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The governor of West Virginia and a spokesman for the federal Mine
Safety and Health Administration (MSHA) announced Monday that they will conduct
a joint investigation and public hearings into the Sago Mine disaster that claimed
the lives of 12 miners last week. A US Senate subcommittee also announced a
public hearing to be held January 19.
Governor Joe Manchin made clear, however, that the joint state-federal
investigation would not focus on the well-documented safety violations at the
mine or why state and federal regulators allowed it to remain open. Instead,
he said, the probe would concentrate on the communications failure that led
miners’ families to believe the men had been rescued alive.
“We’re going to do this a little differently,” he said. “I’m
asking that we do a communications investigation. I’m asking for this
because I have witnessed first-hand the unbelievable human suffering that comes
from miscommunication.”
Presumably, the suffering from the death of family members and loved ones was
less “unbelievable” than the additional pain from the false hopes
raised by company and government officials. Manchin’s absurd statement
was a clear signal that the official investigation will be more concerned with
covering up the responsibility of the mine owners and government regulators
for the tragedy than uncovering the truth.
Davitt McAteer, the head of MSHA under President Clinton, who will serve as
the governor’s personal advisor in the investigation, downplayed “the
number of citations, previous accidents and the speed of recovery” at
the mine. “If we find mistakes,” McAteer declared, “we will
fix them.”
He emphasized one aspect of the disaster—the primitive communications
system in the mine. “We don’t have communication underground when
we can [communicate] with Mars or under the ocean,” he said.
This emphasis on the secondary issue of miscommunication between the rescue
team and the rescue command center already makes clear that state and federal
investigators have no intention of conducting a serious and objective investigation
into the condition of the mine, possible criminal neglect by its owners, the
International Coal Group, and the role of federal and state agencies in allowing
it to continue to operate.
If the history of previous mine disaster probes is a guide, the current investigation
will produce at best a slap on the wrist for the individual mine operator, while
concealing the underlying and systemic causes of such tragedies.
In a telling comment, Governor Manchin acknowledged it took 24 years for investigators
to explain the causes for the explosion at Consolidated Coal’s Farmington,
West Virginia mine that claimed 78 miners’ lives in 1968. The governor
promised to have an “open” process, involving the dead miners’
families, and said a report would be issued no later than July.
In comments prior to the press conference announcing the investigation, McAteer
acknowledged that “twenty-first century methods were being used to produce
coal” while the mine safety system was still based on technology and methods
developed decades ago.
Manchin promised that the investigation would lead to the implementation of
new safety and rescue technologies. However, the coal companies have bitterly
resisted bearing the costs of providing safer mines, let alone new and improved
rescue equipment.
According to a January 10 New York Times article, throughout the US coal mining
industry, “The oxygen canisters, the telephones, the ventilation equipment
and almost every other piece of safety equipment are nearly identical to those
used more than 20 years ago.”
Technologies already exist that would deliver oxygen for longer periods of
time than the one-hour’s worth of oxygen available to the men trapped
below the Sago Mine. There is also a belt-worn transmitter currently used in
Australia that allows emergency personnel to immediately locate miners trapped
underground. In the Sago explosion, rescuers spent precious hours trying to
determine the location of the miners.
Had the miners been equipped with hand-held radios, they could have been directed
safely out of the mine. Instead, they turned away from the exit because they
apparently believed their path of escape was blocked by fire and debris. In
fact, it was not.
The Sago Mine was equipped merely with stationary phones, connected by wires
that were evidently destroyed by the explosion.
In 1998, miners successfully escaped a major fire at the Willow Creek mine
in Price, Utah, in large part because all the miners were carrying hand-held
radios and were immediately informed of the blaze. MSHA has not mandated the
new communications system.
According to the Times article, researchers at Wheeling Jesuit University in
Wheeling, West Virginia conducted a technological survey last year to see if
respirators could be improved to deliver more oxygen in a smaller, lighter container.
“What we found is that there are technologies that can be used to improve
the system to do all three,” said Michelle Dougherty, the director of
the university’s technology center. “I can’t answer why no
one in the private sector has thought of this before.”
Bruce Watzman, vice president of safety, health and human resources at the
National Mining Association, an industry group, told the Times it was not the
responsibility of the coal operators to develop new safety equipment. “We’re
not in the self-rescuer manufacturing business,” Watzman said.
Federal and state mine safety officials never ordered the shutdown of the Sago
Mine despite its record of roof-falls, frequent injuries and repeated violations
of safety regulations.
The disaster has highlighted the close ties of the Bush administration to the
coal operators, and its efforts to limit the oversight and enforcement powers
of the federal mine safety agency by promoting a policy of MSHA “partnership”
with the owners.
The Bush administration has reduced MSHA by 170 positions since 2001, leaving
approximately 600 federal mine inspectors to enforce safety regulations in 25
states. Congress cut the agency’s funding by $4.9 million, in inflation-adjusted
terms, for the 2006 fiscal year. Bush’s appointees to MSHA have included
dozens of officials connected to the mining industry.
The coal companies were major contributors to Bush’s election campaigns.
In return, the president’s energy bill contained billions in subsidies
and tax breaks for the coal companies. At the time it was being signed into
law, Jack Gerard, head of the National Mining Association and a major Bush donor,
told the West Virginia Coal Symposium that “the Energy Policy Act may
well be the best opportunity the mining industry will have in our lifetimes.”
The close ties with the Democratic Party are less well known. Governor Manchin
received $571,214 of the $673,251 spent by coal interests in the gubernatorial
election of 2004, according to the West Virginia People Election Reform Coalition.
That was the most any political candidate received in coal industry donations
in any state election since 1996, accounting for 12 percent of all the money
Manchin raised in the campaign. Industry leaders also contributed $174,500 for
Manchin’s inaugural ball.
Last February, Manchin, the former owner of the coal brokerage firm Enersystems,
gave a speech before the West Virginia Coal Association declaring that the production
of more domestic coal was necessary for “homeland security”—because
it would reduce dependence on Middle East oil. He pledged his support for streamlining
the permit process to allow more companies to mine West Virginia coal.
“We made a mistake by electing Manchin. His agenda is clear. His interest
lies with the coal companies and not with the citizens of this state,”
said Sarah Haltom, a resident of Beaver, West Virginia and opponent of the coal
companies’ mountaintop removal methods, which pollute rivers and have
produced deadly floods, wiping out several mining communities.
There is a serious question as to whether the governor’s effort to “streamline”
the state’s permit process was a factor in state and federal agencies
turning a blind eye to dangerous conditions at the Sago Mine. According to an
article in the Charleston Gazette published Tuesday, nearly two months after
New York billionaire Wilbur Ross’s International Coal Group bought Sago
Mine from bankrupt Anker Coal Group, the company has still not sought a permit
to operate the mine. Such a request triggers government scrutiny of the company’s
environmental record and its ability to operate a “responsible”
mine.
Federal and state mining laws prohibit anyone from operating an underground
or surface mine without a permit. Nevertheless, when a Department of Environmental
Protection inspector visited the Sago Mine on December 1, he did not cite the
company for lacking an approved permit.