Friday, January 14, 2011

Deadly Year in the Mines Comes to a Close without Safety Overhaul


Comment:  Bragging in one article about mine inspections and now the weak laws will continue! Demand the federal govt to protect our miners!

By Patrick Corcoran on December 23, 2010

With 2011 just days away, the mining industry is about to close the book on the deadliest year in nearly two decades.

Forty-eight U.S. miners perished in 2010, the most since since 1992, when 55 were killed. The toll represents a jump of more than 150 percent from 2009, when 18 miners died on the job.

The spike in fatalities stemmed mainly from the Upper Big Branch disaster in April, which took the lives of 29 workers at a Massey Energy Co. coal mine in West Virginia. That tragedy and six other deaths made 2010 the deadliest year for West Virginia’s mining industry since 1974.

Nonetheless, a proposed overhaul of mine safety regulation failed in Congress.

The bill to give the Mine Safety and Health Administration greater power to prosecute mining executives and to shut down mines in violation of safety laws was defeated in the House of Representatives on Dec. 8, and never came to a vote in the Senate.

Such legislation now faces a much harder path to approval because Republicans, who will have a majority in the House, are typically staunch opponents of tougher regulation.

The mine safety agency did step up inspections after the Upper Big Branch disaster.
Read more:
http://www.fairwarning.org/2010/12/deadly-year-in-the-mines-comes-to-a-close-without-safety-overhaul/