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Coal miners hail proposed rule to slow rise of black lung
(Continued From Page A16) and others with the advanced kind in their 40s. “That’s just nuts,” said Dr. Carl Werntz, a West Virginia physician who conducts black lung examinations and described cases as “skyrocketing.”
United Mine Workers of America President Cecil Roberts said there’s no reason a 35-year-old miner should be diagnosed with a disease “that’s going to cost him his life.”
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“Nobody should be dying because of a job they have,” Roberts said.
Outdated. MSHA’s existing silica standards were developed in the 1970s, around the time of the U.S. Coal Mine Health and Safety Act of 1969 and the Federal Mine Safety and Health Act of 1977.
West Virginia University law professor Pat McGinley, who was part of a state team investigating the 2010 Upper Big Branch mining disaster that killed 29 miners, called the resurgence of black lung “unparalleled” when it comes to occupational health failures.
In the Upper Big Branch mine, 71% of the 24 miners who received autopsies were found to have black lung.
“I can’t think of any occupation where there has been such devastation that’s been ignored” by corporations and the government, he said. “It’s stunning.”
The new rule is supported by Democratic Sens. Joe Manchin of West Virginia, Sherrod Brown of Ohio, Bob Casey and John Fetterman of Pennsylvania, and Mark Warner and Tim Kaine of Virginia, who pushed for the change and released a joint statement saying protecting miners from “dangerous levels of silica cannot wait.”
MSHA will be collecting comments on the proposal through Aug. 28, with three hearings scheduled in Arlington, Virginia, Beckley, West Virginia, and Denver.
Protection equipment. One issue expected to come up: the use of respiratory protection equipment. The National Mining Association, which represents mine operators, wants workers to be permitted to use respirators as a method of compliance with the rule.
“These are recognized industrial hygiene practices utilized by” federal regulators in other industries, “but not in mining,” spokesman Conor Bernstein said, adding that better ventilation controls, safety awareness and regulations on coal dust have all contributed to “exponentially lower dust levels” inside U.S. mines in recent years.
The mine workers’ union and others, however, say respirators are ineffective while performing heavy labor in hot, confined spaces common in mines.
The proposed rule allows for the use of respirators on a temporary basis while operators are implementing engineering controls.
But advocates say inspectors aren’t present often enough to ensure they don’t become a permanent solution.
“The history of miner safety and health enforcement teaches us that exceptions become the rule,” said Sam Petsonk, a West Virginia attorney who represented miners who were diagnosed with black lung after operators knowingly violated regulations.
Self-reporting. The proposed rule also includes a provision that allows companies to self-report silica levels. Federal inspectors conduct spot checks to ensure accuracy, but mine operators still have leeway to manipulate reporting data, said Willie Dodson, Central Appalachian field coordinator for Appalachian Voices, an advocacy group.
“Ideally, MSHA inspectors would take samples day after day after day in a given mine to determine compliance,” he said.
A coal dust examiner who worked for a Kentucky mining company was sentenced to six months in prison last month for falsifying dust samples and lying to federal officials.
Want accountability. In rural Nickelsville, Virginia, near the
Tennessee border, Vonda Robinson says miners and their families are owed more accountability from the federal government and mine operators. Her husband John was diagnosed with black lung about a decade ago at age 47.
Now, his doctors say he will need a lung transplant.
Vonda Robinson said her husband doesn’t know what to say when his 5-year-old granddaughter asks why he can’t run and play with her, why even walking down the end of the driveway leaves him physically spent.
“He’ll tell her ‘Honey, papaw can’t do that,’ “ she said.
During his 28 years mining, John Robinson would come home with his face covered with dust. But she tried not to worry. Everyone in the community mined coal.
“He was one of those that wanted to go in the mines to give his family the American dream — the nice house, vehicles, put our kids through college,” she said. “And this is what he got.”
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