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Kentucky Mine Accident: Workers Missing, Feared Dead In Dotiki Mine

Kentucky Mine Accident

AP/Huffington Post   First Posted: 06/29/10 06:12 AM ET Updated: 05/25/11 05:20 PM ET

UPDATE 4PM ET 4/30/10

From the White House and President Barack Obama:


I am deeply saddened by the loss of two miners in Kentucky, and my thoughts and prayers are with the loved ones they left behind. As I said after the tragedy in West Virginia, I refuse to accept any number of miner deaths as simply the cost of mining. It is the responsibility of all of us, from mine operators to the federal government, to prevent such tragedies from happening again. That is why my administration is taking steps to demand accountability for safety violations and strengthen mine safety so that all of our miners are protected.

-----
PROVIDENCE, Ky. - A rescue team has found a second Kentucky miner dead after a roof collapse at an underground coal mine with a long history of safety problems.

Kentucky Office of Mine Safety and Licensing spokesman Dick Brown said the two miners were found dead Thursday after the accident at the Dotiki (doh-TEE'-kee) Mine in western Kentucky.

Rescue workers earlier found the body of one miner trapped under rock. They had to retreat for a time when the roof become unstable, sending down a shower of rocks.

Gov. Steve Beshear identified the miners as 27-year-old Justin Travis and 28-year-old Michael Carter.

State and federal records show more than 40 closure orders over safety violations since January 2009. Officials with mine operator Alliance Coal Co. didn't return calls seeking comment.

THIS IS A BREAKING NEWS UPDATE. Check back soon for further information. AP's earlier story is below.



UPDATE 2:40 PM:

Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) announced on the Senate floor Thursday that one of the miners had died. But Kentucky Gov. Steve Beshear said at a news conference later he could not confirm that. A McConnell spokesman told the Evansville Courier and Press that the senator was alerted by the mine operators.

WATCH McConnell's remarks:

"Many Kentuckians awoke this morning to the sad news that one miner was killed and another is missing after a ceiling collapse in an underground coal mine in Webster County, which is in the western part of Kentucky," he said. "Right now, it is my understanding that MSHA officials are on the site, and rescue teams are working to locate the missing miner. For now, we can only hope that their efforts are successful. I ask my colleagues and the American people to keep the miners, their families, and the rescue workers in their prayers."

Scroll down for breaking news updates:

PROVIDENCE, Ky. — Two western Kentucky miners were missing Thursday and rescuers were unable to contact them after a roof collapsed in a large underground coal mine that had a history of safety violations, officials said.

Rescue crews were in the mine on Thursday morning, said Ricki Gardenhire, a spokeswoman for the Kentucky Office of Mine Safety and Licensing. Mine operators told a news conference that they are holding out hope of finding the miners alive.

U.S. Mine Safety and Health Administration spokeswoman Amy Louviere said rescue crews entered the Webster County Coal Dotiki (doh-TEE'-kee) Mine about 11:30 p.m., and traveled approximately four miles to the area where the miners are trapped. Their efforts to stabilize the roof and haul away rock were temporarily halted about 4:50 a.m. because of "adverse roof conditions."

Louviere said the mine, with a work force of 367, operates three shifts.

Records show inspectors from the Kentucky Office of Mine Safety and Licensing have issued 31 orders to close sections of the mine or to shut down equipment because of safety violations since January 2009. Those records also show an additional 44 citations for safety violations that didn't result in closure orders.

The Kentucky paper, The Evansville Courier & Press reports even more violations:

The Dotiki mine has recorded well over 300 "significant and substantial" violation reports from the Mine Safety and Health Administration since the start of 2009. The tally ranked the mine seventh among U.S. mines for the most such violations, according to a report published earlier this month by Business Week magazine.


So far this year, Dotiki Mine near Nebo, Ky., also has been cited at least three times for violating an MSHA standard regarding "protection from falls of roof, face and ribs" of mine areas.

The missing miners were operating what's known as a continuous miner, a toothy machine that digs coal for transport to the surface, said Ricki Gardenhire, a spokeswoman for the Office of Mine Safety and Licensing.

The rescue teams from the Office of Mine Safety and Licensing and the U.S. Mine Safety and Health Administration "were in the area where the miners are believed to be" by 8 a.m. Thursday, he said.

Tim Miller from the United Mine Workers Union said at least two others escaped after a rock fall in the mine near Providence, about 150 miles west of Louisville.

"Rescue operations were initiated immediately, but efforts to contact the miners have been unsuccessful," a spokeswoman for the mine told the Evansville Courier & Press.

Calls by The Associated Press to mine operator Alliance Coal Co. were not immediately answered.

Gov. Steve Beshear was on his way to the accident scene, where he planned to get an update on the rescue effort and meet with family of the missing miners.

Miller said he was called around 6 a.m. by a woman who had received a call from the mine. The woman said she was told her husband and her son, who were working in the mine, were safe, but that two other miners were missing.

Miller said the Dotiki Mine employs more than 300 miners.

The mine is owned by Alliance Resource Partners, based in Tulsa, Okla. The company's website says it purchased the mine in 1971 and produces high-sulfur coal there.

The mine was at least partially idled in 2004 when a supply tractor caught fire and spread flames to the coal, timbers and other equipment. The 70 miners who were underground were all safely evacuated and the mine returned to full production in about a month.

WATCH this report on the 2004 fire:


A worker died outside the mine in 1995 when the bulldozer he was operating fell into a cavity in a coal stock pile. He was buried in coal and suffocated.

Alliance primarily sells coal to electric utilities. It reported 3,090 full-time employees, $1.1 billion in assets and $1.2 billion in total revenues at the end of 2009.

The nation's worst coal mine disaster in 40 years happened this month in West Virginia, where 29 men died in an explosion inside a mine owned by Massey Energy Co.

Kentucky has had one miner killed this year in a roof fall at a mine in southeastern Kentucky. Travis G. Brock, 29, was working at the Bledsoe Coal Co. at the Abner Branch mine in southern Leslie County.

The state's worst mine disaster in recent years occurred four years ago when five miners died in at Darby Mine No. 1 in Harlan County. Two of the miners were killed immediately in the May 20, 2006, blast. Three others died of carbon monoxide poisoning while trying to escape.

Kentucky led the nation in mining deaths last year with six in coal mines and one in a limestone quarry.

The mine accident should serve as a reminder to state officials of the need to fully staff regulatory agencies, said Steve Earl, a regional vice president of United Mine Workers of America.

Beshear said Wednesday that a budget impasse in Frankfort could force a partial government shutdown that could halt, at least temporarily, mine inspections and idle mine rescue teams unless lawmakers reach an agreement on a spending plan before July 1.

Earl called that unacceptable.

"This is not the time for the state of Kentucky to be cutting back on safety inspections and ending mine rescue teams," he said. "They need to find the money somewhere."

___

Associated Press Writer Roger D. Alford contributed to this story from Frankfort, Ky.

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UPDATE 4PM ET 4/30/10 From the White House and President Barack Obama: I am deeply saddened by the loss of two miners in Kentucky, and my thoughts and prayers are with the loved ones they left behin...
UPDATE 4PM ET 4/30/10 From the White House and President Barack Obama: I am deeply saddened by the loss of two miners in Kentucky, and my thoughts and prayers are with the loved ones they left behin...
 
 
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Balzac
03:03 PM on 05/03/2010
Condolences to the families of these miners. It's time to enforce safety regulations for workers and their families.
01:40 PM on 04/30/2010
miners mine the coal, they should own and run the mines themselves.
as long as it's up to bosses, miners' lives will matter less than profits.
OCCUPY!
great video:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vYCJU4rbygo

what the headlines should say:
"capitalist kllls 29 miners in W. Virginia"
http://thetbf.wordpress.com/2010/04/07/safety-at-work/

fight back!
04:33 PM on 04/30/2010
Great video indeed. The Teabaggers should see it before they rail again against the unions and demand that Capitalism reigns free from any infringement. Poppycock.

People send this video out to all you know. And remember it everytime you turn on your lights and gas up your car. Fossil Fuels must go. We cannot allow our addiction to proceed. We must break the shackles of our dependency on FFs. It's taken us (Industrial Age) a little less than 200 years to get to this precipice. It's now or truly never. Conserve. Less is more. Otherwise, we kill ourselves and our planet.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
dawlishgal
06:44 PM on 04/30/2010
Somebody should tell the teagaggers that all of these horrible events of late could be due to God telling THEM to demand reregulation.
01:14 PM on 04/30/2010
These mine disasters are the result of corporate executives trading miners' lives for personal profit. The corporations and mining operations are priced to be profitable. The lack of safety is cost cutting by CEO's looking to increase their bonuses and so on. It is equivalent to premeditated and willful murder over and over again.
01:06 PM on 04/30/2010
It does not matter if you work in the safest mine in the world, there are always risks. Things like this can happen anywhere at anytime. Miners are well aware of the risks they take when they go to work every day. If they didn't accept those risks, they wouldn't continue to mine. What happened to the workers at Webster Co Coal was horrible. West VA is a different story. MSHA should have never allowed those workers to continue to work with a major ventilation problem. They should have closed the mine until the problem was fixed, re-inspected it, and then once resolved, continue. But MSHA wasn't thinking of the miners. More so their bank account.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
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12:31 PM on 04/30/2010
Has anyone else noticed the fossil fuel industry seems to be running amok?

Decades of no oversight does that, btw.
04:36 PM on 04/30/2010
Yes. And the Repubs want less .................. why on earth would anyone REALLY vote for them?Why do people vote against their own self interests?
12:08 PM on 04/30/2010
We sent people to the moon 50 years ago, but we can't keep mines safe in 2010? It's a tragedy and a travesty.
10:06 AM on 04/30/2010
Coal powered cars are promoted by greenie whackos. This is what happens.
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swift goat pet for truth
The Life of the Land is preserved in Righteousness
11:19 AM on 04/30/2010
So, it is the Green's fault that mine safety regulations are not followed because the Greens want coal powered cars?

Or is this snark?

It is just so hard to tell sometimes.
01:06 PM on 04/30/2010
Coal keeps the lights on buddy.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Kevin Atlanta
Active Citizen 54
09:49 AM on 04/30/2010
The "Clean Coal" body count continues to rise. When will America grow up and accept responsibility for the consumption that allows these Corporate Communists to murder our sons and fathers without compassion or concern?
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
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09:05 AM on 04/30/2010
I can see the need for, at least, one more regulation and perhaps the most important of all: strict adherence to the regulations already in place without exception.
01:38 AM on 04/30/2010
WTF! How about if the investors and so called supervisors worried more about the value of life instead of net profit? Maybe they could send their kids down there for summer jobs. Not frickin' likely...
11:33 PM on 04/29/2010
What will solve this?

Federal marshals arresting coal company executives and taking them away in handcuffs. Trials in different venues and the seizing of the assets of the company and selling them off to benefit the workmen.

That will happen once and then you will see a huge wave of investment in safety related infrastructure and more jobs created.
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swift goat pet for truth
The Life of the Land is preserved in Righteousness
11:20 AM on 04/30/2010
You suggest too much government interferrence into business.
11:25 PM on 04/29/2010
The Dotiki mine has recorded well over 300 "significant and substantial" violation reports from the Mine Safety and Health Administration since the start of 2009

The mine had been fined over 2 million dollars for not protecting workers from falling rock and coal.

The board look at the fines and decided paying the fines was better than doing what had to be done to keep their workers alive. And now God will judge them.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
jessicadevyn
Danger Zone
10:28 PM on 04/29/2010
Very sad. These two miners are just a few years older than me...

Then again, this country has never cared much for young life.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
CJWebber
I think we all love teachers.
10:27 PM on 04/29/2010
All this lack of safety for workers is making China look good.
04:52 PM on 04/30/2010
I see little difference now between the 2 work environments to tell you the truth. I am closer to 60 yrs old than 50 and I can assure you that this country has fallen far from grace in the last 25 yrs which places in handily in the lap of Reagan. Daddy Bush and Baby Bush nailed the few remaining nails in our coffin. Yet we all are guilty .... how big is your house? How much electricity do you use? WE forget where all of our "conveniences" come from and the same apathy now surrounds how we get our food. WE still have the power to stop this. WE must use less. WE must want less. WE must consume less. WE must start telling ourselves NO. And anybody tells you that the Amerian Dream can live on in this wanton selfish manner is lying to you and considers you a fool and a sucker.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
CJWebber
I think we all love teachers.
09:43 PM on 04/30/2010
Agreed. Well said.
10:06 PM on 04/29/2010
That's to bad. Anyway. Not an important issue or something would be done. Oh, right... Obama... Mr. Blah blah do nothing. Got the memo.