Mining Deaths Rise to 71 Last Year, More Than Double 2009′s Record Low

On-the-job deaths in the mining industry, after hitting a record low of 34 in 2009, shot back up to 71 last year.

Twenty-three of the 2010 fatalities, the Department of Labor reported, were in surface mining accidents. The other 48 miners died in underground mining incidents — including 29 killed in the April explosion at the Upper Big Branch mine in West Virginia, the nation’s worst mining disaster in 40 years.

“Mine operators must take responsibility for the health and safety conditions in their mines to prevent these tragedies,” Joseph A. Main, assistant secretary of labor for mine safety and health, said in a news release. “Mining deaths are preventable, and actions must be undertaken to prevent them.”

The leading cause of coal mining deaths last year was categorized by the government as “ignition or explosion,” followed by powered haulage and roof falls. Main pledged that the Mine Safety and Health Administration will look “for ways to improve our policies and regulations to prevent these unnecessary deaths.”

A proposed overhaul of mine safety regulation failed in Congress last year. The bill, which would have given the MSHA greater power to prosecute mining executives and to shut down mines violating safety laws, was defeated in the House of Representatives on Dec. 8, and never came to a vote in the Senate.

The mining fatality toll in 2010 was the worst since 2006, when the total was 73.

Related Post:

Deadly Year in the Mines Comes to a Close without Safety Overhaul

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