Jan. 7, 2007
RAHALL REPORT: On Anniversaries of Sago, Aracoma Mine Tragedies, Mine
Safety Still at the Forefront
From the desk of U.S. Rep. Nick Rahall (D-WV)
Representing West Virginia's 3rd District
Washington, DC (HNN) -- This January, as we mark the one-year
anniversaries of the tragedies at the Sago and Aracoma mines, we pay
tribute
to all of the brave coal miners who died in 2006 - one of the most
deadly
for coal miners in recent history - and to their families who fought
for
passage of a new law to repair a failing national mine safety system.
This past June, after many months of pressing for action, I joined my
West
Virginia colleagues in shepherding the MINER Act through Congress. The
Miner Act includes requirements for more oxygen to be made available to
trapped and escaping miners for a "sustained period of time." It
calls
immediately for redundant communications devices to link miners
underground
with rescuers on the surface, and it requires two-way
telecommunications and
tracking devices to be in the mines by mid-2009. It calls for fines to
be
levied on mines that fail to timely report accidents, a provision that
has
already been put to use by Mine Safety and Health Administration.
The MINER Act is milestone legislation, but it is just one marker on
the
long route toward ensuring the health and safety of our miners.
The entire West Virginia delegation united behind that bill and the
mission
to return MSHA to the business of protecting our miners. That effort
continues.
In September, I worked to bring together a $4 million statewide mine
safety
and technology consortium, to be housed at WVU Technical and Community
College. The Mine Safety Technology Consortium will be a catalyst to
transforming West Virginia coal mining, know-how, skills and
capabilities to
produce superior coal mine safety and health technology, products and
services, including training technologies.
The Consortium is one component of a $4 million-dollar project, which
is the
result of my deep concern for mine worker safety and vision for the
future.
The project is being funded by a $2 million EDA grant I helped secure,
$1
million in state funding and another $1 million in private funds,
including
$100,000 from Arch Coal and $200,000 from State Electric.
Project collaborators include the WVU Institute of Technology-Community
and
Technical College; Marshall University Center for Environmental,
Geotechnical & Applied Sciences (CEGAS); Wheeling Jesuit
University-National
Technology Transfer Center (NTTC); West Virginia High Technology
Consortium
(WVHTC); Robert C. Byrd Institute for Advanced Flexible Manufacturing
(RCBI); and the Mine Safety and Health Administration (MSHA).
We have seen many mine safety improvements in the past several months.
Seals have been strengthened; new guidelines have been issued for air
packs;
new inspectors are being recruited and trained. MSHA has been taking a
good,
hard look at refuges, too, and given the success of such refuges in
other
nations, this is long overdue. But even with these advancements, more
work
needs to be done.
In keeping with the requirements of MINER, mine operators have
submitted
more than 600 emergency response plans to MSHA for approval. So far,
only a
handful have been fully approved as the agency works to address the
question
of how mines will comply with MINER's mandate that oxygen be available
to
trapped miners for "a sustained period of time."
Many in Congress argued that defining the period could impede
technological
advances and may result in limiting the level of air supplies rather
than
spurring research and development that could save more lives. Pushing
the
technological envelope to strive for the longest possible supplies of
breathable air for trapped miners is a necessity and one that MSHA must
pursue.
While the State of West Virginia has completed two studies on the Sago
disaster, as well as two on the Aracoma mine fire, the Federal Mine
Safety
and Health Administration has said that it expects to complete its
official
reports on Sago and Aracoma within the next three months. Any lessons
that
can be learned from these reports should be turned into action to save
more
lives.
In January, one year ago, television viewers around the globe were
riveted
to heart-wrenching images emanating from our West Virginia mining
communities. They pulled for us, and prayed with us - and in the words
of
Mother Jones, the plight of miners "permeated the hearts of men all
over the
world." Those West Virginia tragedies sparked a reenergized fight to
improve
the lot of miners.
My deep appreciation goes to those Sago and Aracoma families who lost
so
much and gave so greatly. We owe profound gratitude to those families
who
selflessly fought to ensure that others would not suffer as they have.
The
renewed emphasis on mine safety that has emerged over the past year is
directly attributable to their fierce conviction that some good would
come
of their heartbreak. What resulted from their grief is a legacy worthy
of
their loved ones - a renewed national commitment to the health safety
of all
coal miners.