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U.S. Coal Mine Deaths: 2010 Deadliest Year Since 1992

TIM HUBER   12/30/10 01:30 PM ET   AP

Mine Explosion

CHARLESTON, W.Va. — The U.S. coal industry had its deadliest year in nearly two decades in 2010, with much of the death toll stemming from a single explosion.

As of Thursday, 48 miners had died in the nation's 1,500 coal mines over the past 12 months – including 29 who were killed April 5 in a blast at Massey Energy Co.'s Upper Big Branch mine. This year's was the highest death toll since 55 were killed in 1992, according to information compiled by the federal Mine Safety and Health Administration. And it was much higher than the 18 killed in 2009, the industry's lowest tally since 1900, according to federal records.

State and federal investigators say their report on what caused the Upper Big Branch blast, the deadliest U.S. coal mine explosion since 1970, won't be finished until late next year.

"Everyone in the industry is concerned about 2010 and what we saw there and is taking a look at all aspects of mine safety," said Carol Raulston, a spokeswoman for the National Mining Association, an industry trade group.

MSHA officials declined to address the 2010 death toll until the year is done.

Many of the 2010 deaths were caused by gas explosions, moving equipment and other factors long thought to be under the industry's control.

"We're seeing causes of incidents including fatalities reappear that have not been prominent causes of fatal injuries for some time, for instance a lot of fatalities involving moving equipment," Raulston said. "We thought we had really trained or done equipment modifications to move that out of the trendlines and here it comes again."

Earlier this month, MSHA launched a safety initiative called "Watch Out!" The initiative targets injuries and deaths caused by moving equipment. The agency said three miners were killed this year by underground shuttle cars and coal scoops.

The industry endured a similarly disastrous year in 2006, when 47 miners were killed. Three high-profile accidents killed 19 miners – including the explosion at West Virginia's Sago Mine that killed 12.

Congress responded in 2006 by passing sweeping safety legislation. In 2007, the number of deaths fell to 34. It dropped to 30 in 2008.

But the response to the Upper Big Branch explosion and other fatalities this year has been limited largely to tougher inspections by government regulators.

Earlier this month, the U.S. House rejected a measure that would have made it easier to shut down problem mines, increased penalties for serious safety violations and offered more protection for whistle-blowers.

"The entire industry as well as our elected representatives are going about this accident in a more methodical, deliberate manner," Chris Hamilton, a senior vice president with the West Virginia Coal Association, said of the Upper Big Branch explosion.

In rejecting the measure, House Republicans said the legislation would do little to advance mine safety and would unfairly penalize mining companies that operated in good faith.

Federal regulators have credited a series of tough inspections at problem mines with cleaning up the industry since the Upper Big Branch explosion. MSHA said it had issued more than 600 citations and orders in October and November.

Last week, MSHA announced another safety effort.

The agency plans to require underground coal mine operators to check for health and safety violations, in addition to the hazard checks they now conduct. The inspections must be done before and during work shifts, as well as weekly and as follow-ups.

"I don't think there's any question mining's much safer today than a decade, two decades ago," Hamilton said.

Federal mining statistics bear Hamilton out. Between 1900 and 1945 it was common to have annual death tolls of 2,000 or more. The last time more than 100 people died in the nation's coal mines was 1984, when 125 miners were killed.

Besides the 29 killed at Upper Big Branch, another six were killed in West Virginia, the nation's second-largest coal producing state. Kentucky, the nation's third-largest producer, recorded six deaths. Other mining deaths occurred in Alabama, Illinois, Indiana and Montana.

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CHARLESTON, W.Va. — The U.S. coal industry had its deadliest year in nearly two decades in 2010, with much of the death toll stemming from a single explosion. As of Thursday, 48 miners had died...
CHARLESTON, W.Va. — The U.S. coal industry had its deadliest year in nearly two decades in 2010, with much of the death toll stemming from a single explosion. As of Thursday, 48 miners had died...
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08:25 PM on 01/30/2011
And how many people are being prosecuted?
09:57 AM on 01/02/2011
If Holder does not arrest Blankenship and his minions soon, we should organize protests that block the entrances to every Massey Energy building.  This criminal corporation needs to be shut down until proper safety is restored and justice is served.
09:56 AM on 01/02/2011
Ignoring safety laws in mines is the equivalent of murdering for profit.
09:55 AM on 01/02/2011
We must constantly pester Eric Holder's office with calls, emails and letters and demand that he arrest the criminal executives that ignored safety laws and therefore committed MURDER for PROFIT.
09:54 AM on 01/02/2011
Blankenship needs to be arrested.  Holder needs to be impeached for not enforcing the law when wealthy criminals break the law.
09:54 AM on 01/02/2011
We must continue calling for the arrest, trial, and harsh punishment of the criminal executives who ignore safety laws.  If we don't demand justice now, more miners will die in the future.
09:53 AM on 01/02/2011
Coal mining will become even more dangerous and deadly if the criminal executives that ignore safety laws are not punished harshly.
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jmdziuban1
Aspiring ne'er do not-so-well
01:09 AM on 01/02/2011
May the 48 rest peacefully, and may their families recover, as best they can, from their loss. It is known that mining is dangerous, and also currently still necessary. That,as a society, we accept. What we cannot accept, is if any of those 48 was avoidable. I hope they were not avoidable.
11:22 PM on 12/31/2010
I thought Bush said that the coal industry would be better at regulating itself without government oversight? That they would be better at protecting its workers "because thier workers can't work if thier hurt".
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jmdziuban1
Aspiring ne'er do not-so-well
01:10 AM on 01/02/2011
The industry convinced politicians that it was so, America elected those politicians.
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Longtimeliberal
05:29 PM on 12/31/2010
Bush's deregulation sure helped huh?
06:58 PM on 12/31/2010
What was in the deregulation?
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Clay Rehmus
02:29 PM on 12/31/2010
Yet, Chile can totally rescue their miners...

Super.
06:59 PM on 12/31/2010
Wow well maybe you should mine in Chile?
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Clay Rehmus
01:01 AM on 01/01/2011
Wow. You're hilarious. Really witty. Anyone tell you that, Einstein?
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jcarterla
There ain't no shame in my game!
11:14 AM on 12/31/2010
Republicans needed a lot more coal this year for stocking stuffers.
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NWBrunette
Blessed Girl
10:25 AM on 12/31/2010
Now that Congress is filling up with teabaggers and win.gnuts the chance of doing anything to actually help and protect workers has fallen to negative territory. Sorry folks. Next time around, help elect some progressives.
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10:35 AM on 12/31/2010
Funny brunette but this record happened this year under a dem. president and dem. controlled congress. I think we figured it out and elected more of the right ones this time my friend.
12:16 PM on 12/31/2010
Do you mean, the new Repubs are going to work harder to enact mine safety?
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NWBrunette
Blessed Girl
11:11 AM on 01/03/2011
Wow, if you think that there's a big bridge in Brooklyn with your name on it.
heckmepitus
Truth, justice and the American way
09:34 AM on 12/31/2010
Liberals use death counts as a political tool, in this case against the coal industry which Liberals hate. So far 40 US soldiers have died in Afghanistan this month, but Liberals now ignore Afghan War deaths now that their political goal of attacking Bush is done.
12:17 PM on 12/31/2010
Since when are liberals ignoring Afghan war deaths?
06:44 PM on 12/31/2010
Since Obama got into office silly.
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09:24 AM on 12/31/2010
It takes years, sometimes lifetimes of hard work to write and pass good safety legislation. But it takes only one election bought with industry money, a few cheaply bribed public officials or a corrupt judge to obliterate good law.
As soon as the horrors of unsafe coal mines faded from the for-profit press, mining companies went back to 19th Century America. Doesn't matter how awful the consequences of GOP money-first policies. Honest regulators are easily transferred or fired, lawsuits are easily dismissed by corrupt judges, policymakers are effortlessly purchased wholesale by lobbyists.
Remember, before Reagan millions of cars routinely got 30 or more miles per gallon. After Reagan we got SUVs chuffing along closer to 10 mpg -- for oh, about the next 30 years. Did I mention a decade of ruinous wars to control oil? Well, there were some. Still are. Gotta control oil when new cars are deliberately designed to quaff oil by the barrel. Oh, and did Big Oil's profits go through the roof? Why, yes, they did. Thanks for asking.
Same with Big Coal. The GOP has returned us to the era of trusts, monopolies and the old robber barons.
Now if they can somehow, perhaps through Goldman-Sachs, bankrupt the nation and destroy the financial system, we'll be poised for October, 1929!
Then we can move right into those fabulous '30s and '40s -- again!