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US: Six coal miners trapped underground in Utah
By Jerry White
7 August 2007
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A powerful cave-in Monday morning trapped six workers in an
underground coal mine in central Utah. As of this writing rescuers
were still trying to reach the miners, who are believed to be
1,500 feet below ground some four miles from the mines entrance.
As of Monday nightmore than 15 hours after the initial mine
collapsesearchers had made no contact with the miners.
Rescuers were trying to reach the workers by drilling into
the mine vertically from the mountaintop and horizontally from
the side, according to Robert E. Murray, chairman of Murray Energy
Corporation of Cleveland, Ohio, which is a part-owner of the Crandall
Canyon mine. Murray told the Associated Press (AP) if rescuers
could open an old mine shaft they believe they can get within
100 feet of where the men are trapped.
The idea is to get a hole into where they are,
Murray said. They could be in a chamber 1,000 feet long
or they could be dead. We just dont know right now.
Murray acknowledged that he did not know what kind of breathing
equipment the miners were carrying.
The cave-in occurred in the early morning hours Monday at the
mine, which is located in a rugged and sparsely populated forest
area about 140 miles south of Salt Lake City. Ten men were in
the mine at the time and four were able to escape. Seventy-one
people are employed at the small mine, with approximately a dozen
miners working each shift.
The families of the miners have gathered in the nearby town
of Huntington. A local news report said mine rescue teams, including
some 200 company employees, have been bringing in maps, heavy
mining equipment from around the state and timber to shore up
the mine. Utah Governor Jon Huntsman and federal mine inspectors
were also at the scene.
University of Utah seismograph stations recorded waves of 3.9
magnitude in the area of the mine early Monday, raising speculation
that an earthquake may have caused the cave-in. However, scientists
later concluded the collapse at the mine had actually triggered
the seismic disturbance, whose epicenter was a mile away. There
is no evidence that the earthquake triggered the mine collapse,
Walter Arabasz, director of the seismography stations, told AP.
Disputing the scientific findings, the mine owner angrily insisted,
The whole problem has been caused by an earthquake.
The Crandall Canyon mine has a record of serious safety violations.
Government mine inspectors have issued 325 citations against the
mine since January 2004, according to the federal Mine Safety
and Health Administrations (MSHA) web site. Of those, 116
were what MSHA considered significant and substantial,
meaning they were likely to cause injury or death. Since the beginning
of the year, inspectors have issued 32 citations, 14 of them considered
significant.
AP reported that last month inspectors cited the mine for violating
federal rules requiring that at least two separate passageways
be designated for escape in an emergency. This was the third time
in less than two years that the mine had been cited for the same
problem. In 2005, MSHA ordered the mines owners to pay $963
for not having escape-ways and in 2006 the fine was reduced to
just $60. According to MSHA records, the mine owner has been ordered
to pay nearly $152,000 in penalties.
Asked about safety, Murray told reporters, I believe
we run a very safe coal mine. Weve had an excellent record.
The state of Utah ranked 12th in coal production in 2006, with
13 underground mines. Emery County, the states number two
coal producer, was also the site of a fire that killed 27 miners
at the Wilburg mine in December 1984.
So far this year, 10 miners have been killed throughout the
coalfields in the US. In 2006, 46 miners were killed, including
a dozen miners at the Sago Mine in West Virginia. At the time
of the January 2006 tragedy, Democratic and Republican politicians
pledged to improve mine safety. Nineteen months later, however,
no serious changes have occurred and miners continue to lose their
lives and limbs.
To a great extent, the increase in fatalities has been due
to the spike in coal production that has been spurred by higher
coal prices and the Bush administrations energy policy,
which has provided tax incentives and other subsidies to increase
output. In order to extract more coal, operators have hired inexperienced
miners, reopened long-shut mines and sought to extract coal in
more dangerous areas. Meanwhile, the Bush administration, which
has staffed the federal Mine Safety and Health Administration
with former mine bosses, has lifted safety regulations and done
little to enforce the laws presently on the books.
The Murray Energy Corporation is the largest independent, family-held
coal producer in the United States, producing about 30 million
tons of coal in Ohio, Pennsylvania, Kentucky, Illinois, West Virginia
and the companys recent acquisitions in Utah. Known as Ohios
coal king, the two large mines owned by Murray in the state recorded
injury rates about one-fourth higher than the national average
last year and were cited for nearly 500 safety violations. These
included failing to test for explosive methane gas, accumulations
of dangerous coal dust, ventilation problems, unsupported roofs,
unsafe equipment and other violations. Inspectors also issued
13 orders instructing miners to clear areas where an imminent
danger was detected.
Robert Murray is a major donor to the Republican Party, with
his coal companys political action committee handing over
$200,000 to Republicans during the 2006 elections. He has often
testified before Congress on behalf of the National Mining Association
in order to press for tax cuts, environmental and safety deregulation,
arguing that unreasonable costs were being imposed on operators
and were a disincentive to the increase of coal production.
Denouncing MSHAs supposedly high fines and tough regulations,
just last month Murray told the Senates Environment and
Public Works Committee: The fines are outrageous ... and
will take a lot of producers down because we cant pass them
on to our customers.
According to a news report in the Lexington, Kentucky Herald-Leader,
in September 2002 Murray used his close relations with Senator
Mitch McConnell to chase off MSHA inspectors who were confronting
him over safety violations at his mines. The Kentucky Republican
senator, just one of many Republican senators who has received
large campaign donations from Murray, is married to Labor Secretary
Elaine Chao, whose agency oversees mine safety.
The newspaper recounted, Shouting at a table full of
MSHA officials at their district office in Morgantown, W.Va.,
Murray said, Mitch McConnell calls me one of the five finest
men in America, and the last I checked, he was sleeping with your
boss, according to notes of the meeting. They,
Murray added, pointing at two MSHA men, are gone.
One of the federal safety inspectors was then transferred to another
region, away from Murrays mines, the newspaper reported.
See Also:
Safety reports document
deadly conditions at West Virginia mine
[14 January 2006]
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