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WSWS : News
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Four days after Utah mine collapse
Three miners killed in Indiana
By Jerry White
11 August 2007
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Three workers were killed at a southern Indiana coal mine Friday
morning when they fell from a large bucket carrying them down
a newly constructed ventilation shaft. The miners plunged 500
feet to their deaths.
The mine in Princeton, Indiana, about 30 miles north of Evansville,
is owned by Alliance Resource Partners, the fourth largest coal
producer in the eastern United States. The Gibson Coal Mine was
the scene of another fatality shortly after it opened in 2000
when a miner was crushed by machinery.
According to the local Princeton Daily Clarion, the
men were employed by Frontier-Kemper Constructors, which was digging
a new portal for the mine. The Clarion reported that people
doing such construction work have to be licensed miners, but it
is not clear whether the deceased had received such training.
Construction company officials said they did not know how the
men fell out of the bucket. Delton Gooch, a worker for Frontier-Kemper,
explained that the basket goes all the way down to
the work deck, which moves up and down to different levels within
the shaft. When the accident occurred, he said, the work deck
was suspended only 10 feet from the bottom of the 500-foot shaft.
He said the basket is as big as an SUV, and said
it could comfortably hold 6-10 men.
Gooch, who leads one of the construction teams, said when he
heard about the accident he immediately started phoning his family
to let them know he was OK. The possibility of an accident is
something the workers think of regularly, Gooch told the local
newspaper.
If youre doing [the job] and youre going
up and down in the bucket every day, of course the possibility
crosses your mind, he said.
The death of the three mine workers in Indiana brings to thirteen
the total number of fatalities in the nations coal mines
so far this year. Since January 2006, 60 miners have been killed,
including 12 at the Sago Mine in West Virginia 19 months ago.
The deadly accident in Indiana occurred just four days after
the collapse of the Crandall Canyon Mine in central Utah. There
has been no contact with the six miners trapped in the mine Monday
morning and hope is fading that they will be found alive.
Late Thursday night rescuers completed drilling a borehole
into the area1,500 feet below the surfacewhere the
miners were believed to have last been. A microphone dropped into
the cavity detected no sound.
Richard Stickler of the federal Mine Safety and Health Administration
(MSHA) said initial tests suggested there may have been sufficient
oxygen levels in the cavity for the miners to survive. Tests conducted
overnight and released Friday, however, found oxygen levels at
7 percent, too low to sustain life. Potentially deadly levels
of carbon monoxide were also found.
Sticker could not explain the discrepancy with the initial
findings. He speculated that the new results might indicate that
the drill hole drifted as it was being bored and ended up in a
different part of the mine. We should all continue to have
hope, Stickler said at a news conference.
The miners were carrying no more than two hours of oxygen in
the self-contained self-rescuers they each wear on their belts.
Despite claims by company officials to the contrary, there is
no way of knowing the exact location of the miners because the
primitive communication system used at the Crandall Mineand
most US mineswas destroyed by the mine collapse.
Robert Murray, whose company is co-owner of the Crandall Canyon
Mine, continues to insist a magnitude 3.9 earthquake caused the
mine collapse. He claims that at least ten aftershocks have been
recorded and that seismic activity was responsible for wiping
out more than 300 feet of progress in digging toward the trapped
miners and temporarily halting rescue efforts.
Murray says it will take at least another week to dig through
the fallen coal and rock to reach the trapped men.
Seismologists and geophysicists have repeatedly disputed these
claims, saying the seismic activity they measured was due to the
mines collapse, not the other way around.
On Thursday, University of California-Berkeley seismologist
Douglas Dreger said the shaking bore the signature of a collapse
and not a tectonic earthquake. Experts have said the
aftershocks could be the rock adjusting after the
collapse.
Murrays insistence that a natural disaster
caused the tragedy is aimed at protecting himself and his business
interests and distracting attention from a record of safety violations
and reports that the mine employed the dangerous method of retreat
mining, in which pillars of coal holding up the mine roof
are removed as miners leave a dug-out area, intentionally causing
a roof collapse.
Stickler has said little or nothing about retreat mining and
the scores of safety violations found at the mine. This is not
surprising. Stickler is a former mine boss appointed by President
Bush to head MSHA and continue the administrations policy
of dismantling safety regulations and gutting enforcement in order
to boost the profits of the coal companies. Murray is a major
Republican donor who has testified before Congress on behalf of
the National Mining Association and called for tax breaks and
the lifting of environmental and safety regulations.
Politicians such as Republican Senator Orrin Hatch of Utah,
who support the Bush administrations agenda of rolling back
mine safety rules, have lined up to shed crocodile tears for the
trapped miners.
Others, such as Democratic Senator Edward Kennedy, have issued
two-faced statements suggesting that the underlying causes of
such mine disasters are a mystery. Kennedy, who chairs the Senate
Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee, said there were
too many unanswered questions and it was necessary
to determine how future disasters like these can be prevented.
Such hypocritical doubletalk is intended to obscure the fact
that measures essential to protecting the lives and limbs of coal
miners are not carried out because they would cut into coal industry
profits. The technology and know-how already exist to virtually
eliminate mine disasters and dramatically reduce if not eliminate
mine fatalities, including refuge stationsalready in use
in Europe, Australia and Canadathat are equipped with adequate
supplies of oxygen, water and food and have proper communications
systems.
See Also:
Hope dwindling for trapped Utah miners
[9 August 2007]
The Utah mine disaster: A tragic consequence
of government-industry collusion
[8 August 2007]
US: Six coal miners trapped underground
in Utah
[7 August 2007]
The Sago Mine disaster
Safety reports document deadly conditions at West Virginia mine
[14 January 2006]
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