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WSWS : Workers
Struggles : Australia
: Mines
Another mine death in Australia
By Terry Cook
9 July 1998
In the early hours of July 6 another name was added to the
long list of deaths in Australia's mining industry. Anthony Carroll,
a 39-year-old mine worker, was crushed to death in a roof collapse,
at the Catherine Hill Bay Wallarah mine, near Swansea, in the
Northern District coal fields of New South Wales (NSW). The mine
is owned by Coal Operations Australia Pty Ltd.
Carroll and two other miners, part of a crew of five, were
drilling holes for roof supports, after cutting coal within 10
metres of a fault line in the coal seam. The cave-in occurred
at approximately 4.45 am.
Another miner, Tony Dickson, 26, of Charlestown, was pinned
by the legs under tonnes of rubble for three hours before being
freed. Luckily he only suffered a fractured ankle and abrasions.
A third member of the crew, a mine deputy, narrowly missed being
injured only because he had stepped back to get one of the 1.5
metre bolts used to secure steel straps across the mine's roof.
The latest tragedy took place one day prior to the release
of the long awaited findings of the judicial inquiry into the
deaths of four miners on November 14, 1996, at the Cyprus-Oakbridge
Group owned Gretley mine, at Wallsend, near Newcastle, NSW.
The four men were drowned when they cut into an abandoned mine
shaft releasing a torrent of water into the shaft they were working
in. The Gretley disaster was the worst in NSW in 20 years.
Numerous official inquiries into mine safety have done nothing
to quell the rising tide of deaths and injuries. Their purpose
has been to cover up the real source of the disasters -- the continuous
downsizing and speed-up carried out to meet the demand of the
mining companies for ever greater productivity.
Despite the mountain of recommendations brought down by these
inquiries mine safety has continued to rapidly decline. There
were over 33 mining deaths in coal and mineral mining in NSW alone
in 1996-97. The latest fatality at Wallarah brings the number
of deaths in the Northern District coal mines to 20 in the last
decade.
Even though the deaths in many cases were the direct result
of negligence and of practices in breach of the law there have
been no prosecutions of mine owners to date. However, the persistent
carnage demonstrates that the cause is not rogue mine operators
or isolated negligence or mistakes.
It is the outcome of a definite program ruthlessly imposed
by the mine companies and supported by mining union. This program
demands that mining operations be restructured in line with the
drive for "international competitiveness" and for markets.
As a result anything which impedes production, including safe
working conditions, comes under attack.
Commenting on the latest death one Wallarah miner said: "I
am not sure of the exact details of what happened but it can't
just be written off as an accident. In principle nobody should
be working under an unsound roof.
"But the management here is no different to any other
mine. There is always a pressure for increased production. We
are always being told that we have to increase output or the mine
will face closure. Because the roof is hard conglomerate rock
and is generally sound there have been many occasions when undermanagers
have told workers that they should not stop production to do roof
bolting. I have known times when coal has been cut for an entire
shift before roof bolts have been put in.
"I was just reading the statement by the union's chief
check inspector Jack Tapp that was in the Newcastle Herald.
He said that the deaths in mines were unacceptable. Bob Martin,
(State Labor Minister for Mineral Resources) also said something
like this. But the union officials and Labor leaders never talk
about the restructuring and deregulation that they have supported
over the last 10 years that has undermined safety.
"A big part of safety has always been bound-up with the
amount of hours miners spend underground. But the union has allowed
extended rosters and around-the-clock production. Now they have
given the go-ahead for the introduction of 12-hour shifts."
He explained that the latest death had occurred on the "dog
watch" -- the shift that goes throughout the entire night.
"At one time we would not allow coal production on this shift
because it was too dangerous. Towards the end of the shift men
are walking around like zombies. Production on dog watch was agreed
to by the union and is now standard practice throughout the coal
mining industry," he said.
See Also:
Closure threatened in mining
disaster town of Moura
Australian coal union imposes sweeping job cuts
[18 June 1998]
Thousands of jobs axed in Australian
coal mines
Unions allow offensive to proceed
[2 May 1998]
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