HHS reinstates fired workers responsible for coal miner health protection
U.S. District Judge Irene Berger issued a preliminary injunction halting the firings at the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health's (NIOSH) Coal Workers Health Surveillance Program.
Berger ordered the 'full restoration' of services for the program, which is congressionally mandated by the Federal Coal Mine Health and Safety Act of 1969. The program offers health screenings for miners and allows researchers to identify disease trends across the nation.
Miners who are diagnosed with black lung can transfer to a different part of the mine without a pay cut, under a provision called a Part 90 waiver.
Health and Human Services (HHS) Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. on Wednesday confirmed the workers had been rehired.
'I reinstated 328 employees at NIOSH,' Kennedy said during a House Appropriations Committee hearing. 'A little over a third of them were in Morgantown, about a third were in Cincinnati and then the World Trade Center group, I also reinstated.'
The program's employees were among the thousands of federal health workers put on administrative leave on April 1, with termination effective June 2, as part of HHS's reorganization efforts.
Berger found that there 'is no dispute' that the congressionally mandated services are not currently being offered, 'and there is no testimony or plan offered explaining how they will resume. The only reasoning for their actions put forth by the Defendants is an effort to streamline efficiencies.'
The case is a class action lawsuit brought by a veteran coal miner named Henry Wiley who argued the terminations endangered him and other miners.
Berger wrote if the dismissals were allowed to go forward, 'thousands of miners will go without screening for black lung, and those with black lung will be deprived of access to the Part 90 transfer option.'
Halting research that helps ensure effective, targeted and efficient preventative measures 'harms the public both by increasing the prevalence of black lung and by increasing the costs of preventative measures and of treatment and benefits,' Berger wrote.
Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


CNN
an hour ago
- CNN
HHS staffers implore RFK Jr. to ‘stop spreading inaccurate health information' in wake of CDC shooting
Federal agencies VaccinesFacebookTweetLink Follow More than 750 current and former staffers at the US Health and Human Services implored Secretary Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. in a letter Wednesday to 'stop spreading inaccurate health information' after a shooter fired hundreds of rounds at the headquarters of the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention earlier this month. The letter, also addressed to members of Congress, noted 'the violent August 8th attack on CDC's headquarters in Atlanta was not random.' The Georgia Bureau of Investigation reported that the shooter had expressed discontent with the Covid-19 vaccine and wanted to make his distrust known. 'The attack came amid growing mistrust in public institutions, driven by politicized rhetoric that has turned public health professionals from trusted experts into targets of villainization – and now, violence,' wrote the staffers, who emphasized they signed the letter 'in our own personal capacities.' Some signed anonymously 'out of fear of retaliation and personal safety.' The August 8 shooting pockmarked multiple buildings at the nation's public health agency with bullet holes and killed DeKalb County Police Officer David Rose, whom the staffers emphasized they wished to honor. The staffers wrote that Kennedy, who helmed an anti-vaccine advocacy group before President Donald Trump named him health secretary, 'is complicit in dismantling America's public health infrastructure and endangering the nation's health by repeatedly spreading inaccurate health information.' They cited previous comments from Kennedy calling CDC a 'cesspool of corruption' and HHS' termination of thousands of employees in a 'destroy-first-and-ask-questions-later manner,' leaving gaps in areas including detection of infectious diseases, worker safety and chronic disease prevention. They also said 'many CDC workers who focused on issues such as injury and violence prevention have been fired,' hampering the agency's ability to respond to emergencies. They also focused on Kennedy's claims about vaccines, including mRNA shots and measles vaccines, saying he's 'undermining public health outbreak response,' and decried his dismissal of the entire Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices, the influential panel of outside vaccine advisers to the CDC, and previous comments falsely tying vaccines to autism. HHS didn't immediately respond to a request for comment. Kennedy said in an August 9 post on social media that 'we are actively supporting CDC staff on the ground and across the agency. Public health workers show up every day with purpose — even in moments of grief and uncertainty.' Kennedy visited CDC headquarters two days later. But his response was criticized by public health leaders such as former US Surgeon General Dr. Jerome Adams, who called it 'delayed and tepid.' In their letter, the HHS employees asked Kennedy to 'cease and publicly disavow the ongoing dissemination of false and misleading claims about vaccines, infectious disease transmission, and America's public health institutions;' affirm the scientific integrity of the CDC; and guarantee the safety of the HHS workforce. NIH staffers who signed the letter also said they called on Director Dr. Jay Bhattacharya 'to refrain from his dangerous politicization of mRNA vaccine technology.' NIH did not immediately respond to a request for comment. The administration earlier this month said it was dismantling funding of mRNA vaccine development because the vaccines 'fail to protect effectively against upper respiratory infections like COVID and flu.' Researchers have estimated that Covid-19 vaccines saved more than 2.5 million lives.


The Hill
3 hours ago
- The Hill
Tick-borne disease spreads, causing meat, dairy allergies
Emergency room visits have spiked across the Midwest this summer as millions of Americans grapple with tick bites, but a lesser-known tick-borne illness is causing particular alarm in some communities. Alpha-gal syndrome, transmitted by the lone star tick, creates severe allergies to meat and dairy products that can last for years. The condition essentially forces people to adopt vegan diets, with some patients experiencing life-threatening reactions even to the smell of cooking meat. The lone star tick, identifiable by a white dot on the female's back, is most common from Maine to Florida and in Texas, living primarily in wooded and grassy areas. These ticks carry a sugar molecule called alpha-gal that, when transmitted to humans, triggers severe allergic reactions to mammalian products. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) estimates as many as 450,000 people in the U.S. may have it. Patients report reactions so severe that smelling burgers on a grill can cause unconsciousness. The syndrome also affects everyday items containing animal byproducts, including lip balms, lotions and some bottled water, causing hives, coughing and wheezing. Cases have become so widespread on Martha's Vineyard that restaurants there now offer special alpha-gal menus, according to report from The New York Times. Nicole Cooper of Virginia, diagnosed with alpha-gal syndrome in December 2021, experienced symptoms for more than a year before receiving proper diagnosis. She was rushed to an emergency room unable to breathe, where doctors recognized a recurring rash on her arms. 'I was shocked when they wanted to run the blood test,' Cooper told NewsNation's ' Elizabeth Vargas Reports.' 'I was, like, no, no, I really hate ticks,' she continued. 'I always wear my bug repellent when I'm out in the woods.' She became 'fume reactive,' unable to be around cooking meat or use cast iron pans previously used for meat. Even products such as dryer balls containing lanolin, derived from sheep, became off-limits. The delayed reaction between exposure and symptoms makes alpha-gal syndrome particularly difficult to diagnose and treat. Cooper remained highly reactive for two years before her symptoms began improving through strict avoidance of mammalian products.


Axios
3 hours ago
- Axios
Doctors mount vaccine safety review to rival feds'
An ad-hoc group of infectious disease doctors and health researchers on Tuesday held a public meeting to review recent studies on the safety and effectiveness of COVID, RSV and flu vaccines, in the belief the data isn't being adequately considered by federal health officials. Why it matters: The unusual online gathering of the newly formed Vaccine Integrity Project was intended to provide an evidence base for doctors and public health officials as they update recommendations for kids, pregnant women and immunocompromised people. The agenda resembled those of a vaccine advisory board to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention that's come under scrutiny since Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. purged its 17 members and replaced them with a handpicked roster that includes some known vaccine skeptics. What they're saying:"Over the last few months, we've seen policy changes by federal officials based on evidence that has been shown as flawed, analytically fraught, or flat-out wrong," said Michael Osterholm, an epidemiologist at the University of Minnesota and a leader of the initiative. "It's vital that providers and the public continue to have vaccine information they can rely on," he said during the meeting. HHS didn't respond to a request for comment. What they did: The group of 24 doctors and researchers from across the countryexamined scientific studies published since mid-2024 for COVID and RSV vaccines, and mid-2023 for flu. The group reviewed more than 14,000 peer-reviewed scientific articles and extracted data from 590 studies, including 50 controlled trials, Osterholm said. The effort is being funded by Alumbra, a foundation established by philanthropist and Walmart heiress Christy Walton. The panel found that recent research shows flu, COVID and RSV vaccines remain safe and effective for kids, pregnant women and immunocompromised people. Data continued to show a possible increased risk of preterm birth associated with Pfizer's RSV vaccine. Osterholm said there is no scientific evidence to justify Kennedy's recent decision to no longer recommend COVID vaccines for healthy pregnant women or children. Zoom out: The American Academy of Pediatrics on Tuesday separately released its immunization guidelines for flu, RSV and COVID-19 ahead of the fall respiratory virus season. For the first time, the group's guidelines diverge from the federal government's. The pediatricians recommend COVID vaccines for all kids between six and 23 months old, and for kids over 2 years old at risk for severe disease. The Trump administration earlier this year said it would require new randomized clinical trials for COVID boosters before authorizing them for healthy individuals. The American College for Obstetricians and Gynecologists earlier said it would release its own guidelines for respiratory virus vaccines during pregnancy in coordination with the Vaccine Integrity Project. Reality check: Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices vaccine recommendations that get approved by the CDC must be covered by health insurers. That's not the case for vaccine recommendations from medical associations.