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WSWS : News
& Analysis : North
America
Slaughter in US coal industry continues
Five miners killed in Kentucky explosion
By Samuel Davidson
22 May 2006
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Five coal miners were killed in an explosion that ripped through
an eastern Kentucky mine early Saturday morning. The fatal blast
took place at about 1:00 a.m. at the Darby Mine No. 1 in Harlan
County, killing five of the six men on a maintenance crew at the
mine, located near the Virginia border.
Killed in the disaster were: Amon Brock, 51, of Closplint;
Jimmy D. Lee, 33, of Wallins Creek; Roy Middleton, 35, of Evarts;
George William Petra, 49, of Kenvir; and Paris Thomas Jr., 53,
of Evarts. Only one manPaul Ledfordsurvived. Initial
reports indicate that the blastwhich was so powerful that
debris was blown hundreds of yards from the mine entrancewas
caused by methane gas, which appears to have ignited in the production
area after leaking from a sealed, unused section of the mine.
Coming just months after the explosion at the Sago Minewhich
killed 12 West Virginia coal miners on January 2the Harlan
County disaster is an indictment of the entire political and corporate
establishment in the United States. Behind all the crocodile tears
for the miners families by Democratic and Republican politicians
and promises for improved safety, the fact is that miners
lives and limbs continue to be ground up to feed the industry
boom that is producing huge profits for the coal bosses.
In the first five months of this year, 31 US coal mines have
been killed in explosions, roof falls and other accidents, exceeding
the number of fatalities in all of 2005, when 22 miners died.
Since the beginning of the year 10 miners have been killed in
Kentucky alone, including two workers killed at two different
mines on April 20 and 21.
The continuing slaughter of miners underscores how ineffectual
have been the measures announced by the federal Mine Safety and
Health Administration (MSHA) and the Kentucky state government
after the Sago explosion. For all intents and purposes these measures
have been for public consumption and have been delayed in Washington
and various state capitals to make sure they are acceptable to
demands of the coal companies for increased production and profits.
For its part, the US media, which provided rare coverage to the
conditions of Appalachian miners and their families during and
after the Sago disaster, has all but ignored this latest tragedy.
The New York Times, for example, buried its coverage of
the Harlan County explosion on page 28.
That this tragedy occurred in Harlan County is particularly
significant. The area was long a center of the struggles of coal
miners against the coal operators and the state authorities who
defended them. In the 1930s the county became known as Bloody
Harlan throughout the US, after miners fought the violent
resistance of the coal bosses, their hired gunmen and the National
Guard to organize the United Mine Workers of America (UMWA) in
the area. In 1973-74 Harlan County miners waged a 13-month strike
at Duke Energys Brookside Mine, once again defying armed
thugs, to win union recognition and fight for decent wages and
safety conditions.
By the 1980s, however, the UMWA abandoned these militant traditions
and deliberately betrayed several bitter strikes, in order to
further its policy of labor-management collaboration and its political
alliance with the Democratic Party. The betrayal of the 1984-85
AT Massey and the 1989-90 Pittston strikes, which included the
abandonment of miners framed up and even murdered by the coal
bosses, transformed eastern Kentucky and other former union strongholds
into areas where coal miners confronted conditions of exploitation
not seen since the 1930s. Today there are only 271 UMWA miners
in eastern Kentucky, compared to 12,620 nonunion miners, according
to statistics compiled by the US governments Energy Information
Administration.
After more than two decades of mass unemployment and poverty
in the coalfields, and after successfully driving down the wages
and conditions of the miners, producing coal has once again become
a very profitable enterprise, particularly as coal prices have
risen sharply in recent years. While production has greatly increased
mine operators have limited the number of workers they have hired
in order to contain costs, and those that are hired are sent into
the mines with little or no training.
The opening of small, low-cost and unsafe pitslong known
among miners as dog-holeshas become profitable
in this climate. The Darby Mine, where Saturdays tragedy
occurred, employs 34 miners who produced 118,052 tons of coal
last year. According to MSHA records, the Darby mine was cited
for 10 safety violations in April, four of them serious
and substantial, an indication that an employer willfully
ignored safety precautions. These included allowing the accumulation
of flammable coal dust and a problem with water sprinklers and
fire warning system on the coal belt.
Since being taken over by its current operatorRalph Napierin
May 2001, there have been three very serious accidents caused
by collapsing roofs and walls. Over the last five years, the mine
has been issued 257 citations by MSHA investigators for which
the company has been fined just $27,651 or a little over $100
per violation. As in the case of the Sago Mine, these fines are
little more than the cost of doing business for the coal operators,
who have little to fear from federal and state authorities that
either reduce the penalties or do nothing to collect them.
In a revealing comment, Ray McKinney, the acting director of
MSHA, said the number of fines at the Darby Mine would probably
be normal for the industry. This only underscores the imminent
danger facing thousands of miners and that the fact that under
the Bush administration MSHA has all but ended any serious regulation
of the mining industry.
Statements from friends and relatives point to the economic
desperation in eastern Kentucky that forces workers into the dangerous
occupation. Mary Middleton, whose husband Roy, 35, was one of
the miners killed, told the Associated Press that he had been
working in the mines since he was 18. He thought about coming
out of the mines but we have two kids. It was a job to make a
living, said the widow. Other family members recounted the
unsafe conditions that have become a fact of life for miners.
Paris Thomass wife, Tilda, told the Louisville Courier-Journal,
every night before he left (for work) I wouldnt say
goodbye. Id just say see you in the morning and hed
say, I hope so.
The lone survivor of the disaster, Paul Ledford, said that
at least two of the miners who died had survived the initial blast
and tried to escape. The miners crawled through a 48-inch high
tunnel, trying to make their way through dense smoke and dust
to reach the mine entrance some 3,000 to 5,000 feet away. Ledford
passed out twice on his way out of the mine, once for two-and-a-half
hours and again for 30 or 40 minutes, according to his brothers
account.
Preliminary autopsy reports indicated that three of the minersMiddleton,
Petra, and Thomasdied of smoke inhalation and carbon monoxide
poisoning, while Brock and Lee were killed by the explosion.
Ledford, who sustained burns to his face and chest and had
the skin on his knees worn away, was treated at a nearby hospital
and released Saturday evening. According to his brother his oxygen
packknown as a Self-Contained, Self Rescuer or SCSRprovided
clean air for only five minutes, instead of the one hour that
the device is supposed to provide. The sole survivor of the Sago
explosion, Randal McCloy Jr., made a similar complaint about the
oxygen packs the trapped men had, saying that several failed to
work.
In a telling example of the state of mining in the US and its
tragic impact on mining communities, Ledfords brother David
was killed in a mining accident in 1991, while another brother,
Jeff, was permanently disabled from a rock fall in 1996.
See Also:
Survivor of West Virginia
mine disaster says respirators failed to work
[29 April 2006]
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