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Six Utah Coal Miners Trapped 1,500 Feet Underground

 

by Mike Hall, Aug 6, 2007

Six Utah coal miners were trapped 1,500 feet underground today following an early morning cave-in. Rescue workers were trying to make their way to the miners, but as of this afternoon, there had been no contact with the six.

 

A Mine Workers (UMWA) spokesman said the union’s thoughts and prayers are with the trapped miners and their families. The Genwal mine, near Huntington about 140 miles south of Salt Lake City, is a nonunion operation owned by Utah American Energy.

 

According to the Associated Press, first reports indicated an earthquake may have been the cause of the cave-in because a 4.0 magnitude earthquake was reported at the same time. However, Walter Arabasz, head of the University of Utah’s Seismograph Stations, told the wire service:

The seismic waves are consistent with the idea that the mine collapse caused the earthquake.

Following the deadly year in the mines in 2006, when 47 workers were killed, the Mine Safety and Health Administration (MSHA) reports that 10 miners have died on the job so far this year.

 

With last year’s death toll the highest since 1996, Congress passed the first major mine safety legislation in more than three decades. While the UMWA and other mine safety advocates call the MINER Act a good first step to shoring up mine safety, they say much more needs to be done.

 

In March, a Senate committee held hearings to examine how effectively the Bush administration was implementing the MINER Act’s requirements and what additional safety measures were needed. The committee found there had been foot-dragging on the part of the MSHA and that far more sweeping safety measures were needed.

Safety legislation introduced in June would improve emergency response plans, greatly strengthen federal enforcement of safety and health rules and reduce coal miners’ exposure to black lung-causing coal dust.

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3 Comments

  1. ChicanoWobbly on 07.08.2007 at 14:18 (Reply)

    This is the second non-union mine to experience such a tragedy! Miners and other industrial workers have to understand that without a union, the bosses will use you, misuse you and abuse you, even if it kills you!

    In the words of Joe Hill the famous IWW organizer; “Don’t Mourn, Organize!”

  2. DemocraticSocialist on 07.08.2007 at 14:49 (Reply)

    Brother ChicanoWobbly, I hear you loud and clear . Utah is the most Republican, Neo-Con, Anti Union State north of Dixie. How many time must the American people be slapped with reality before they get up off their knees and do something that will bring about real change like,” Organize.”

  3. FraternalOrder on 07.08.2007 at 20:49 (Reply)

    >>I’d like to share an excerpt from an Associated Press report:

    Government mine inspectors have issued 325 citations against the mine since January 2004, according to a quick analysis of federal Mine Safety and Health Administration online records. Of those, 116 were what the government considered “significant and substantial,” meaning they are likely to cause injury.

    The 325 safety violations is not unusual, said J. Davitt McAteer, former head of the MSHA and now vice president of Wheeling Jesuit University in West Virginia.

    “It’s not perfect but it’s certainly not bad,” McAteer said.

    >>I can’t help but to wonder…how many violations are required in order to qualify as “bad”? Also, as a follow-up…should the MSHA formulate a strategy to lower the total number of violations that it deems “not unusual” particularly when “they are likely to cause injury”?

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