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Trump reverses plan to close more than 30 mine safety offices
Trump reverses plan to close more than 30 mine safety offices

Yahoo

time5 days ago

  • Business
  • Yahoo

Trump reverses plan to close more than 30 mine safety offices

The Trump administration has reversed course on a plan to close 34 Mine Safety and Health Administration offices. (Karen Kasmauski | Getty Images) President Donald Trump's administration has reversed course on a plan to close more than 30 mine safety offices, something union leaders and advocates said would compromise inspectors' ability to protect coal miner's lives. Leases of the office, which employ coal mine inspectors, were set to end this summer along with several other federal offices under a plan by the Department of Government Efficiency. A spokesperson for the Department of Labor confirmed Thursday that 34 Mine Safety and Health Adminsitration offices will be retained. They said the agency 'has been working closely with [the General Services Administration] to ensure our MSHA inspectors have the resources they need to carry out their core mission to prevent death, illness, and injury from mining and promote safe and healthy workplaces for American miners.' The reversal comes amid a push back from the Black Lung Association, the United Mine Workers of America, and others on what advocates called the Trump administration's 'attacks on coal miner safety.' In April, workers at the National Institute for Occupational Health and Safety were put on administrative leave due to 'reorganizations' at the federal level. According to an analysis from the Appalachian Citizens' Law Center, the MSHA offices that were slated to close performed more than 16,600 safety and health inspections — with more than 230 of those done in West Virginia — between February 2024 and 2025. Earlier this month, a federal judge ordered workers from NIOSH's Respiratory Health Division back to work, ending a reduction in force that prevented coal miners with black lung disease from having the option to transfer to less dusty areas of the mine to prevent further illness and injury. MSHA had delayed the implementation of a new silica rule aimed at protecting coal miners from the dust that causes black lung disease. The rule was set to be effective in April but will now be effective in August. 'I'm happy they're going to keep these MSHA offices open,' Gary Hairston, president of the National Black Lung Association, said in a news release. 'We need these offices that are close to the mines so that MSHA can conduct safety inspections and respond to accidents in a timely way. Now we need MSHA to enforce the new silica rule, and we need Congress to give MSHA enough funding to do its job.' In a statement Friday, the United Mine Workers of America, a labor union representing coal miners, said the organization is relieved by the decision but called on the Department of Labor to be transparent about which offices remain are still at risk, and to stop remaining efforts to reduce the government's mine safety infrastructure. 'The idea that anyone would even consider shuttering dozens of MSHA field offices, most of which are located in remote mining communities, shows a fundamental misunderstanding of what it takes to keep miners safe,' UMWA International President Cecil E. Roberts said in the statement. 'We've said from day one that cutting these offices would compromise inspectors' ability to respond quickly to accidents, enforce safety regulations, and protect the lives of our members and their coworkers.' In a statement Friday, Sen. Shelley Moore Capito, R-West Virginia, and chair of the Senate Labor-HHS Appropriations Subcommittee, said she was glad to hear that many of West Virginia's MSHA offices will remain open. 'I have raised this issue directly with [Department of Labor] Secretary [Lori] Chavez-DeRemer because I was concerned about the impact these closures could have on mine safety and workers' access to support,' Capito said. 'Keeping these offices open is the right decision — and a win for miners, inspectors, and the communities they serve.' SUPPORT: YOU MAKE OUR WORK POSSIBLE

Barrackville launches plan to place memorial for Mine Explosion from 100 years ago
Barrackville launches plan to place memorial for Mine Explosion from 100 years ago

Yahoo

time19-03-2025

  • General
  • Yahoo

Barrackville launches plan to place memorial for Mine Explosion from 100 years ago

BARRACKVILLE — After 100 years, the Barrackville Mine Explosion will finally receive its own monument. Members of the Barrackville community gathered at the Lions Community Building to commemorate the 100th anniversary of the disaster where 33 men lost their lives. 'One day I just thought, why don't we have a memorial, why are we not recognizing our miners when similar memorials are in place at other communities,' maintenance coordinator Josh Bartlett said. 'Barrackville's a coal mining town. We had a mine for over 80 years, so to not have something to look back at what formed our community, what's woven into the fabric still today.' Bartlett said after bringing the lack of a memorial to the attention of the Barrackville Lions Club and Town Council, everyone embraced the idea with open arms. Bartlett's family has a connection to the disaster. His father managed the company store when the mine explosion happened. Bartlett said his family passed stories of that terrible night down through generations of his family. Pastor Stephanie Bennett, who helped organize the event Monday night, said the explosion was the largest of three disasters that happened in Barrackville. A total of 11 mining accidents have taken place in Marion County. Bennett said the disaster, and coal mining more generally, have shaped the community, whether it's aware of it not. 'Lives have been lived and lost here,' she said. 'There are people in this community who worked in that mine before it closed. There are people in this community who had grandfathers and great-grandfathers that worked in that mine, and it's just a way to remember the cost of coal.' Former Sen. Mike Caputo spoke at the event on behalf of the United Mine Workers of America as a former officer. He said he's spoken at a lot of memorial services like the one at Barrackville and across West Virginia. 'They didn't care much about the miner at that time,' Caputo said. 'They cared more about production. A lot of times, they cared more about the mule than they cared about the mine.' Bartlett said he thought there was a possibility of foul play which led to the mine explosion on March 17, 1925. There was a lot of union turmoil going on at the time and the mine wasn't unionized, the miners there were considered scabs he said. Caputo said after the explosion happened, the union still showed up to help and provide relief. Although any wrongdoing was cleared at the time, Bartlett said a lot of historical documents were kind of sketchy and a rumor of foul play persisted. He suspects a potential coverup created a stigma that led the disaster to being forgotten and no memorial ever created. 'But I don't think it'll be forgotten anymore with the group of people that are here today,' he said.

A father died mining coal. His son warns KY bill would endanger other miners.
A father died mining coal. His son warns KY bill would endanger other miners.

Yahoo

time03-03-2025

  • Yahoo

A father died mining coal. His son warns KY bill would endanger other miners.

David "Bud" Morris celebrates his son Landen's first Christmas in 2005. Five days later, Bud died after a mine owner, the only mine emergency technician on duty, failed to render aid after Bud was injured underground. (Morris family photo) Growing up along the Harlan-Letcher county line in Eastern Kentucky, Landen Morris often heard from family that he reminded them of his father. It wasn't just because his slightly crooked smile or brown eyes resembled David 'Bud' Morris, they told him. It was the way he talked, the way he laughed, his personality. Bud was a good person, they said, who cared about others. The 19-year-old plays the bass drum in the Morehead State University marching band, and his late father loved playing the drums in a rock band. 'I never got to really meet him personally,' Landen told the Lantern over the phone. 'I feel like that process of getting to know him was a little more difficult. … Just learning to actually trust what people had to say about him, and the fact that they were all good things.' Landon was only 3 1/2 months old when Bud Morris was fatally injured in an underground coal mine in Harlan County in December 2005, leaving behind his mother, Stella Morris, to raise him. It was a death that federal inspectors said was preventable, in part because Bud, 29, didn't receive proper first aid to stop bleeding after a loaded coal hauler nearly amputated both of his legs. The only person trained on site in emergency medical care, the mine owner, failed to provide proper aid. Morris' death was part of a spate of deaths in coal mines across the country including five miners killed in an underground explosion in Harlan County in 2006. Stella Morris and the other widows did not grieve in silence. They joined the United Mine Workers of America (UMWA) at the Kentucky Capitol to push for stronger safety protections. That intense lobbying effort led to Kentucky lawmakers in 2007 unanimously approving a number of mine safety protections that went beyond federal rules. One protection was put in place because of what happened to Bud Morris, said Tony Oppegard, a former mine inspector and attorney who helped write the law. The legislature required at least two mine emergency technicians (METs), or miners trained to provide medical care and stabilize a miner's condition, on each mining shift. If one MET was unable to help, the new law assured that a backup MET would be there. Now, nearly two decades after losing Bud, Stella, joined by Landen, is speaking out again because Kentucky miners are at risk of losing that extra MET. The House last month approved a bill that would end the requirement for a backup MET on shifts with 10 or fewer miners. The sponsor of House Bill 196, Rep. John Blanton, R-Saylersville, who represents Knott, Magoffin and part of Pike County, has argued small mines are being temporarily shut down by not having two METs available on site, hurting productivity and impacting miners' paychecks. Blanton's HB 196 awaits action by the Senate. An operator of small surface mines in Eastern Kentucky told the Lantern he doesn't want to endanger miners but that having one MET on site is sufficient coupled with the first aid training his miners receive. Oppegard, the former mine safety inspector, disagrees, saying the extensive emergency medical training that METs receive goes well beyond first aid training. Stella remembers Dec. 30, 2005 was the last working day of the year for Bud at Mine No. 3 with H & D Mining Inc. She was getting ready to take a shower and go to her job when she got a call from the mine saying Bud was being taken to the local hospital. Bud's legs were cut off, the caller said. By the time she got to the hospital, Bud was gone. She remembers the months after Morris' death as a bad dream she couldn't wake up from. 'I had a 3 ½ month old son, and I would look at him for my strength to carry on through the day, because part of me wanted to go on and be with Bud,' Stella said. 'But I would look at my son knowing that he had lost his dad. I couldn't make him lose his mom.' She'd also replay in her mind the decisions made by miners that day when Bud died — why they didn't elevate his body to mitigate the bleeding, or why the only mine emergency technician on site didn't instruct other miners on how to help Bud. According to a federal mine fatality report, Morris, a shuttle car operator, died from 'near amputating injuries' to his legs when he was struck from behind by a loaded coal hauler. His left leg was severed '17 inches above the heel.' The report states the mine emergency technician at the mine did not provide Morris with any first aid as he continued to bleed, instead telling miners to 'get him out of here.' A supervisor, who was supposed to receive first aid training but had not yet done so, wrapped cravat bandages around Morris' knees. Outside the mine while waiting for an ambulance, miners had 'applied two pieces of rope to each leg above the knee' in an attempt to stop the bleeding, according to the report. Miners didn't apply dressings or tourniquets to the injury, nor were pressure points used to mitigate the bleeding. A paramedic who treated Morris said there would have been 'a very different outcome' if basic first aid training had been implemented, according to the report. The lone mine emergency technician at the mine had 'panicked,' the acting director of Kentucky's mine safety office told the Louisville Courier-Journal in a Feb. 15, 2008 article. Stella's takeaway: 'Just because you have a title don't mean you're going to do what you should do when it comes down to things like that. If we would have had someone else, just one other miner trained to do what Bud needed, he may still be with us today.' Stella filed suit against H&D Mining Inc. but received no compensation from the coal mining company. When Landen was growing up, she'd tell him how much his dad loved him and that he was in heaven. Stella didn't sit down with Landen and share some of the details of what had happened to Bud until her son was about 10 years old. 'My son would just lay and cry for his dad, and it was like, 'He knew his dad but he didn't know his dad,' And it was a struggle,' Stella said. 'I'm very proud of my son for being the tough kid that he is. I just thought it was a different life for him than what he would have had had he had his dad growing up.' Landen told the Lantern he didn't look at the federal mine fatality report detailing how his father died until last month. He worries that if HB 196 becomes law other injured miners will die like his father for lack of trained help. Ending a requirement that could 'save someone's life one day is, without a better term, stupid,' Landen said. 'I just feel like they're doing miners a disservice.' Both proponents and critics of HB 196 recognize the significant decline of Kentucky's coal industry, particularly in Eastern Kentucky, in the nearly two decades since Bud's death. The market pressures of competitive natural gas prices along with cheaper coal produced elsewhere decreased demand for Appalachian coal, while mines became more mechanized and automated. The number of active mines and miners in Kentucky have steadily dropped. Blanton, the sponsor of HB 196, has argued that fewer and smaller coal mines are operating now in Eastern Kentucky. Some of those smaller operators asked him for the change. He told the Lantern he wants to cause no harm to miners, only keep them working. 'I don't want to cause consternation for them, by no means. I just want to make sure that our mines are able to stay operational, that we do so in a safe manner,' Blanton said. 'I'm simply trying to make a tweak to it so that mines can stay operational.' According to the state's 2023 annual mine safety report, 53 licensed mines — out of 158 total — had 10 or fewer employees. Those small mines accounted for 267 of the 4,766 total employees counted in the report. When asked about small mining operations that have been impacted by the MET requirement, Blanton pointed to former Pikeville Mayor Frank Justice II who operates a few small surface mines in Eastern Kentucky. Justice in a phone interview said it's been difficult to have two METs on site for his highwall mining operations, particularly overnight shifts, staffed with three or four people. Highwall mining is a technique in which machinery is used to extract coal from an unmined wall of excavated earth. 'It's a big burden to keep two METs on there, especially when guys already got all their first aid training,' Justice said. 'What happened to Mr. Morris is certainly a tragedy, but I've got confidence in my guys' ability to handle situations.' Justice said in the past when he has had only one MET available, he has hired emergency medical technicians from local fire departments to stay on site while his miners operate. He said he pays his certified METs a dollar more per hour, but he also suggested some of his miners don't want the responsibility of being a MET. 'Anytime you ask for something like this, it's controversial of course. I know that,' Justice said. Oppegard, the attorney who helped write the 2007 law, said that while the industry has declined, the need for a backup MET at all mine sites has not. The free training required to become certified as a MET takes at least 40 hours and includes learning about cardiac emergencies, muscular and skeletal injuries and bleeding and shock. An exam and annual training also are required. The industry's decline has coincided with the disappearance of organized labor in Kentucky mines. The last unionized Kentucky coal mine closed at the end of 2014. The United Mine Workers of America union has previously opposed bills that would reduce the required number of METs for small coal operations. In 2009, UMWA President Cecil Roberts wrote a letter to the editor in part condemning a Kentucky bill that would have reduced the number of required METs from two to one for mine shifts with 18 or fewer workers. Roberts wrote then that 'supporters of these attacks on miners' safety say they are taking these steps to help small mine operators.' 'One thing you can say about these folks: At least they aren't trying to hide the truth of their greed. They are willing to be quite upfront about their desire to put profits and production ahead of safety in Kentucky coal mines,' Roberts wrote. The UMWA was neutral on a similar Kentucky bill last year to reduce the number of METs, and Blanton has said the UMWA is neutral on this year's bill as well. A representative with the national UMWA office didn't respond to emails requesting an interview about the union's position on this year's bill. Every mining law ever written on paper was written with the blood of dead miners. It always took a disaster to get the laws changed. – Steve Earle, United Mine Workers of America In a recent interview, Steve Earle, a former UMWA lobbyist who helped push for the original requirement for two METs and current vice president for the UMWA district representing Western Kentucky, spoke personally about his experience working with Stella and other widows to pass the 2007 mine safety law. The late Democratic Rep. Brent Yonts of Muhlenberg County carried the mine safety bill in 2007; it passed both legislative chambers unanimously. 'I was speaking at a Democratic function. I said, 'Because of the hard work that Rep. Yonts did … women have husbands and children have fathers.' And I was convinced then, and I'm convinced now, that that legislation saved miners' lives,' Earle said. Earle, speaking to the Associated Press in 2007, said the mine safety law showed what determined, passionate people like Stella and the other widows can do 'when they have right on their side.' Earle told the Lantern he still believes that. 'They did have right on their side. They were very effective,' Earle said. 'Every mining law ever written on paper was written with the blood of dead miners. It always took a disaster to get the laws changed.' Landen says he has a lot of respect for his many neighbors and high school classmates who work in mining. He believes coal mining — an occupation that's taxing and difficult for a number of reasons — is an integral part of his mountain community. He picked a different path, enrolling at Morehead State where he hopes to become a high school English teacher. He remembers writing an essay about the epic poem 'Beowulf' in high school, being fascinated by the Old English syntax. He doesn't know what his future holds or whether he'll stay in Eastern Kentucky but he hopes to inspire and help others. As for the father he never got to know in person, he believes Bud would be proud of him. 'I'm on the path to actually doing something else than what's usually expected in our little town. Because not many people do go to college here, let alone teach,' Landen said. 'I feel like he would just be really, really proud of me, that I'm carrying on that dream and that I'm actually chasing it, rather than falling into something that I wouldn't enjoy.' SUPPORT: YOU MAKE OUR WORK POSSIBLE

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