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Who Killed the Miners? Profits Over Safety?

All coal mining safety laws have been written in miners' blood.

My grandfather, who barely survived an explosion in a coal mine in
southern Illinois, taught me this phrase. He also taught me about the
150-year-old battle in the coalfields over reckless production at the
cost of responsible safety measures.

As our prayers and condolences go out to the many coal mining
families in Raleigh County, West Virginia, I think about the needless
safety violations and subsequent disasters that have taken place over
the past century.

Over 104,000 Americans and immigrants have died in our coal mines.
According to one inspector, many, if not a majority of those
"accidents" should not be considered mishaps, but acts of negligent
homicide.

As a coal miner's widow from Raleigh County, West Virginia told me on
the phone last night, every time she sees a miner just off his shift,
draped in coal dust, standing at the convenience market, she knows that
mine is rife with violations.

Three coal miners still die daily from black lung disease--one of the most flagrant safety issues and scandals
overlooked in our nation.

While we are still waiting for the details on the Performance Coal
Co. Upper Big Branch Mine disaster, and whether methane gas buildup--the
release of highly flammable and toxic gas that has haunted coal miners
for centuries--led to the explosion that has taken at least 25 lives,
reports are now coming out of the mine's history of safety violations.
According to Ry Rivard in the Daily Mail:

In March alone, U.S. Mine Safety and Health Administration
officials cited the mine, which is owned by Massey subsidiary
Performance Coal Co., for failing to control dust; improperly planning
to ventilate the mine of dust and the combustible gas methane;
inadequate protection from roof falls; failing to maintain proper
escapeways; and allowing the accumulation of combustible materials.

Since 1995, there have been more than 3,000 violations at Upper Big
Branch, though it was not immediately clear how that compared to other
mines of its size.

Of the $1.5 million in penalties MSHA proposed since 2007, Massey has
actually paid less than $300,000.

The proposed fines for this year alone amount to about $190,000. Last
year, the mine faced $900,000 in fines for more than 450 violations,
including 48 "unwarrantable failure orders," which are considered
serious.

Many of those citations and fines are being contested.

The violations appear "quite relevant" to Monday's explosion, said
Scott Simonton, a professor of environmental science and environmental
engineering at Marshall University.

"The fact that these seem like to me to be some serious violations
and not just some paperwork violation - these are serious violations,
especially in light of what has happened," he said.

Massey, of course, has become infamous for its devastating mountaintop removal operations.

But the company also pleaded guilty to criminal violations for a
January, 2006 fire at the Aracoma mine in Logan County, WV, which took
the lives of two miners. As Charleston Gazette reporter Ken Ward noted:

a huge problem at Aracoma was also that Massey
officials had removed key ventilation walls, or stoppings, allowing
smoke to enter that primary escape tunnel in the first place -- a move
that U.S. District Judge John T. Copenhaver later said "doomed two
workers to a tragic death.

In a now infamous internal memo to employees that was used
in the Aracoma mine trial, Massey's CEO Don Blankenship openly declared:
"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 complaint quotes the memo. "This memo is
necessary only because we seem not to understand that coal pays the
bills."

Nonetheless, Massey is ramping up its mine productions and profits,
especially in its hurry to export coal to India and China. Last year,
nearly 3,000 coal miners died in China's own mines.

When my grandfather was in the mines in southern Illinois, a group of
UMWA miners from Centralia, Illinois, outraged by the political
machinations in the Department of Mines and Minerals, wrote a letter in
1946 urging the governor to take action on clearly dangerous buildups of
coal dust. The letter described the mine's situation, the politics, and
then made a desperate request for intervention:

"In fact, Governor Green, this is a plea to you, to please save our
lives, to please make the Department of Mines and Minerals enforce the
laws at No. 5 mine of the Centralia Coal Company at Centralia, Illinois,
at which mine we are employed, before we have a dust explosion at this
mine like just happened in Kentucky and West WV."

Despite numerous inspections, recommendations, and noted violations,
the mine owners did not consider the dust situation to be of imminent
danger. On March 25, 1947, an explosion ripped through the Centralia
mine and killed 111 miners. Half of them died from carbon monoxide
poisoning. Three of the four men who had written the governor also died
in the explosion.

As the St. Louis Post-Dispatch pointed out, a crime was committed at
Centralia. Just like modern operators, the Centralia Coal Company had
made it a habitual practice to violate mining safety laws and simply pay
the fines.

And the violations and the deaths continue today.

I can't get the words of an old Welsh coalfield ballad out of my
mind:

"Oh what will you give me, say the sad bells of Rhymney

Is there hope for the future, say the brown bells of Merthyr

Who made the mine owners, say the blackbells of Rhondda

And who killed the miners, say the grim bells of Blaenau. . . "

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