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Two more US coal miners killed in Kentucky and West Virginia
By Jerry White
26 May 2006
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The almost daily toll of deaths and injuries in US coal mines
continued this week with the loss of two young miners in Kentucky
and West Virginia, just days after five coal miners were killed
in a mine explosion in eastern Kentucky. The latest deaths bring
the number of coal industry fatalities in the first five months
of the year to 33, well over the 22 miners killed in all of 2005.
On Tuesday, Steven T. Bryant, 23, of Louisa, Kentucky, was
killed when his water truck went over an embankment and crashed
at an open-pit mine in Breathitt County. Bryant had only been
on the job for about a month at the Risner Branch No. 2 Mine and
was normally employed as a rock truck driver, according to Kentucky
Governor Ernie Fletcher.
The death of the young workerthe sixth fatality in a
Kentucky mine in four days and the eleventh in the state so far
this yeartook place as relatives and co-workers were burying
the five miners killed May 20 at the Darby Mine in Harlan County,
Kentucky.
The following day Todd Lewis Upton, 34, an underground scoop
operator, was killed at the Sycamore No. 2 Mine in Harrison County,
West Virginia, when he was apparently hit in the head by a wooden
board while operating equipment underground. Like the miner killed
on the previous day, Upton had only recently been hired and had
worked at the mine less than eight months.
The West Virginia mine is owned by Wolf Run Mining Co., a subsidiary
of International Coal Group. ICG is a growing player in the US
coal industry, and also operates the Sago Mine, where 12 coal
miners were killed January 2. ICG owner Wilbur Rossa billionaire
New York financier has made a fortune in buying and selling
bankrupt steel mills, auto parts factories, coal mines and other
industrial assets. His Ashland, Kentucky-based company, which
was formed in 2004 after the acquisition of Horizon Natural Resources,
once the nations fourth largest coal company, controls 916
million tons of coal reserves and has 11 mining complexes in Kentucky,
West Virginia, Maryland, Virginia and Illinois.
After the fatal blast at Sago forced the temporary shutdown
of the mine, some of its employees were transferred to Sycamore,
located 56 miles away. Like the Sago Mine, Sycamore has been repeatedly
cited for gross violations of federal safety and health regulations,
even though it just began operating during the second quarter
of 2005. The federal Mine Safety and Health Administration (MSHA)
has cited the mine 49 times since January, for violations ranging
from not having the proper guards on machinery to failing to control
explosive coal dust. According to MSHA records the mine has a
non-fatal injury rate that is nearly a third higher than the national
average for similar operations.
Last month MSHA inspectors cited Sycamore five times for unwarrantable
failure, a citation that means mine managers have engaged
in aggravated conduct constituting more than ordinary negligence.
According to the Charleston Gazette, two of the five orders
concerned alleged failure to conduct proper pre-shift safety examinations,
a violation that was also cited repeatedly at the Sago Mine and
prompted the criminal prosecution of one former Sago foreman.
The other three Sycamore violations concerned alleged failure
to control the accumulation of combustible materials underground,
according to MSHA records.
These miserable working conditionswhich have already
caused the death of a minerhave promoted no more than a
slap on the wrist from state and federal mine inspectors, who
under the Bush administration have been ordered to partner
with the coal bosses. For its egregious safety violations at the
Sycamore Mine, ICG has been assessed $4,494 in federal penalties
since 2005 and has paid $1,250.
With rising coal prices and profits, coal operators have rushed
to hire new younger, workers and send them into the mines with
little, if any, training. In many cases more experienced laid-off
miners have stayed away from these jobs because of the low pay,
lack of safety, and nonunion conditions. After more than two decades
of high unemployment, mine owners are counting on the economic
desperation in Appalachia to fill their demand for labor. At the
same time some operators have called for relaxing restrictions
on immigration in order to lure low-wage workers from Mexico and
elsewhere to the coalfields.
After more than two decades of betrayed strikes and complicity
with the mine bosses and Democratic Party to cut labor costs,
there is little more than a shell left of the United Mine Workers
union in its former strongholds of West Virginia and Kentucky.
Having driven down wages and decimated working conditionsfought
for by coal miners for decadesthe coal operators are sharply
driving up production while only marginally increasing employment
in the industry. This factor, along with years of safety deregulation
by both big-business parties, has made these tragedies inevitable.
The Pittsburgh Post-Gazette reported Thursday that federal
mining officials in 1999 were so concerned about the coal miners
inability to use complicated emergency oxygen respirators that
they proposed increasing training sessions to four times a year,
instead of once a yeara mandate that is also generally ignored.
A 130-page draft of the proposed safety standard obtained by the
Post described multiple mine disasters or near-disasters
where the lack of training rendered the oxygen packs practically
useless, including a 1984 fire at a Utah mine where 27 miners
died. The device in question was the CSE SR-100 Self-Contained,
Self-Rescuer, a 20-year-old technology that was used by
miners at Sago and Darby Mine No. 1 in Kentucky, where five miners
died last weekend.
In addition to the fact that the respirators only provide,
at best, one hour of clean air, surviving miners at Sago and Darby
complained that the oxygen packs have failed operate in many cases.
Although the questionable reliability of the respirators and
the lack of training was well understood to have caused the deaths
of dozens of miners, the proposal to increase inspections of the
respirators and training for the miners, as well as mandating
mine owners to store additional supplies of oxygen in the mines,
was not made by then-head of MSHA David McAteer until near the
end of the Clinton administration, in 1999. The proposed change
was then not acted upon, and once the Bush administration took
over in 2001 the proposed standard was scrapped because of resource
constraints and changing safety and health regulatory priorities.
See Also:
Slaughter in US coal industry continues
Five miners killed in Kentucky explosion
[22 May 2006]
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