More

Massey Kept Fake Safety Records To Throw Off Inspectors, Mine Disaster Victim's Fiancee Says Of Latest MSHA Findings

Massey Safety Records Fake Upper Big Branch

TIM HUBER and VICKI SMITH   06/29/11 12:33 AM ET   AP

BEAVER, W.Va. — Federal investigators have proof that Massey Energy kept fake safety records to throw off inspectors at a southern West Virginia mine where 29 men died in an explosion last year, the fiancee of one of those victims said late Tuesday night.

In a private briefing for the families, officials with the Mine Safety and Health Administration showed relatives of the Upper Big Branch miners side-by-side comparisons of books that purported to document the same shift.

In one authentic production report, underground miner Bobbie Pauley said, Massey reported that its mining machine was shut down because of problems with ventilation and a potentially explosive accumulation of methane gas. The on-shift inspection report, meanwhile, indicated no problems with gas.

"You put in an inspection report what you wanted the inspectors to see," said Pauley, whose fiance Howard "Boone" Payne was among the men killed in the April 5, 2010, blast near Montcoal. "The books, they told two different stories. But I already knew that because I worked there."

Pauley returned to Upper Big Branch only briefly after the explosion and now works at another former Massey operation bought out in a recent takeover by Alpha Natural Resources. She was among about 30 people – nearly half of them lawyers – who attended the briefing for several hours at a mine safety training academy in Beaver.

The nation's deadliest coal mine explosion in four decades remains the subject of a criminal investigation by the U.S. Department of Justice, and MSHA has said it won't release some information to avoid hindering that probe. It largely reiterated its past public statements, offering detail but no blockbuster revelations, family members said.

MSHA contends the explosion started with a small, naturally occurring release of methane gas that was then fueled by coal dust into a devastating inferno that tore through the mine in a series of explosions over a few minutes. The agency has blamed a poorly maintained cutting head on a piece of mining equipment for sparking the blast and a malfunctioning water sprayer for failing to douse it.

An independent investigation commissioned by former Gov. Joe Manchin reached the same conclusion last month.

A public presentation for MSHA's latest findings is set for Wednesday morning. But Pauley and two other relatives, Gary Quarles and Clay Mullins, say the federal team offered nothing new and pushed back the timeline for completion of its final report for at least four more months. They'll now have to wait until October, at the earliest, for a comprehensive report, they said.

Mullins, whose brother Rex died in the blast, said he was frustrated that MSHA continues to blame Massey for the well-documented and serious safety problems at Upper Big Branch, rather than accepting blame for its own failures.

"It's a finger-pointing game: `It's your fault. It's this guy's fault,'" he said. "This whole thing has been very frustrating. We didn't learn anything new.

"Massey didn't do their job, providing these men with a safe work area. MSHA didn't do their job by enforcing the law and making them provide the men with a safe working environment. Same with the state. I blame all three parties," Mullins said. "And I still do. And I will, until the day I die."

Although MSHA acknowledged it needs to do better, he said, it stopped short of apologizing.

"I think they know they're a guilty party in this, too," he said. "They didn't say it that way, but they know."

Manchin's study blamed former owner Massey Energy for ignoring the most basic safety practices in the industry, allowing highly explosive coal dust and methane gas to accumulate when it failed to provide either enough fresh air flow or enough pulverized limestone on the mine's walls to render coal dust inert.

MSHA offered some more detail Tuesday, Pauley said, "but the bottom line is the same: It was preventable. It didn't have to happen."

Quarles said the history of violations spoke for itself. MSHA knew there were problems at Upper Big Branch, he said. Inspectors were in the mine the day of the blast and did nothing.

"Somebody should have stepped up and said we need to take a better look at this mine and, if we have to, go in and shut it down," he said.

"I thought this meeting would give us quite a bit more, and then in a month that it would all be over," said Quarles, whose son Gary Wayne also died. "We didn't learn nothing I didn't already know."

Quarles credited MSHA for acknowledging it could have done a better job.

"And I hope they do," he said. "We don't want to see any more families going through what we had to go through.".

FOLLOW HUFFPOST GREEN

BEAVER, W.Va. — Federal investigators have proof that Massey Energy kept fake safety records to throw off inspectors at a southern West Virginia mine where 29 men died in an explosion last year,...
BEAVER, W.Va. — Federal investigators have proof that Massey Energy kept fake safety records to throw off inspectors at a southern West Virginia mine where 29 men died in an explosion last year,...
Filed by Travis Donovan  | 
 
 
  • Comments
  • 235
  • Pending Comments
  • 0
  • View FAQ
Comments are closed for this entry
View All
Favorites
Recency  | 
Popularity
Page: 1 2 3 4 5  Next ›  Last »  (11 total)
09:18 AM on 06/30/2011
I'd like a mash up of Massey officials giving their lies about what caused the disaster--so we can play it whenever corporate PR shills are trying to spin their way out of liability. So we can say 'this is what corporate lies sounded like LAST time.'

But also--funny how corporations can make political contributions but they can't go to jail.
10:20 AM on 06/30/2011
Maybe this video is source material for that mash up?

(Massey touting its safety record)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PTOzvZG_lpA
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
danglines
01:43 AM on 06/30/2011
Massey, what a bunch of sleazy greedy jerks.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
photo
06:39 PM on 06/29/2011
How much did the CEO make?
I'm sure this ploy came from him.
Follow the money, what politician got a BIG donation from Massey Energy????
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
KarlaElisa
The atmosphere is Toxic
04:43 PM on 06/29/2011
well this oughta be good to impose a 10k fine, right?
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Thanks4Watching
Daily dose of cynicism
08:55 PM on 06/29/2011
They SHOULD be strapped down to a table with needles in their arms. Forget fines and corporate malfeasance, this is murder.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
KarlaElisa
The atmosphere is Toxic
01:12 AM on 06/30/2011
yes, they SHOULD. but i bet my scenario plays out for real. oh, maybe they'll negotiate x number of dollars per dead worker, but it won't be what they deserve. it never is.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
qud
03:03 PM on 06/29/2011
Okay, so rught now they are still investigating the accident? But in the meantime they now Know the recorsd are false so they can at least prosecute management for this. BTW, this is a tragic case of poor management at company level that lead to the deaths of many and some of you morons still bring in partisan politics. Come on!!!
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
westbygoddoug
the weird turn pro
02:50 PM on 06/29/2011
This is awful and criminal.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
photo
duey35
do the right thing for country
02:34 PM on 06/29/2011
Have they ever proven it was methan gas and not coal dust?
02:18 PM on 06/29/2011
The Republican appointed U.S. Supreme court would rule that there wasn't enough deaths and refuse to hear any case brought before it. Just move along. Nothing to sue here.
02:12 PM on 06/29/2011
Would Bushs non-torture (Water boarding) apply in this case?
02:08 PM on 06/29/2011
They will just pay the fine (or tie it up in the courts so long they won't have to pay) and just keep on with makeing profits on the backs (or deaths) of their workers.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
KarlaElisa
The atmosphere is Toxic
04:43 PM on 06/29/2011
and i bet it's a tiny little fine too
02:03 PM on 06/29/2011
Iguess if Rep. Bachman had her way there would be no need to keep false books or any books at all. There would be no regulators to read them because there would be no laws to enforce. Why let a few deaths impede progress? Who needs dem stinkin' regulations?
photo
HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
tyger
01:55 PM on 06/29/2011
Oh just as the repubs predicted frivolous lawsuits coming. Not!
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
KMBerger
"Cui adhaereo, prae est,"
01:55 PM on 06/29/2011
I wonder if there is enough public pressure and anger being brought to bear on State and Federal elected and bureaucrat officials to formally indict these former executives and managers responsible on criminal charges, or are we going to backpedal on these crimes as has been done for so long? Is there any integrity left in this nation?
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
KarlaElisa
The atmosphere is Toxic
04:44 PM on 06/29/2011
nope. not a drop
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
photo
01:51 PM on 06/29/2011
Blankenship is a criminal and belongs in jail with the worst of them.
photo
shellsangels
A free thinking Texan
01:46 PM on 06/29/2011
It was only a typo. We, Massey, meant to say "trouble with gas" instead of "no trouble with gas". The Supreme Court, by a vote of 5 to 4, agrees. Nuff said ...
photo
shellsangels
A free thinking Texan
02:55 PM on 06/29/2011
And the secretary that made the typo was fired!