UMWA Grapples With Coal’s Decline, An Uncertain Future

Miners at Warrior Met in Brookwood, Alabama have been on strike since the beginning of April. It’s a rare union action in the American South — especially these days when membership in the UMWA continues to decline.

President Cecil Roberts, now in office for 26 years, has been walking the picket line with miners from Warrior Met.

“We’re still doing what we’ve always done — we’re fighting for the middle class here and [to] make things better for our members,” Roberts told West Virginia Public Broadcasting.

For nearly a decade, his organization worked through the courts to secure pensions and health care benefits for miners whose employers went bankrupt.

“People told us, they’ll never give you a dime for health care,” he said. “But we had a success in 2013, where we were able to get about $400 million out of these companies.”

The UMWA then took its fight for members’ health care benefits to the halls of Congress.

“Folks told us that we’ll never pass legislation,” Roberts recalled. “‘That’s impossible,’ [they said], particularly with that time that Congress was dominated by the Republican Party.”

They ultimately won there, too. In 2017, the UMWA secured healthcare for 22,600 union members.

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FR159526 AP
United Mine Workers of America President Cecil Roberts speaks during the rally on Capitol Hill in Washington, Thursday, Sept. 8, 2016. Thousands of unionized mine workers and supporters rallied to push for a bill that would protect health-care and pension benefits for about 120,000 former coal miners and their families. (AP Photo/Jose Luis Magana)

‘No Denying What’s Happening’ 

Despite these wins, the organization faces a troubling reality.

From 2002 to 2019, the number of members actively working in a U.S. mine plummeted from 23,000 to 10,000, according to the Energy Information Administration.

In West Virginia, that figure has dropped from roughly 6,000 to 3,000 over the same time period. These trends have paralleled the decline of total employment across the industry.

Richard Mulchay, a labor historian at the University of Pittsburgh Titusville, says those numbers pale in comparison to what the industry — and union membership — once was.

“When the union hit its height during the New Deal, it had about a membership — I would say — of anywhere from about 500,000 to 470,000 miners,” Mulchay said.

Since the mid-20th century, those numbers have dropped off. Mulchay says automation played a big role — lessening the need for so many workers.

“The industry became far more machine intensive than it is today, thereby more efficient,” he said. “And so a lot of people were attrited out — you know, retired — this sort of thing.”

Concerns over climate change and dramatic shifts in the economics of energy production have also taken their toll.

“There is no denying of what’s happening out here,” said West Virginia state senator and UMWA District 31 Vice-President Emeritus Mike Caputo.

Caputo is quick to acknowledge the coal industry’s decline in recent years. But, he said, the UMWA is still trying to play a role — even as the nation’s energy needs shift.

“We’re the only ones out there fighting to preserve the way of life in coal country,” Caputo said. “We fight that — if the industry does decline — that we can find a way to transition miners into other jobs. And that’s very important, because they’re just some things we can’t control.”

UMWA Looks To Expand Membership — But Where?

With President Joe Biden’s administration pushing a cleaner energy future, Roberts, Caputo and others in the UMWA’s leadership have had to walk the proverbial tightrope when it comes to acknowledging the reality of the coal industry’s future.

On one hand, they know that coal’s glory days are over. On the other, the union still represents those left working in the industry.

Meanwhile, industry-funded groups like Friends of Coal have stepped in to create a sense of collective identity and an alliance between employers and workers — a kind of company union.

Mulchay, the labor historian, says the UMWA’s current situation reflects that of the wider U.S. labor movement. With traditional manufacturing on the decline, they’re at a pivotal moment.

“They’re trying to redefine themselves and certain other unions are doing the same thing or have been doing the same thing,” Mulchay said. “A lot of basic industrial unions are going into the direction of trying to organize white collar workers — or maybe new varieties of mass production workers, and so on.”

But how fast is the UMWA moving? And could they be doing more?

Davitt McAteer, who served as assistant secretary of the Mine Safety and Health Administration under President Bill Clinton, said Roberts deserves a lot of credit — especially considering the difficult position the union finds itself in.

“He has made a turn, and said they’re recognizing that there’s limited demand for coal and for coal miners, and they’re going to have to look at the vehicle and find out where to go from here,” McAteer said.

But the UMWA has yet to say exactly what that vehicle might be. And although they have expressed interest in organizing workers in coal-adjacent technologies and other sources of energy like wind and solar, to date there is little evidence that a broad organizing effort beyond coal miners has been successful.

Roberts claims that people in coal country are skeptical of a future in the renewable energy sector.

“The thing to remember here is [that] the jobs — as they exist right now — in the renewable sector, pay only a fraction of what a coal miner makes,” Roberts said,

Roberts says, over the years, there has been a lot of talk about what could replace coal as the main driver for the region’s economy. But, he says, trying to balance the economy with environmental concerns leaves a lot of questions.

“No one in Appalachia believes there’s going to be ‘just transition’ here. They believe that the Lord will return before they get a ‘just transition’ in Appalachia,” Roberts said.

The UMWA is also at a crossroads of another kind.

With Roberts now 74-years-old and his term as president ending in 2023, the long-time UMWA leader said he doesn’t yet know whether he will run again.

While the future of the UMWA’s leadership remains in question, Caputo said he feels as though Roberts has cultivated a new generation of labor leaders who are also looking forward.

“I think Cecil’s got a lot of years left and I think that he’ll continue to lead this union for a long time,” he said. “But I think he’s just preparing for the future.”

20 Years Later: WVU Professor Who Experienced 9/11 In New York City Looks Back

While many Americans watched the events of September 11, 2001 play out in real time on television, some West Virginians experienced the tragedy firsthand.

At least five people with ties to the state died in the events that played out in New York City, at the Pentagon and in Shanksville, Pennsylvania.

Mary Lou Hague, originally of Parkersburg, former WVU Quarterback Chris Gray and WVU graduate Jim Samuel all lost their lives after a pair of planes crashed into the Twin Towers.

Shelly Marshall, the wife of a Morgantown native, died while working at the Pentagon. Huntington native Paul Ambrose was a passenger on American Airlines Flight 77, which crashed into the Defense Department’s headquarters.

But there were some West Virginians who were spared in the chaos, forever imprinted with the sights and sounds of one of America’s darkest days.

Business Meeting In Manhattan Leads To A Glimpse At History 

On September 11, 2001, then-West Virginia University economics professor Tom Witt was in New York City attending a conference. By that afternoon, he was on the phone with West Virginia Public Broadcasting’s Beth Vorhees.

“Tom, take us through it from the very beginning. This morning — what happened?,” Vorhees began.

“I’m attending the National Association of Business Economists annual meeting here in Manhattan. It was taking place at the World Trade Center Marriott Hotel,” he told Vorhees.

While eating breakfast just before 9 a.m., Witt and the others at the conference heard what he described as a “muffled explosion.” Chandeliers shook from the ceiling.

Startled and confused, Witt says those at the conference made their way onto the streets of Manhattan to try to figure out what was happening.

Tom Witt via Twitter
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He told Vorhees he then witnessed a second plane strike the other Twin Tower and then watched other gut-wrenching scenes that have been etched into America’s collective memory of that day.

“I was in shock as well as everyone else around me. I recalled one of my neighbors, Herb Morrison, who was the voice of the Hindenburg disaster in New Jersey, who said ‘Oh, the humanity!’” he said.

Vorhees, known by many as the matriarch of West Virginia Public Broadcasting and as someone well-versed in the history of radio, said she had also recalled the famous line from Morrison’s reporting of the Hindenburg’s explosion in May 1937.

Witt said he was unable to reach his wife, who was with him on the trip to New York City. Vorhees asked him about being separated from his wife amid the chaos of that day.

“I haven’t even talked to her,” he told Vorhees. “But she has called my office and said that she’s safe, which was a great relief to me — and I’ve got to connect up with her here very shortly.”

Then, while Witt was on the air, those he was with told him it was time to get moving towards somewhere safe.

“Where are you going? “Oh, can I go with you?” Witt could be heard speaking to someone nearby.

Vorhees then ended the interview as Witt headed off through the streets of Manhattan.

A Memory That Still Lingers 20 Years Later 

With the nation shaken and air travel halted as a result of the terrorist attack, it would be days before Witt and his wife would be able to make their way home to Morgantown. But while trapped in New York City, locals offered them clothes to wear and a place to sleep. He says, despite the tragedy, a sense of community, camaraderie and goodwill had overtaken New York City and the collective national experience.

Twenty years later, Witt looks back on the events of 9/11 and recalls a sense of confusion in the moment. As chaos reigned, he recalled that no one on the ground knew what we know now.

“At the time it occurred, we weren’t quite sure what had happened. That day in New York City, it was a very clear blue sky,” he said.

Shortly after the attack, Witt said he saw fighter planes overhead — not sure whether the United States had been invaded. He noted that airspace across America had been shut down.

The only thing you saw were military planes — and they were too far up to determine whether they were friend or foe. So the immediate thing that goes through your mind is: ‘Is the United States under attack?’” Witt said. “When we look back, in retrospect, that was an attack on the United States, by foreign entities — the first time that had happened in a very long time.”

Months later, Witt was in a meeting with colleagues at WVU’s College of Business and Economics when he was interrupted with a phone call from a New York City police officer.

“He said, ‘Well, we’ve gone through over a million tons of material from the World Trade Center hotel, and we found your briefcase and would you like your briefcase returned to you?’” Witt recalled in a recent interview with West Virginia Public Broadcasting.

“In that briefcase was the bill from the Marriott Hotel, which had been charged to me but had not been able to reimburse through the West Virginia State purchasing system,” Witt added. “When I got that briefcase — and I got that singed bill out — I processed, finally, my reimbursement for my travel. And I think it was in record speed.”

Since then, Witt has donated his briefcase and its contents to WVU to be archived — so that future generations can get a glimpse into his experience of that day.

Over the course of years, Witt has stayed in touch with other 9/11 survivors — particularly those who attended the same conference that brought him and his wife to New York City.

“I think the way in which most of us have been able to keep in touch — successfully, like it or not — has been through Facebook, and being able to support each other, as we pass critical days and challenges in our life,” he said.

As an eye-witness and a survivor of one America’s darkest days, Witt said he’s thought a lot about how his own experience on 9/11 shaped him.

“It’s easy when you go through an event like this, to say ‘That is going to affect me for the rest of my life,’” he said. “And certainly it has affected me in some ways, but I decided I’m not going to let it define my life.”

Witt said he believes America and the world has changed dramatically since September 11, 2001.

While the rise of the internet has allowed humans to connect more and more closely, Witt said he’s noticed a diminished collective experience amongst Americans. He said that has come into focus as the nation seems as divided as ever — especially in the midst of another shared crisis.

“I think the type of sense of community that we saw on that day, I wish we had continued with that today,” Witt said. “But it seems to me that we’ve actually lost a lot of that community — [based on] the events that have transpired since that time and the environment in which we live under a pandemic.”

Gov. Justice Opens Applications For Seats On New Intermediate Court

Gov. Jim Justice announced Thursday that applications for newly created judicial seats are now open.

According to a news release, the Judicial Vacancy Advisory Commission will accept applications for three seats on the Intermediate Court of Appeals through Oct. 11.

Following recommendations based on a list of qualified applicants, the governor will select three judges to fill staggered terms — after which elections will be held for each respective seat. Each seat comes with a salary of $142,000.

After years of attempts, West Virginia’s Republican-led Legislature passed Senate Bill 275 during the 2021 session to create the intermediate court system. It’s estimated to cost about $2 million annually.

The new layer of the state’s judiciary will hear appeals on final judgments in civil, family court, guardianship and workers’ compensation cases. The intermediate court of appeals will not have jurisdiction over criminal, juvenile justice or child abuse and neglect cases.

The new law calls for the intermediate court to be operational on or before July 1, 2022.

Ventilator Usage Hits All-Time Pandemic High In W.Va. As Hospitalizations, ICU Patients Approach Records

West Virginia hospitals are once again reporting record numbers as the coronavirus pandemic surges on.

Ventilator usage hit an all-time high Thursday, as 111 patients are currently making use of the life-saving breathing machine, according to data released Friday by the West Virginia Department of Health and Human Resources. An earlier record of 104 patients on ventilators was set Jan. 10 — just weeks after an end-of-2020 holiday surge.

Other data on pandemic-related hospitalizations continues to head toward record highs.

As of Friday, 714 patients were hospitalized with the coronavirus across the state. A previous record of 818 patients was set on Jan. 5.

The use of intensive care units across West Virginia is also on the rise, with 206 patients. An earlier high mark of 219 patients in intensive care came on Jan. 6.

Gov. Jim Justice acknowledged Friday the recent sharp rise in new cases, hospitalizations and other statistics.

“This situation is really serious,” Justice said. “We’re hanging on, but it is really tough.”

Those advising the governor on the state’s response to the pandemic also offered grim reports about the effect of the coronavirus on West Virginians and the state’s health care system.

“The bottom line, West Virginia, is: People are going to the hospital faster, they’re sicker and they’re younger,” said James Hoyer, the head of West Virginia’s Joint Interagency Task Force.

The current surge of the virus — spurred on by the highly contagious delta variant — has put immense stress on hospital staffing, Hoyer said.

“We continue, at the governor’s direction, to work closely with our hospitals — particularly through the Hospital Association — to monitor concerns related to capacity, staffing, and equipment. We are hitting a peak in the hospitals in West Virginia that are going to be a significant challenge.”

Current projections from the University of Washington’s Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation show West Virginia is set to hit a peak for hospitalizations and ICU use in late September — posting numbers double or nearly that — compared to current records.

According to those projections, the state is expected to need more than 1,500 hospital beds and about 500 ICU beds for COVID patients on Sept. 25.

Hoyer said those projections track with what public health officials expect to see in the coming weeks.

As the number of new cases continues to rise — including a number of “breakthrough” cases of those who have been fully vaccinated — Justice and other state officials urge residents to get the shots.

“You can rest assured — if you’re not vaccinated, you’re taking one hell of a chance,” Justice said. “That’s all there is to it.”

Hoyer noted that 82% of West Virginians hospitalized in the state are unvaccinated. State data also show 0.63% of fully vaccinated people have developed COVID-19.

While Justice has remained hesitant to reinstate a mask mandate, on Friday he did tease the possibility of having to issue an order to once again halt elective procedures at medical facilities across the state.

Tractor Trailer Carrying Moderna Vaccines Crashes In Mon County, Shuts Down Part Of I-79

The Monongalia County Sheriff’s Department says a tractor trailer carrying Moderna COVID-19 vaccines lost control on Interstate-79 early Friday morning — sending a truck driver to the hospital and closing a stretch of highway.

The Monongalia County Sheriff’s Department said a tractor trailer carrying Moderna COVID-19 vaccines lost control on Interstate-79 early Friday morning — sending a truck driver to the hospital and closing a stretch of highway.

Sheriff’s deputies were dispatched to a crash at mile marker 144 on I-79, according to a news release.

The tractor trailer carrying the vaccines — which were ultimately destined for a foreign country — lost control on the interstate, struck a concrete barrier, went down over a 30-foot embankment and rolled on its side. Officials say about 50 gallons of oil and antifreeze leaked into a nearby stream.

The Monongalia County Sheriff’s Department says the driver was extracted from the vehicle before being treated for minor injuries at Ruby Memorial Hospital.

The northbound lanes of I-79 have been closed at exit 139, and all traffic has been detoured onto Route 73. Southbound interstate traffic was not affected.

In a Facebook post, Monongalia County Emergency Management requested those who are HAZMAT certified respond to the scene.

Report: Ethics Office Says Rep. Alex Mooney Used Campaign Funds For Food, Family Vacation

Rep. Alex Mooney spent thousands of campaign dollars on food and a stay at a West Virginia resort, according to a report from Roll Call based on findings from the Office of Congressional Ethics.

Mooney also failed to report more than $40,000 in campaign expenses on required filings, the publication, which covers Congress, reported.

Roll Call reported Wednesday that a six-member non-partisan board at the OCE recommended that the House Ethics Committee — made up of five Republican and five Democratic House members — review the matter further.

According to the OCE findings reviewed by Roll Call, Mooney told investigators that expenses made at Chick-fil-A were done so as a means to speak with constituents. He also spent campaign funds on a trip with his daughter to Smoke Hole Caverns Log Cabin & Resort, which is located outside of Mooney’s district.

House members are prohibited by law and House rules from spending campaign money for personal use.

While the OCE report has not yet been made public, those under investigation by the office would be given a copy of the report and the investigation’s findings, according to those familiar with the OCE’s investigative process. Investigations turned over to the House Ethics Committee will typically be released within 45 days.

A spokesperson for the OCE declined to comment on the matter.

Mark Harris, a spokesperson for Mooney’s campaign, disputed the reporting from Roll Call in a statement to West Virginia Public Broadcasting.

“Some of these allegations are demonstrably false and are legitimate expenses to local West Virginia businesses. The OCE report specifically rejected many of the partisan allegations, which demonstrated these were perfectly allowed expenses,” Harris said.

Harris said, prior to the OCE inquiry, Mooney “adopted multiple new procedures, amended past reports to ensure their accuracy and hired a company to ensure full legal compliance and accurate reporting.” He said Mooney is fully cooperating on the matter.

“The Congressman will clear up this issue and as always fight for the people of West Virginia and their conservative values,” he said.

Kedric Payne, an ethics expert at the Campaign Legal Center and a former investigator and deputy chief counsel at the OCE, told West Virginia Public Broadcasting that — based on Roll Call’s reporting — investigators are taking the alleged violations seriously.

“You have a red flag when the member failed to disclose expenditures on the FEC report and apparently used campaign funds for personal use,” Paynes said. “Those things together make it look as though there’s an intentional cover-up of a violation.”

Payne also said it is possible that the ethics inquiry may turn into a criminal investigation.

“Typically, what you see in this type of situation — when a report becomes public that shows personal use of campaign funds — the Department of Justice will get involved [and it will] move over to a criminal action,” Payne said.

While the OCE investigates a number of complaints brought by members of the public, Payne said this type of potential violation is often considered to be among the most egregious.

“There are many ethical issues that come up with members. But this personal use violation is one of the most serious because of the criminal implications,” Payne said.

West Virginia will lose a congressional seat following the 2022 election — potentially pitting two of the state’s current three Republican members against one another in a primary race that cycle.

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