident claims two more West Virginia coal miners
By Samuel Davidson
23 January 2006
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Tragedy again gripped the coalfields of West Virginia on Saturday,
as the bodies of two miners trapped since Thursday night by a
fire were recovered at the Alma No. 1 Mine in Melville, about
60 miles southwest of the state capital of Charleston, in Logan
County. The two men had been making an effort to escape but were
blocked by the intense heat and smoke, according to West Virginia
state officials. The two men were identified as Don Bragg and
Ellery Hatfield.
Don Bragg, 33, of Accoville in Logan County, is survived by
his wife Delores and two children. He had worked in the mines
for 15 years. Ellery Hatfield, 47, of Simon in Wyoming Country,
is survived by his wife of 10 years, Frida, and their four children.
He had 12 years experience in the mines. Both men started
at the Alma No. 1 Mine about five years ago.
The deaths of these two men bring to 15 the number of coal
miners killed in three separate incidents during the first three
weeks of this year alone. In addition to most recent tragedy,
12 miners were found dead January 4 following an explosion at
the Sago Mine near Buckhannon, West Virginia. Another miner died
in eastern Kentucky on January 10. By comparison, 22 miners died
in US mines in all of 2005.
In the Sago Mine disaster, the trapped men died from carbon
monoxide poisoning as their oxygen supply ran out. To date, a
thirteenth Sago miner, Randal McCloy, remains in a light coma.
Doctors have not yet been able to determine the extent of brain
damage he sustained from being trapped in the mine nearly 42 hours
before rescuers reached him.
The Kentucky miner, Cornelius Yates, 44, was killed at a Maverick
Mining Co. mine in Pikeville, near the Virginia line, when a section
of the roof fell in, crushing him to death.
In the latest fatal incident, a fire started Thursday afternoon
900 feet underground and more than two miles from the entrance
of the Alma Mine 1. Nineteen other miners working in the mine
at the time were able to escape to the surface.
Rescue teams entered the mine and began searching for the two
trapped men. The mine consists of more than 10 miles of catacomb
paths cut through the coal. Rescuers reported Friday that they
had gone 10,000 feet into the mine, but were prevented from going
further due to the thick smoke and heat. Visibility had fallen
to no more than 2 or 3 feet and they had to attach themselves
together to prevent being lost.
The fire started on the conveyer belt that brings coal out
of the mine to the surface. The fire quickly spread to the coal
seams, weakening the roof and causing rock fall-ins. Rescuers
were blocked from reaching the trapped men by the fire and feared
that the weakened roof could collapse and trap even more men.
It was not until Saturday afternoon that rescuers were able to
reach the men, whose bodies were found together.
The Alma mine is operated by Aracoma Coal, which is owned by
Massey Energy, the fourth largest coal company in the country.
Miners and residents throughout the mining community had been
angered at the refusal of company officials to attend press conferences
about the tragedy and explain what was happening.
Frida Hatfield, before learning of her husbands death,
told the Logan Banner that company officials never contacted
her to tell her that her husband was trapped. I dont
really know anything, she said at the time. Nobody
even called me. I heard it from somebody else. I called down to
the mine and they said they couldnt give me any information.
I called one of my friends and she said, Frida, I just didnt
know what to say to you, but, yes, Ellery is trapped.
As with the Sago disaster, the Alma mine has been allowed to
operate despite a horrendous safety record. In the last two years,
the mine has received more than 200 citations from the federal
Mine Safety and Health Administration (MSHA). The violations include
allowing the buildup of coal dust and other combustible materials
and poor ventilation. Since June, at least 12 of the violations
were related to fire equipment.
A miner from the Alma mine, who asked that his name not be
used for fear of being fired, told the New York Times that
another fire had occurred on the conveyor belt at the mine on
December 23. I work at the belt that caught fire and had
to put out a fire at the same exact spot just a couple weeks ago
when the sprinkler system didnt work, the miner said,
I reported the fire to my supervisor, and he ignored it.
West Virginia Governor Joe Manchin, along with US Senators
Jay Rockefeller and Robert Byrd, all Democrats, have decried the
latest tragedy and pledged a full investigation to prevent future
accidents. However, even the limited amount of information that
has become available since the Alma No. 1 accident indicates that
the two deaths could have been prevented, and point to a slackening
of mine safety standards by both the Bush and Clinton administrations.
According to MSHA records, conveyor belt fires accounted for
14 percent of all underground mine fires between 1970 and 1990.
Flames in such fires traveled for hundreds of feet
causing a severe hazard to the health and safety of miners,
a 1992 MSHA report stated.
The MSHA estimated at the time that there were 3,000 feet of
conveyor belts in a small underground mine and 28,000 feet in
large mines. When belt fires reach the propagation stage,
they produce more fire gases and spread faster than the fires
of surrounding coal surfaces. The belt fires that have occurred
since 1970 have burned as much as 2,000 feet of belt before the
fire was extinguished.
To address this problem, in 1992 MSHA officials proposed upgrading
testing of conveyor belts and requiring that they be made of materials
that are resistant to flames. The regulation was meant to significantly
reduce or eliminate belt fires.
The proposal was shelved for the eight years of the Clinton
administration. In July 2002, under Bush, MSHA regulators completely
abandoned the plan. MSHA officials justified dropping the proposal
on the grounds that improvements had been made in carbon monoxide
monitoring.
In a briefing last Friday, Bob Friend, acting deputy administrator
of the MSHA, commented, The decision was made that the hazards
of belt fires would be addressed through carbon monoxide monitoring
systems. At the urging of the mining lobby, the Bush administration
has dropped more than a dozen new safety rules, including those
that would improve the response of rescue teams.
See Also:
Two missing in fire at West Virginia
coal mine
[21 January 2006]
A report from the scene of the Sago
Mine disaster: Lack of decent-paying jobs drives workers into
West Virginia mines
[20 January 2006]
US coal miners denounce deadly conditions:
The government is giving a green light to the coal operators
to violate safety
[17 January 2006]
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