logo
If not now, then when? Silica dust has been a problem for decades

If not now, then when? Silica dust has been a problem for decades

Yahoo01-05-2025

Hawk's Nest Tunnel during construction in 1930. Workers had to drill through rock that contained high levels of silica, making workers sick within months. (National Park Services photo)
As the West Virginia Legislature wound up its less than stellar session this year, the titled words to this commentary, rooted in the teachings of Hillel the Elder, a Jewish sage who lived in the first century CE, echoed in my mind, reaching an even greater, fevered pitch knowing that JFK and John Lewis were known to echo the phrase often in the context of political and social activism. The power in those five words resounds loud and clear to each of us — at least we can hope they do.
While state legislators were tasked with a number of vital pieces of legislation, I honed in on the continued and shameful disregard for the certain and necessary protections of West Virginia's coal miners whose lives continue to be threatened from the inhalation of silica dust particles, which is the leading cause of black lung disease, along with lung cancer, kidney disease, COPD and cardiovascular illnesses.
In learning that a federal appeals court issued a temporary stay on the implementation of what advocates have called a long overdue industry rule that would have limited how much silica dust coal miners are exposed to, I recalled one of the nation's worst industrial tragedies — the building of the Hawks Nest Tunnel in Fayette County, West Virginia, in the early 1930s, when an economic depression plagued this country. Stop for a minute to consider the incredulity of a period of time fighting the same issue that spans nearly one hundred years. It's outrageous.
In the fall of 1990, shortly after completing my graduate work, I wrote a piece for Goldenseal titled, 'Hawks Nest, the Novel.' Since my graduate thesis focused on the history of early West Virginia authors, it would not have been complete without a discussion of Hubert Skidmore's controversial work. Still, after all these years, the same threat to every coal miner's life continues. It's unfathomable that this is still an issue. In fact, it's obscene. The silica rock that the builders of the Hawks Nest Tunnel drilled through — completely unprotected — is being breathed by Appalachian coal miners today, in 2025.
The tunnel workers developed horrendous coughs and had trouble breathing, ending their shifts covered in a thick blanket of dust. Some died and were buried in unmarked graves in a field in Summersville, often before their families were informed of their death. The only time the dust was abated was when the foreman announced the arrival of the mine inspector and turned on the water to keep the dust down. Once the mine inspector left, the water was turned off and remained off. A reviewer for the New York Times reported in 1941, 'It is a story of crass injustice to make the reader's blood boil.'
Fast forward decades later and the problem persists. Why? The answer is simple — money. Imposing regulations in order to keep the related diseases caused by the breathing of silica dust at bay cost money, and coal operators/owners don't want their bottom lines (i.e., profits) affected negatively. Valuing profits over people's lives is incomprehensible. How can basic, decent concern for your fellow man, the very men who risk their lives to line your pockets with even more profit, be ignored?
Yes, we are a country that is divided at every turn, wrestling with politicians who, on one side, fight for the worker and who, on the other, quite simply don't. Corporate profits versus tighter safety measures for coal miners has a long history, none more obvious than in West Virginia.
Are we going to be writing this same story in yet another decade from now? Are we going to leave it to the next generation to tackle? At what point are we going to say, 'Enough!'
Theodore Roosevelt issued these resounding words: 'There can be no life without change, and to be afraid of what is different or unfamiliar is to be afraid of life.'
I don't think it's inherent in the human spirit to belittle the worker and be concerned only with corporate greed. I think that the latter is a conscious choice that must certainly plague the conscience of those who choose to put their own interests above everything that is inherently decent and good about mankind. I often wonder what events, experiences led someone to toss aside respect and decency and concern for their fellow man and prioritize only their own agenda. I guarantee there is a reason, for to suggest that the workers' concerns are irrelevant is a clear example of pure disregard for those who built this country, brick by brick and shovel by shovel, asking only that they be protected as they reaped enough to provide the basic necessities for their families, while the industry barons rode their backs all the way to the banks, not feeling the least bit responsible for the price paid by the workers. It was unacceptable then, is now, and always will be unacceptable. Yet still, it continues.
SUBSCRIBE: GET THE MORNING HEADLINES DELIVERED TO YOUR INBOX

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Who was gay rights activist Harvey Milk?
Who was gay rights activist Harvey Milk?

The Hill

time8 minutes ago

  • The Hill

Who was gay rights activist Harvey Milk?

Slain gay rights activist Harvey Milk was a political appointee for the city of San Francisco, where he enacted policy geared towards improving conditions for LGBTQ community members and working mothers. Harvey was born in New York to Jewish parents who both served in the Navy during World War I, according to the Milk Foundation. He attended New York State College for Teachers (now State University of New York) where he became well known for a column in the student newspaper addressing diversity within the country's armed forces before enlisting in the Navy in 1951. Milk served for four years, but ultimately resigned over questions about his sexual orientation, as reported by the foundation. However, he would go on to create legislation that supported LGBTQ openness in different facets of professional and private life during his tenure as a business owner and local official in California. Milk moved to the West Coast in 1972, beginning a career as a camera store owner and operator on Castro Street. It was after two gay men were denied the opportunity to open shop in the area that Milk created the Castro Village Association, which became one of the nation's first organizations of predominantly LGBTQ businesses. In 1975, Milk became the first openly gay city commissioner in the United States after being appointed to the Board of Permits. He then went on to be elected as the San Francisco City-County Supervisor in 1978 after three bids, which he on served with former senator Dianne Feinstein, who went on to become the city's mayor. In one year, he helped defeat California ballot initiative Proposition 6, which would have banned openly gay individuals from working as public school teachers. He also promoted the conversion of military facilities into affordable housing alongside tax reform and the promotion of LGBTQ rights in speeches. 'We are coming out to fight the lies, the myths, the distortions. We are coming out to tell the truths about gays, for I am tired of the conspiracy of silence, so I'm going to talk about it,' he said during one speech, as transcribed by the foundation. 'And I want you to talk about it. You must come out,' he added. In November of 1978, Milk was assassinated by a former city supervisor alongside Mayor George Moscone. Feinstein was present at the time and was the one to find Milk's body. 'I was the one that found Supervisor Milk's body, and I was the one to put a finger in a bullet hole, trying to get a pulse,' she said in 2013. His killer was acquitted of murder charges but sentenced to eight years in prison for manslaughter. Milk was honored by the U.S. Navy in 2021, when the branch announced it would name one of its oil tankers in his honor. However, Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth has ordered that his name be removed from the ship, according to reports from USA Today. 'Secretary Hegseth is committed to ensuring that the names attached to all DOD installations and assets are reflective of the Commander-in-Chief's priorities, our nation's history, and the warrior ethos,' Chief Pentagon Spokesman Sean Parnell previously said in a statement to The Hill when asked about potential renaming. 'Any potential renaming(s) will be announced after internal reviews are complete.' The move comes months after President Trump issued a January executive order that issued guidelines banning gender identity and expanded pronoun usage from military service.

Record number of anti-Semitic attacks recorded in Germany in 2024
Record number of anti-Semitic attacks recorded in Germany in 2024

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

Record number of anti-Semitic attacks recorded in Germany in 2024

Anti-Semitic incidents in Germany were up by 77% in 2024 compared to the previous year, according to figures published by a monitoring organization on Wednesday, with the increase being partially attributed to the ongoing war in Gaza and the far right. "Never before have we been aware of more attacks against Jews in a calendar year than in the past year," said Benjamin Steinitz, managing director of the Federal Association of Departments for Research and Information on Antisemitism (RIAS). The 2024 report details 8,627 anti-Semitic incidents, including eight cases of extreme violence, 186 attacks, 443 cases of property damage and 300 cases involving threats. Cases classified as "offensive behaviour" were reported most frequently with 7,541 incidents, including 1,802 cases recorded at public gatherings. The latter category defined incidents as anti-Semitic based on the content of speeches or other material used as calls to action. A total of 544 cases were attributed to right-wing extremist views, a record since RIAS began documenting cases nationwide in 2020. Meanwhile, 5,857 cases were classified as "anti-Semitism related to Israel" - meaning incidents in which Jews living in Germany are held responsible for the actions of the Israeli government, or where Israel's right to exist is disputed. The figure was more than twice as many as recorded in 2023. Steinitz stressed that the category did not include cases of mere criticism of the Israeli government. The rise in anti-Semitic attacks since the October 7 attacks in Israel recorded by RIAS, which documents cases reported by victims or eyewitnesses, is also reflected in official data. However, a recently published report by the German-Israeli journalist Itay Mashiach on behalf of the Diaspora Alliance, an organization that fights anti-Semitism, accuses RIAS of "opaque methods," criticizing it for overemphasizing "Israel-related anti-Semitism." RIAS recorded a total of 450 anti-Semitic incidents at universities last year, followed by 284 at schools, including 19 attacks. Steinitz described the Hamas-led attacks on Israel in October 2023, which triggered Israel's devastating military campaign in the Gaza Strip, as a turning point. "The risk of being attacked as a Jew in Germany has objectively increased since October 7," he said. Among the cases of extreme anti-Semitic violence recorded by RIAS last year is that of a Jewish student who was attacked by a fellow student outside a bar in Berlin. In the same category, the association also included a terrorist attack on a city festival in the western city of Solingen, which left three dead, as well as an attack by a suspected Islamist on the Israeli consulate general in Munich. Among the 186 registered attacks was the case of a Jewish pupil who was held by two men on her way to school who called her a "dirty Jew." In another incident in a park in the eastern city of Leipzig, 10 to 15 right-wing extremists attacked three men who had been talking about anti-Semitism. Among the cases of property damages, 50 incidents were recorded in residential areas. In March 2024, unknown perpetrators daubed two swastikas next to the front door of the home of a Jewish couple in Hamburg, while in April, a Star of David was smeared onto the house of a Jewish person living in Leipzig. Steinitz rejected the accusations levelled against the association, and the German government's anti-Semitism commissioner Felix Klein said he has "great confidence in the work of RIAS." Klein described the new figures as shocking and stressed the need for the fight against anti-Semitism to become "even more focused, intensive and successful." Cooperation with states, municipalities, associations, organizations and individuals is necessary "so that we can ideally see the numbers of anti-Semitic incidents fall again as soon as possible."

U.S. House offers moment of silence honoring native Kansan slain in Washington
U.S. House offers moment of silence honoring native Kansan slain in Washington

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

U.S. House offers moment of silence honoring native Kansan slain in Washington

U.S. Rep. Sharice Davids, D-Kansas, leads colleagues Tuesday in a moment of silence in honor of Sarah Milgrim and Yaron Lischinsky, who were shot and killed in May in Washington, D.C. Milgrim grew up in Johnson County, Kansas. (Kansas Reflector screen capture of U.S. House's YouTube channel) TOPEKA — Members of the Kansas congressional delegation participated in a moment of silence on the U.S. House floor to honor the memory of a couple slain in May during an apparent antisemitic attack outside the Capital Jewish Museum in Washington, D.C. Federal lawmakers stood in tribute for Sarah Milgrim, who grew up in Prairie Village, Kansas, and her partner, Yaron Lischinsky. Both were staff members at the Israeli embassy. They were fatally shot May 21 by a Chicago man who reportedly yelled 'free Palestine' while handcuffed and has been charged with first-degree murder. U.S. Rep. Sharice Davids, a Kansas Democrat who represents the community where Milgrim was raised, said the couple were 'tragically and senselessly killed in an antisemitic attack.' 'This hateful and targeted violence is not only heartbreaking, it is unacceptable,' she said. 'Antisemitism has no place in our country, and yet we are seeing a deeply disturbing rise in these acts of hate.' Davids said Milgrim was a member of Congregation B'nai Jehudah and that Milgrim and Lischinsky were committed to building understanding and connection between Israel and the United States. 'To the Jewish community in Kansas, Colorado and across the nation,' Davids said, 'please know that I am standing with you. We mourn with you. We recommit to creating a world where no one fears for their safety because of who they are.' Davids offered her thoughts Tuesday in collaboration with a group of representatives, including Kansas Republican U.S. Reps. Tracey Mann and Derek Schmidt. Milgrim was a 2017 graduate of Shawnee Mission East High School and earned a degree in 2021 from the University of Kansas. Her funeral service was May 27 at a synagogue in Overland Park, Kansas.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store