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Dozens More Massey Mines Cited as Unsafe
Some 41 Other Appalachian Mines Have Racked Up 2,074 Safety Violations Since January
The federal investigators readying their probe into the massive explosion that killed at least 25 West Virginia coal miners this week might take note: The dozens of other active tunnel mines owned by the same energy company have run up thousands of safety violations this year alone, according to a review of federal records by TWI. Hundreds of those citations target the same problems with ventilation and methane buildup that many suspect sparked the West Virginia disaster.
Massey Energy CEO Don Blankenship gives an interview on Tuesday after an explosion at Massey's Upper Big Branch Mine killed at least 25 people. (Xinhua/ZUMApress.com) Massey Energy - the Virginia-based coal giant that owns the
Upper Big Branch mine, the site of Monday's tragedy - also controls 41
other underground coal mines currently active in Appalachia.
Investigators have cited those projects for 2,074 safety violations
since the start of the year, according to federal documents. The
citations run a spectrum, but hundreds charge mine operators with
failing to maintain air quality detectors, failing to ensure proper
ventilation, allowing combustible material to accumulate, and a host of
other infractions related to miner safety.
At the Upper Big Branch - where rescue teams were still searching Wednesday night for four missing miners - investigators had cited 124 similar safety violations this year. More than 50 of them were issued in March alone.
On Wednesday, the Mine Safety and Health Administration, a branch of the Labor Department, sent a team to Upper Big Branch to begin investigating whether the conditions cited in those violations sparked the explosion.
"The very best way we can honor [the miners] is to do our job," Labor Secretary Hilda Solis said in a statement announcing the team.
But as those officials prepare to look backwards in search of what went wrong at Upper Big Branch, a growing chorus of voices is urging policymakers to examine also the corporate culture that, they say, has led companies like Massey to disregard worker safety in the name of profit-making.
"This incident isn't just a matter of happenstance, but rather the inevitable result of a profit-driven system and reckless corporate conduct," AFL-CIO President Richard Trumka said in a statement. "Many mining companies have given too little attention to safety over the years and too much to the bottom line."
As far as recent safety violations go, the Upper Big Branch mine has plenty of company. In fact, it doesn't even rank first among the Massey-owned underground mines with the most safety violations this year. That distinction goes to Freedom Mine #1, in Pike County, Ky., which tallied 187 such citations, according to documents posted by the Mine Safety and Health Administration. Among the infractions, investigators cited accumulations of combustible materials and a failure to maintain escapeways. A man answering the phone Wednesday at Freedom Energy Company - the Kentucky-based Massey subsidiary that operates the mine - hung up on a reporter.
Other notable Massey-controlled mines currently in operation include:
- The Justice # 1 Mine in Boone County, W.Va. Operated by the Independence Coal Company, the project has been hit with 115 safety violations this year, including citations surrounding air-quality detectors and ventilation plans. (A woman answering the phone for Independence Wednesday said the company doesn't talk to reporters.)
- The Alloy Powellton Mine in Fayette County, W.Va. Run for Massey by the Mammoth Coal Company, the operation has received 80 citations this year, including those targeting its plan to control methane buildup. (No one answered the phone at Mammoth Wednesday.)
- The Slip Ridge Cedar Grove Mine in Martin County, Ky., which has attracted 40 citations this year, including problems with combustible material found too close to ventilation fans. (The Marfork Coal Company, which runs Slip Ridge, referred questions to Massey. Massey didn't return calls for comment.)
Outside of coal country, the infractions have flown largely under the radar. But in the wake of Monday's explosion - the worst mining tragedy in at least 26 years - there are new calls, on and off Capitol Hill, for better enforcement of the nation's mining safety regulations. And Massey, no stranger to controversy, will be the center of attention.
Indeed, Rep. Nick Rahall (D-W.Va.) - a long-time defender of the coal industry who represents the miners killed at Upper Big Branch - told CNN Wednesday that it's "valid" to question Massey's dedication to worker safety. "Something's fishy," he said. "This company has a rather maverick reputation."
Sen. Robert Byrd (D-W.Va.) also took a shot at Massey, issuing a statement maintaining that miners "deserve ... an employer who respects and values their safety."
Massey did not respond to requests for comment Wednesday. But CEO Don Blankenship this week has defended the company's performance, telling the West Virginia MetroNews that safety violations are "a normal part of the mining process." Massey's safety operations, he told CNN Wednesday, "are typically in better shape than others."
For Massey, the scrutiny is hardly new. And the outspoken Blankenship has only stoked the coals of criticism. In a now infamous 2005 memo, for example, Blankenship instructed his deep mine superintendents to ignore any requests unrelated to coal production.
"If any of you have been asked by your group presidents, your supervisors, engineers or anyone else to do anything other than run coal (i.e. - build overcasts, do construction jobs, or whatever) you need to ignore them and run coal," the memo said. "This memo is necessary only because we seem not to understand that coal pays the bills."
In another telling episode, a young Blankenship outlined his business philosophy in a 1984 interview.
"Unions, communities, people - everybody's gonna have to accept that, in the United States, we have a capitalist society," Blankenship said. "And that capitalism, from a business viewpoint, is survival of the most productive."
With congressional leaders already calling for hearings on Monday's explosion, Blankenship will almost certainly have a chance to tell lawmakers that himself.

22 Comments so far
Show Allhttp://lynchgraphics.com/BloodyCoal.jpg
SHUT MASSEY DOWN!
The consequences for shirking safety to the point where lives are lost should be far more severe than mere fines.
Blankenship should indeed be called before Congress to explain. In the meantime, failing to comply with safety law should be prohibitively expensive to a company's bottom line.
Yes! SHUT MASSEY DOWN!
Here is a video about Blankenships relationship with the West Virginia Supreme court. To say it is cozy is putting it mildly. There is now little attempt to coverup the cronyism
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=O4Ym8qqR5vU
And this video where crazy greeniacks, atheists, and communists are spreading the global warming lies. Basically anybody that disagrees with Blankenship is crazy.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0M_XbeXDNnM&feature=related
Watch them so you can see what the man is all about, from both his own words and actions.
The unfortunate fact is that until CEO's of corporations are held criminally liable for the consequences of the safety violations of the company (in this case Blankenship be charged with 24 counts of negligent homicide) and tried in a local court with a jury of local citizens, the corporations will continue to evade their moral and legal responsibilities because they can buy whatever they want.
I agree with the above; SHUT MASSEY DOWN!
INDICT BLANKENSHIP, INCARCERATE HIM & THROW HIS MONEY LOVING ASS IN JAIL! HE IS A CRIMINAL!
These days it's popular to go to elected school boards in cities like Detroit and take away their power, giving it usually to some corporate or legal personage. How about doing the same to Massey, only this time hand the power from the private sector to the public? Because leaders of that company have demonstrated incompetence to the point of endangering employees, they should be dismissed and the company turned over to governmental control. The government can reorganize the company, establish rules that guarantee the safety of workers and sell the company to a responsible body pledged to maintain the safeguards. Such a plan could be extended to all manner of companies that commit crimes and deception upon the American people.
Blankenship is scum, Massey is irresponsible towards workers, the environment, and those he contracts to sell coal to. However, follow this story as it develops and you will find a new level of depression about our society and our political system.
Jay Rockefeller, Robert Byrd and the various House representative from WV will beat their chests and deliver meaningless platitudes and faux sorrow, but very little will change. Why? West Virginia is a poor state with little to offer except timber, coal and natural gas. When Robert Byrd goes, all of the federal contracts and federal building projects WV has received in the last decades will dry up and the state will retrench more energetically than before around coal, and all of those above and their successors will be the most staunch opponents of any efforts that are associated with the recognition of the need to address climate change.
Count on it. You haven't noticed yet that those two "liberal" bastions of the DP (Rockefeller and Byrd) have allowed any and all comers to trash environmental responsibility and worker safety in WV for decades?
Unfortunately, Ronald Reagan began the emasculation of the unions beginning with the air traffic controllers strike in 1981. Since then it's been downhill for workers and the unions in Amerikkka.
This tragedy in West Virginia is only the tip of the iceberg in a fascist culture that values profits over people. It's time for workers to unite against the greedy bastards who have stolen our country.
One of the greatest propaganda coups ever was to convince working people that unions are their enemy
Actually, Union decline here in this country began in the late 1960's and early 1970's, when Richard M. Nixon was elected POTUS.
Who are the corporations that reward Massey by buying it's unsafe coal? Since our government will not enforce the laws of the land then I would like to purge my portfolio of the deadly lawbrakers.
Blankenship can put on his flag shirt, call in the idiot teabaggers, and have them all cheer him along as he explains how all his clean coal carbon shit he spews copiously to get obscenely rich is good for the Earth, and the peons who "supposedly" died are patriots and promoters of the environment. God bless Ronald Reagan.
(Blankenship should be in jail.)
"There once was a union maid, she never was afraid
Of goons and ginks and company finks and the deputy sheriffs who made the raid.
She went to the union hall when a meeting it was called,
And when the Legion boys come 'round
She always stood her ground.
Oh, you can't scare me, I'm sticking to the union,
I'm sticking to the union, I'm sticking to the union.
Oh, you can't scare me, I'm sticking to the union,
I'm sticking to the union 'til the day I die.
This union maid was wise to the tricks of company spies,
She couldn't be fooled by a company stool, she'd always organize the guys.
She always got her way when she struck for better pay.
She'd show her card to the National Guard
And this is what she'd say
You gals who want to be free, just take a tip from me;
Get you a man who's a union man and join the ladies' auxiliary.
Married life ain't hard when you got a union card,
A union man has a happy life when he's got a union wife."
~Woody
Still a great song, although sex-roles have changed.
Joe
Blankenship should be sealed in one of his own mines.
"Between the idea
And the reality
Between the motion
And the act
Falls the shadow"
But they're all unsafe. The carbon dioxide released from Massey's mines will kill more people worldwide of starvation than the coal slurry waste piles will kill locally of arsenic poisoning. I feel for the poor miners' grieving families, people get utterly attached to fathers and husbands over half a lifetime and then they're gone forever one day, along with any chance at a good living for the survivors, but if you can imagine, in the long run there's much more grief coming.
I'm so sorry, but we need to look at the facts. They are simple. First, the golden rule: those with the gold make the rules. Second, the invisible hand of the marketplace works wisely. And third, spending exorbitant amounts of money on mining safety technologies inevitably contracts the bottom line and that's completely unacceptable. Therefore, the current popular economic paradigm in the USA demands the sacrifice of labor (human beings) in order to satisfy the voracious appetite of unfettered financial self-interest.
Only when the people of the United States decide to engage in comprehensive, wholesale nonviolent noncooperation with the banks, government, military, churches, insurance companies, real estate companies, bill collectors, in short the system, the combine, only then will there be a chance that freedom and justice can eventually prevail.
All the people wringing their hands over these dead miners are hypocrites unless they pushed for mine safety, unions and safe work rules since Reagan started boring holes in the hull of our economic ship. Clinton and Bush the first drilled a few more then Bush the inferior decided to remove a big chunk of the hull to let the water out. Obama has a hand full of #2 corks and will tap them in if the Republicans give him permission.
It is okay though because Capt. Greenspan only hits 30% of the icebergs and Bernanke might be as good. The worship of Ayn Rand goes on so Blankenship will come out of this with more non-union unsafe mines or he will outsource to where he can kill off workers even cheaper.
The recession is officially over, get back to shopping, if we lower the minimum wage more of you could be hired - if you quit bitching everytime a few of you careless, lazy bums get killed.
VOTE REPUBLICAN!
The disregard for workers' wellbeing, welfare, health and their lives has long been a problem here in the United States, regarding coal mining and many other industries, as the documentary film "Harlan County, USA" indicates. It's a total disgrace.
I lived and worked in the mines of Harlan County, and I can confidently say that the documentary "Harlan County USA" was a distortion of the events. It was purely a sensationalized UMWA propaganda piece. It glorified ignorance and demeaned the hard working coal mining community. The Hollywood approach to Harlan County Kentucky has always been to cultivate the stereotypical oppressed hillbilly coal miners embracing their own leftist proletarian fantasies. That is about 180 degrees off reality.
My father was also a UMWA member, and the corruption in that organization continues with Trumpka.
You will be interested to know that the federal government does the most damage to mine safety. The large number of violations are primarily due to the over-inspection of mining operations by typically inexperienced MSHA inspectors. You might be interested that the federal regulators do not require their own ventilation experts to be registered mining engineers. These are the people who frequently dictate how a mine is ventilated. See how MSHA managed Scotia's mine at Ovenfork KY.
Was Hilda Solis doing her job? Doubt it.
Anyone who works in a non-union mine is playing Russion roulette.
It is time for a wildcat walkout. Everybody. Miners, drivers, office people, vendors, everybody. Every place Massey works or hires. I support those who demand it.