Massey Energy, operator of the West Virginia coal mine where 29 workers died in an April explosion, has been cited for serious safety violations following a surprise inspection at another mine, the Mine Safety and Health Administration says.
The Sept. 28 inspection of the company’s Seng Creek Powellton Mine in Boone Country, W. Va., found that company managers had skipped mandatory tests for explosive gases and had failed to use ventilation curtains that filter out flammable chemicals to reduce the explosion risk.
“This week we mark the six-month anniversary of the devastating explosion at Upper Big Branch Mine,” said Joseph A. Main, assistant Secretary of Labor for mine safety and health. “Rather than learn from this tragedy, there are mine operators that continue the ‘catch me if you can’ tactics, ignoring basic mining laws, and placing their workers at great risk of injury, illness and mine explosions.”
A spokesman for Massey told the Washington Post that the company did not dispute the regulator’s findings.
“This situation was very frustrating and totally unacceptable,” spokesman Jeff Gillenwater wrote in an e-mail. “We appreciate MSHA’s blitz for uncovering conduct that we did not uncover ourselves.”
As a result of the inspection, MSHA issued 11 closure orders, which obligate the company to temporarily suspend work in the portions of the mine where the violations occurred.


