WV mine accident, miners found dead

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#1 WV mine accident, miners found dead

Post by The Minx »

Didn't see a thread on the mine accident in WV.

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Naoma, West Virginia (CNN) -- Air samples from the mine where 25 miners were killed Monday are no longer explosive, and rescuers may soon begin searching for four unaccounted-for miners, a federal official said late Wednesday.

"We've seen a steady drop, a slow drop," Kevin Stricklin, an administrator for the federal Mine Safety and Health Administration, told reporters about the concentrations of the three explosive gases. "The numbers now indicate that we're out of the explosive range."

The decision to send rescue teams inside will be made if samples taken from the bottom of the mine confirm the initial results, he said.

"Our first intent is to look for the four miners that are unaccounted for," he said.

Six five-person rescue teams were on standby and ready to move, he said.

If an explosive mix of air or heavy smoke is discovered inside the mine, the rescue teams would be pulled from the mine and nitrogen gas would be poured into it in an attempt to make the atmosphere inert, he said.

Though the rescue teams will be carrying their own oxygen, "there's a hope that they wouldn't have to use it," Stricklin said. Still, he added, "They have to be prepared to go into bad air."

Do you live near the mine or know one of the victims? Let us know

The plan is for the rescue teams to head directly to two refuge chambers about five miles from the mine entrance where any survivors would likely have holed up, he said.

"The only chance ... we still have yet is if they could have made it to the chambers," West Virginia Gov. Joe Manchin said earlier Wednesday.

If that happened, then the miners would have time on their side, since each chamber is equipped with enough air and supplies to keep 15 miners alive for 96 hours, he said.

If the plan fails to materialize, rescuers have a Plan B: They are drilling a hole above one of the refuge chambers with plans to lower cameras to determine if it has been activated, he said.

Besides the one that reached the mine early Wednesday, another drill was set to reach the mine shortly, Stricklin said late Wednesday.

At least 25 miners died in Monday's explosion at the Upper Big Branch South Mine, about 30 miles south of Charleston, West Virginia. Rescue teams were forced to turn back Tuesday because unsafe levels of methane and carbon monoxide posed a risk of a second explosion.

Thirty-one men were working in the mine at the time of the blast Monday afternoon, said Chris Adkins, chief operating officer for Massey Energy Co., which owns the mine. The bodies of seven miners were removed and 18 more bodies were found underground, but not removed.

Officials said that was because rescue teams were focused on finding survivors before being turned back.

Two injured miners were hospitalized, with one "doing extremely well" and the other in intensive care, Manchin said. He did not give their names and said their families had requested privacy.

Authorities believe they know where all four of the unaccounted-for miners were working at the time of the blast, officials have said.

Relatives "know the odds are not in our favor" of finding any of the four alive, Manchin said, "... but that's what we're still holding on to."

The group of 18 dead miners was in an area where longwall cutting was taking place. The technique uses a large grinder to extract the coal and creates large amounts of coal dust and methane. Both are explosive.

While the cause of Monday's blast remained unknown, the deaths turned a harsh spotlight on the safety record of Massey, which has paid record fines for safety and environmental violations.

Federal officials cited the mine for two safety violations on Monday, the day of the blast, though the violations occurred in a part of the mine five to six miles from where the blast occurred and were not related, Stricklin said.

Massey CEO Don Blankenship on Tuesday expressed puzzlement about what could have caused the blast.

"I think everyone thought we had proper ventilation," Blankenship told CNN. "Of course, we don't know 100 percent sure what happened yet, so we can't speculate on it."

He said Massey's mines "are typically in better shape than others that are in our area or in the country. ... Our creativity on safety is second to none."

The company operates 44 underground and surface mines and controls 2.2 billion tons of coal reserves in West Virginia, Kentucky, Virginia and Tennessee.

Three other deaths have occurred in the mine over the past 12 years. This year alone, the mine was cited for more than 100 safety violations, including ventilation violations, according to Mine Safety and Health Administration records.

U.S. Rep. Nick Rahall, D-West Virginia,, said the mine appears to be a "bad apple, there's no question about it, because of the history of violations, including as late as March 30 of this year."

He said Massey has a "rather maverick reputation" and has pulled itself out of organizations including the West Virginia Mining Association. But he acknowledged the company's charitable contributions and its community effort in providing jobs and support for the area's economy.

Monday's explosion was the deadliest U.S. mining disaster in 25 years. State and federal officials have pledged a full investigation into its cause.

People associated with Massey Energy, including Blankenship, have donated more than $307,000 to federal candidates since the 1990 election cycle, with 91 percent going to Republican candidates, according to an analysis from the nonpartisan Center for Responsive Politics, a watchdog group.

In 2004, Blankenship spent $3 million to support a campaign by Brent Benjamin, who successfully ran for the West Virginia Supreme Court of Appeals. At the time, Massey was involved in a business dispute with a rival mining company, and a jury in 2002 had awarded the other company, Harman Mining, $50 million.

By the time Massey appealed the decision in 2006, Benjamin was on the court. Benjamin refused to recuse himself from the appeal, and then voted to overturn the jury's verdict. The case made its way to the U.S. Supreme Court, which ruled last year that Benjamin should have recused himself.

I hope they'll make it. :sad:


EDIT: Changed the title again. :sad:
Last edited by The Minx on Sun Apr 11, 2010 6:34 am, edited 2 times in total.
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#2

Post by LadyTevar »

Sorry, I've been updating it on SDnet, but forgot to post it here. The first 7 deceased have been released by the State Medical Examiner's office; their death certificates will be crossing my desk probably by Friday. We have orders to immediately hand them over to the State Registrar, Mr. Thompson, as soon as they arrive in the office.

We're all dreading the moment those certificates arrive. We're already getting phone calls asking when they'll be ready for the families.
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#3

Post by LadyTevar »

As of 8am:
Rescue teams progressing into Upper Big Branch Mine


MONTCOAL, W.Va. -- Rescue teams entered the Upper Big Branch Mine early Thursday morning after tests revealed that the air quality in the mine is safe enough to proceed.

After an extensive discussion of the plan, four eight-man teams went into the mine just before 5 a.m., Gov. Joe Manchin said.

"Right now, we're in full rescue [mode]," he said.

The teams are trying to locate four miners still unaccounted for after Monday's deadly blast. Twenty-five miners have already been confirmed dead, in the worst U.S. mining disaster in a quarter-century.

The teams will first check two refuge chambers near the last known locations where the miners were working. The chambers have enough air, food and waters to sustain the miners for up to four days.

During the first rescue attempt, crews encountered potentially explosive levels of methane, carbon monoxide and hydrogen.

Since then, rescuers have drilled a shaft into the mine from the surface and ventilated the mine.

"We've taken a sample down there," said Kevin Stricklin, coal administrator for the U.S. Mine Safety and Health Administration, said at about 3 a.m. "It's non-explosive underground as well."

The teams are progressing on mantrips, and will have to walk the last mile or so, Manchin said. If they encounter major obstacles, the miners' families have agreed that the mission can change to a combination of rescue and recovery, he said.

But for now, the focus is still on finding survivors.

"The families are very hopeful, very prayerful," he said.

The teams are in constant communication with the command center on the surface via radio.

Manchin said officials will provide updates on the rescuers' progress every two hours.

It will likely take the rescuers several hours to reach the refuge chambers, which are several miles from the mine's entrance, Stricklin said. They will ride on mantrips - mine vehicles that usually carry miners into the mine -- as far as possible, then walk the rest of the way.

Each rescuer will carry a 30-pound breathing apparatus on his back in case he encounters pockets of unbreathable air.

Because of the constant drilling of ventilation holes, workers on the surface have not been able to listen for signs of life inside the mine, Stricklin said. A second shaft is almost finished, stopping within about 40 feet of the mine underground, but drilling will cease while the rescuers are in the mine.

If the conditions in the mine are worse than expected, the rescue teams may pull out while the drilling on the second and third holes is completed and the mine is further ventilated.

"We are hopeful we can go in and finish this mission," said Joe Main, MSHA's director. "It is a rescue mission."
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#4

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I heard on the radio that this mine has been fined numerous times for safety violations. Any truth to that LT?
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#5

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According to the NYT, the mine has a poor safety record, and yup, they've been fined in the past:

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[quote]MONTCOAL, W.Va. — Rescue workers began the precarious task Tuesday of removing explosive methane gas from the coal mine where at least 25 miners died the day before. The mine owner’s dismal safety record, along with several recent evacuations of the mine, left federal officials and miners suggesting that Monday’s explosion might have been preventable.

In the past two months, miners had been evacuated three times from the Upper Big Branch because of dangerously high methane levels, according to two miners who asked for anonymity for fear of losing their jobs. Representative Nick J. Rahall II, a Democrat whose district includes the mine, said he had received similar reports from miners about recent evacuations at the mine, which as recently as last month was fined at least three times for ventilation problems, according to federal records.

The Massey Energy Company, the biggest coal mining business in central Appalachia and the owner of the Upper Big Branch mine, has drawn sharp scrutiny and fines from regulators over its safety and environmental record.

In 2008, one of its subsidiaries paid what federal prosecutors called the largest settlement in the history of the coal industry after pleading guilty to safety violations that contributed to the deaths of two miners in a fire in one of its mines. That year, Massey also paid a $20 million fine — the largest of its kind levied by the Environmental Protection Agency — for clean water violations.

It is still unclear what caused Monday’s blast, which is under investigation. But the disaster has raised new questions about Massey’s attention to safety under the leadership of its pugnacious chief executive, Don L. Blankenship, and about why stricter federal laws, put into effect after a mining disaster in 2006, failed to prevent another tragedy.

Kevin Stricklin, an administrator with the federal Mine Safety and Health Administration, said the magnitude of the explosion — the worst mining accident in 25 years, which also left four people missing, including a woman working as a mining operator — showed that “something went very wrong here.â€
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#6

Post by Derek Thunder »

Last year, the number of citations issued against the mine more than doubled, to over 500, from 2008, and the penalties proposed against the mine more than tripled, to $897,325.
Hmm, Massey's total revenue in 2009 according to this was 2.69 billion dollars. I'm sure those fines really stung their bottom line, eh?
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#7

Post by LadyTevar »

Considering they only paid 16% of the fines from the last 10years? Not hurting them at all.


Couldn't post this earlier, because I was at work. The rescuers got within 1000ft of the rescue shelter before they were pulled back due to dangerous methane levels. So dangerous, a spark could set off yet another explosion.

Hopefully the final vent-hole will be drilled by 6p and they can go try again before 8p.


and this is what you're looking for Frigid:
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#8

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You mean Cpl Kendall.
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:lol: Thanks LT.
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Post by LadyTevar »

There have been multiple comments to the media about how Upper Branch is a "Gassy Mine". They were literally pumping thousands of gallons of methane out of the mine on a monthly basis, and that is one reason for the countless violations and closures of the mine. Unfortunately, something broke into a much larger concentration.

There had been a 2.7 earthquake two weeks ago, just outside of the town of Man. It was in an uninhabited area, so it did not get much attention until Geologists saw it on their monitoring equipment after the fact. There is a possibility that a massive methane pocket was disturbed, and moved along the path of least resistance. However, this is total guesswork and gossip at this point.

What we do have for sure is another night of no rescues, due to the methane content.
Manchin said Thursday began with three scenarios:

* Forge ahead to check the shelter.
* Discover one area of the mine with unacceptable concentrations of bad air and install a temporary barrier so nitrogen could be pumped in and work could go on elsewhere.
* Find conditions too dangerous and extract everyone.

"Unfortunately we have the worst scenario," Manchin said at a Thursday morning press briefing.
It will take a few more hours to have the second and third vent-holes drilled and the venting fans installed. At this time WV is experiencing a low-pressure system that's brought lower temps and rainstorms, which seems to be sucking more methane out of the rock and into the mine tunnels. It's a battle of how fast it's accumulating to how fast it can be vented, and so far the methane is winning.
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#11

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Changed the title to reflect the recent news. :sad:
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#12

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6000 years of fucking development and nature still kicks our ass whenever she feels like it. Damn it all to hell.

How deep was the mine?
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April 9, 2010
Last four Upper Big Branch miners found dead
Death toll rises to 29; worst U.S. mine disaster in 40 years


MONTCOAL, W.Va. -- Four miners unaccounted for since a massive underground explosion Monday were found dead early this morning, pushing the death toll at Massey Energy's Upper Big Branch Mine to 29 and making it the worst U.S. coal-mining disaster in 40 years.

Gov. Joe Manchin announced the grim findings at a news conference at Raleigh County's Marsh Fork Elementary School, where news media from around the world have camped out since Monday to chronicle a desperate, 100-hour rescue effort.

"We did not receive the miracle we prayed for," Manchin said at about 12:30 a.m. "So this journey has ended and now the healing will start."

The governor said miners had not deployed any of the rescue chambers in the mine, and that none of the workers had a chance to use their emergency breathing devices.



"We remained hopeful the four missing miners would have been found alive," Massey CEO Don Blankenship said in a statement issued just after Manchin's announcement. "I personally met with many of the families throughout the week and share their grief at this very painful time."

Rep. Nick Rahall, D-W.Va., said of the miners' families, "Their loved ones are now smiling down upon them, and we all know they are in a better place and did not suffer."

Kevin Stricklin, administrator for coal at the U.S. Mine Safety and Health Administration, said mine rescue crews would immediately begin recovering the miners' bodies and that MSHA would then turn its attention to investigating the disaster.

"I can assure you that no stone will be left unturned," Stricklin said. "We will find the cause of it."

As the news sunk in, several of the teachers and staff from Marsh Fork Elementary who had come to help the media stationed at the school, began weeping silently. Tammy Gobble hugged Sheri McGraw of the Red Cross and sobbed, her shoulders shaking.

Manchin said that the families wanted to wait until their loved ones had been removed from the mine, but the governor explained to them that it would take some time. He assured them that the fallen miners would be treated with dignity.

"Naturally, they wanted to wait and take their loved ones home with them," said the governor, who lost an uncle in the 1968 Farmington disaster.

Rescue teams had scoured the Upper Big Branch Mine on Friday in a fourth, last-ditch effort to find the four miners, in the hopes they had somehow made their way to an airtight rescue chamber stocked with food, water and breathable air.

Two other miners were injured in the explosion. One of them has been released from a local hospital, while the other remains in intensive care in Charleston. No information on his condition has been released.

A complete list of the victims and the injured has not been made public, and Manchin and Rahall urged the media to respect the privacy of the families in the days ahead.

The 29 deaths in the Upper Big Branch explosion are the most in a U.S. mine disaster since 38 perished in a coal-dust blast on Dec. 30, 1970, at Finley Coal's No. 15 and No. 16 mines on Hurricane Creek near Hyden, Ky.

It is the West Virginia coal industry's worst workplace disaster since 78 miners died in the November 1968 Farmington explosion. In February 1972, 125 residents of Buffalo Creek in Logan County died when a coal slurry dam there collapsed and flooded their hollow.

All week, mine safety advocates and political leaders have promised detailed investigations and said they would re-examine mine safety laws and enforcement practices in the wake of the disaster.

"It is infuriating that in this day and age, and in this country, that such a disaster could still happen," Sen. Robert C. Byrd, D-W.Va., said in a statement Friday. "I am sick. I am saddened, and I am angry."

In brief remarks delivered in the White House Rose Garden, President Obama said Friday afternoon that "it's clear that more needs to be done" on the issue.

Obama has ordered Labor Secretary Hilda Solis and MSHA chief Joe Main to provide him a report by next week on their preliminary findings on "what went wrong and why it went wrong so badly, so that we can take the steps necessary to prevent such accidents in the future."

When asked if there would be public hearings as part of the disaster investigation, Manchin said, "I would assume so. We want to dovetail them with the federal [hearings].

"We want to work with the federal government," the governor said. "We want to work with Congress."

This week's disaster comes four years after a dozen miners died in an explosion at International Coal Group's Sago Mine in Upshur County, the first in a series of major mining accidents that claimed 28 lives in 2006 and 2007.

After years of improvements in coal-mine safety, Bush administration budget cuts and a focus away from tough enforcement eroded MSHA's policing of the industry. The rising death toll prompted lawmakers to pass the 2006 MINER Act, the first major reforms in safety standards in 30 years.

Unsuccessful rescue efforts at Upper Big Branch were made all the more heartbreaking because the 2006 law focused on faster emergency response and new technologies meant to help miners survive and escape from explosions and fires.
:cry:
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#14

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Damn, that's horrible. While I was half expecting it after the search got called off earlier, its still heartbreaking.
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#15

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Aw damn it.
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#16

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There will be a full list of the dead soon enough.

Minx? Please change the title of the thread. :cry:
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#17

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Changed the title.

And an update: Obama is calling for a probe into the disaster.

(CNN) -- President Obama on Saturday urged a thorough investigation into a deadly explosion at a West Virginia coal mine that killed 29 people, hours after rescue efforts at the mine gave way to an operation to recover the dead.

"This has been America's worst mining disaster in forty years, and the toll on all West Virginians has been immeasurable, " Obama said of Monday's blast at the Upper Big Branch mine. "We cannot bring back the men we lost. What we can do, in their memory, is thoroughly investigate this tragedy and demand accountability."

Obama's statement came just hours after rescue efforts came to a grim end after crews found the bodies of the last four miners unaccounted for in the explosion. Twenty-five people were previously announced dead.

"My thoughts and prayers are with the families of all those who were lost in this tragic accident, and my gratitude goes out to the rescue teams who worked so tirelessly and heroically to search for the missing," Obama said in his statement.

The death toll makes the West Virginia mining disaster the worst in the U.S. since 1972, when 91 miners were killed in a fire at the Sunshine Mine in Kellogg, Idaho.

Of the 29 dead in the West Virginia blast, the bodies of 22 remain inside the mine.

The cause of the blast is unknown, and state and federal officials have pledged a full investigation.

The explosion has prompted renewed questions about mine safety.

Obama said Saturday that "all Americans deserve to work in a place that is safe, and we must take whatever steps are necessary to ensure that all our miners are as safe as possible so that a disaster like this doesn't happen again."

Obama will meet next week with Secretary of Labor Hilda Solis and a Mine Safety and Health Administration official to hear their initial assessment of what caused the blast, along with their recommendations for steps the federal government should take to improve mine safety.

Richmond, Virginia-based Massey Energy Co., which owns the mine, said in a statement released Friday that it will conduct "extensive" reviews of the mine accident "to ensure that a similar incident doesn't happen again."

It said the mine has had less than one violation per day in inspections by the Mine Safety and Health Administration and added that that rate is "consistent with national averages."

Most of the blast victims were working in an area where long wall cutting was taking place. The technique uses a large grinder to extract the coal and creates large amounts of coal dust and methane gas, both of which are explosive.

West Virginia Gov. Joe Manchin said Saturday that even though it's not clear what caused the explosion, there needs to be a focus on better ventilation and on sensors to alert mine personnel when gas levels become dangerous.

"There was no way to protect them against this," he said. "You just have to prevent it and make sure it doesn't happen again."

Hopefully, someone in Massey will be made to answer for this.
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