Despite a high-profile, intensified inspections program, authorities say safety violations still abound in the nation’s mines.
The Mine Safety and Health Administration said that during its December “impact” inspections, officials issued 288 citations at 17 mines. That was up from 250 citations at 22 mines in November.
Previously, when citations numbers had declined, MSHA officials cited the dropoff as evidence that the stepped-up inspections program was prodding mine operators to make safety improvements.
The impact inspection program began in response to the April explosion at Massey Energy’s Upper Big Branch coal mine in West Virginia, which killed 29 workers, the nation’s deadliest mining disaster in four decades.
“In spite of our relentless attempts to make mine operators accountable for their workers’ safety and health, some continue to flout their responsibilities,” said MSHA chief Joe Main. “Some operators know that MSHA cannot be at a mine all the time.”
As part of the impact inspections program, MSHA officials showed up unannounced and in unmarked cars to mines, and confiscated cell phones on the surface so that workers down the shaft couldn’t be warned to perform last-minute fixes.
As the Associated Press reported, the agency singled out Wilcoal Mining Inc.’s Tri-State One Mine in Tennessee.
Inspectors issued 21 citations there last month. The most serious included violations for accumulations of coal dust as deep as 24 inches, the agency said. MSHA investigators say dust played a significant role in the Upper Big Branch explosion, although Massey has denied that conclusion.
The MSHA’s announcement comes against the backdrop of another example of the dangers associated with mining around the globe: 21 coal miners in in a Colombian facility were killed by a subterranean explosion Wednesday.
Colombian President Juan Manuel Santos promised a thorough assessment of mine-safety laws.
“We’re going to review every way mines are controlled and how the regulations are used to avoid these accidents,” he said, according to Reuters.
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