Discussing Homelessness And Looking At The Coal Industry, This West Virginia Morning

On this West Virginia Morning, Huntington’s mayor-elect discusses homelessness and we look at the state’s coal industry.

On this West Virginia Morning, addressing homelessness is a growing challenge throughout West Virginia. Huntington, the state’s second largest city, is no exception. Randy Yohe discussed the problems and solutions with Huntington mayor-elect Patrick Farrell, who listed tackling homelessness as a key component of his campaign platform.

And we look at the state’s coal industry, including lagging use at power plants, a new black lung rule and a pollution lawsuit.

West Virginia Morning is a production of West Virginia Public Broadcasting, which is solely responsible for its content.

Support for our news bureaus comes from Shepherd University and Marshall University School of Journalism and Mass Communications.

Maria Young produced this episode.

Listen to West Virginia Morning weekdays at 7:43 a.m. on WVPB Radio or subscribe to the podcast and never miss an episode. #WVMorning

Advocates For Mine Workers Commend Black Lung Rule

The United Mine Workers of America (UMWA) says a final rule by the Labor Department will help miners who have contracted black lung. 

The new rule issued by the Mine Safety and Health Administration (MSHA) requires coal companies to cover the disability benefits of miners who have black lung as a result of working in mines. 

“The burden of dealing with this always-fatal disease has for too long fallen on its victims. It’s time to put the burden where it belongs – on the coal companies that ignored laws and regulations that are in place to keep mine workers safe and healthy,” said UMWA President Cecil Roberts in an emailed press release. 

UMWA says that coal companies were using the bankruptcy process to be relieved of their obligation to pay the disability benefits. 

The union says $1 billion in disability benefits for those diagnosed with Black Lung were shifted to an already faltering trust fund that is backed by taxpayer dollars. This rule shifts it back to coal companies. 

“This is a long-overdue rule that will have a significant impact in helping to ensure benefits to miners who have contracted black lung will be paid, and be paid by those responsible – the coal companies,”  Roberts said in the press release. 

The companies will now be required to post adequate security bonds for their black lung obligations.

The rule will become effective 30 days after its publication in the Federal Register.

Hip Hop And Black Lung, Inside Appalachia

One of America’s greatest contributions to world culture … is hip hop. A new compilation documents what it sounds like across Appalachia. 

Also people in the region love their local water springs, but in Berkeley Springs, West Virginia, they take that dedication to another level.

And, congressional Republicans are trying to freeze funding for new mine safety rules. Advocates are concerned. 

In This Episode

  • “No Options” Explores Hip-Hop in Appalachia
  • The Watery Allure Of Berkeley Springs
  • The Continuing Battle Over Black Lung

“No Options” Explores Hip-Hop in Appalachia

Rapper Monstalung is one of the artists featured in “No Options,” a CD collection of Appalachian hip hop. Courtesy

Hip hop has been in Appalachia for about as long as the genre has been around, about 50 years. A new compilation from June Appal Recordings, “No Options: Hip-Hop in Appalachia” 24 tracks from across the region. Mason Adams spoke with executive producer JK Turner, and rapper Eric Jordan, also known as Monstalung. 

The Watery Allure Of Berkeley Springs

Fans of spring water come from all over to collect water from Berkeley Springs.
Zack Harold/West Virginia Public Broadcasting.

There are natural springs all over Appalachia. Before indoor plumbing, that’s where most folks got their fresh water. In Berkeley Springs, West Virginia, people still fill jugs with spring water to lug back home. In 2022, Folkways reporter Zack Harold visited the springs and brought us this story.

The Continuing Battle Over Black Lung

Assistant Secretary for Mine Safety and Health Chris Williamson moderates a panel on Black Lung and MSHA’s new silica dust rule.

As Appalachian miners cut into increasingly thinner seams of coal, they’re encountering more silica dust from rock. The dust contributes to an advanced form of black lung disease. Coal miners and advocates have spent decades negotiating with the federal government to add safety rules. When a new rule was finalized in April, advocates celebrated, but before it could take full effect, opponents threw up another roadblock.

Emily Rice reported.

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Our theme music is by Matt Jackfert. Other music this week was provided by Joshua Outsey, Monstalung, Tim and Dave Bing, Deep Jackson and Dinosaur Burps.

Bill Lynch is our producer. Zander Aloi is our associate producer. Our executive producer is Eric Douglas. Kelley Libby is our editor. Our audio mixer is Patrick Stephens. We had help this week from folkways editor Chris Julin. You can find us on Instagram and Twitter @InAppalachia.

You can send us an email: InsideAppalachia@wvpublic.org.

You can find us on Instagram, Threads and Twitter @InAppalachia. Or here on Facebook.

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Inside Appalachia is a production of West Virginia Public Broadcasting.

Legislative Interims, Fighting Miners’ Lung Disease And Protecting Our Forests This West Virginia Week

On this West Virginia Week, we’ll review some of the top stories from legislative interims – to find out some of the issues lawmakers are working on. 

Plus delve into how nature lovers can help protect forests from illegal activities.

We’ll also take a look at the latest hurdle for a program designed to make coal mines safer place to work. 

Maria Young is our host this week. Our theme music is by Matt Jackfert.

West Virginia Week is a web-only podcast that explores the week’s biggest news in the Mountain State. It’s produced with help from Bill Lynch, Briana Heaney, Chris Schulz, Curtis Tate, Emily Rice, Eric Douglas, Jack Walker, Liz McCormick and Maria Young.
Learn more about West Virginia Week.

Will The New Silica Dust Standard Rule Be Implemented?

Before a new MSHA rule to limit miner’s exposure to silica dust could take full effect, opponents threw up a new roadblock.

A human takes on average 20,000 breaths per day. Imagine each breath heavy and tight from a career underground working a seam for coal or valuable minerals, a constant reminder of what you sacrificed for your family’s well-being.

“I worked in the coal mine for 27 and a half years,” Gary Hairston, the National Black Lung Association’s president said. “I come out at 48 [years old] with black lung.”

Since leaving the mines, he has been advocating for miners’ rights and safe working conditions.

“I’m worried about young coal miners,” Hairston said. “I don’t want [them] to be like I am.”

The nation’s top health officials have urged the Mine Safety and Health Administration (MSHA), the federal agency in charge of mine safety, to adopt strict rules to protect miners from rock dust.

Black lung and silicosis are both forms of pneumoconiosis, a condition where inflammation and scarring make it hard for the lungs to get enough oxygen. It is incurable but steps can be taken to slow the disease and improve quality of life.

Black lung diagnoses doubled in the last decade. Advanced disease has quadrupled since the 1980s in Virginia, West Virginia and Kentucky.

In recent decades, cases have risen further as miners dig through more rock layers to get to less accessible coal, generating deadly silica dust in the process.

“What’s happening is a lot of these mines, especially in Appalachia have been mined for hundreds of years decades and they are now mining rock, and so it’s this constant hitting of rock from these machines that is causing an increase of silica dust in these mines,” said Erin Bates, director of communications for the United Mine Workers of America (UMWA).

Respirable crystalline silica is a carcinogen. It can cause lung disease, silicosis, lung cancer, progressive massive fibrosis and kidney disease. Coal dust containing silica dust has been shown to increase the severity of black lung cases and affect miners even as early as their 30s and 40s.

Mine operators are supposed to ventilate mine work areas to lower the concentration of coal and rock dust, as well as methane.

But how much silica dust is too much? For years, MSHA set an upper limit of 100 micrograms per cubic meter averaged over an eight-hour shift.

But after years of pressure from advocates like Hairston, it cut that in half, to 50 micrograms per cubic meter.

Mine operators have a legal requirement to maintain safe levels of exposure in the mines at all times. Under the new rule, if levels are too high, mine operators must take immediate corrective action to lower the concentration of respirable dust to at, or below, the respirable dust standard and contact MSHA, according to Assistant Secretary Chris Williamson. 

“That was one of the new provisions in the final rule, that the mine operator will have to notify MSHA, because we want to know that too. They have to take immediate corrective action,” Williamson said. “And resample to be able to verify, did that corrective action address the issue?” 

Under the new rule, when respirable silica dust levels go above the 50-microgram limit, mine operators must provide miners with respirators and ensure they are worn until exposure levels are safe.

The use of respirators when levels are high is part of the rule that many advocates and miners say doesn’t go far enough.

“We truly believe that instead of requiring a miner to wear a respirator, they should shut that mine down and improve the ventilation in that mine, so that there is not any extreme case of silica dust exposure in that area,” Bates said.

The new, stricter safety rules went into effect in June, although coal producers have 12 months to comply.

Advocates like Vonda Robinson, the vice president of the National Black Lung Association, celebrated the new rule.

“I think with this new ruling, I think it’s going to be great for the coal, the coal mines, and also the coal miners,” Robinson said.

As a retired miner, Hairston won’t benefit from the new safety measures, but he’s worked tirelessly to push it through, visiting Capitol Hill to testify about working conditions in the mines.

“The rule is pretty good,” Hairston said. “There’s a lot of stuff we got put in, it is good. The thing is, is the defunding.”

In July, the U.S. House Appropriations Committee passed a spending bill for the federal Department of Labor that includes a line preventing any funds from being used to implement the new rule.

“To cut the funding from MSHA, an organization that already has very limited funding in the first place, is a travesty to all miners out there,” Bates said.

According to Policy and Advocacy Associate with the Appalachian Citizens Law Center, Brendan Muckian-Bates, MSHA’s Coal Mine Safety and Enforcement program has already lost about half its staff over the last decade.

“One of the challenges that MSHA faces is they’ve never been funded at the appropriate level, the level that they have requested of Congress,” Muckian-Bates said. “In fiscal year 2023 for example, the agency requested over $423 million, and that year received just shy of $388 million. And this is a real challenge that the agency has, because with the new silica dust rule, certainly there will be a need for more mine safety and health inspectors, who are already overworked, who already have to travel and conduct appropriate inspections and make sure, obviously, that the health and safety of miners is taken care of.”

Sam Petsonk is an Oak Hill-based lawyer who practices employment law and represents miners seeking black lung benefits. He said the rule would benefit the coal industry and coal mining by saving money and lives.

“The silica rule is 30 years overdue, and this administration has implemented it, and the Republicans in Congress are trying to repeal that new rule legislatively, by defunding the agency,” Petsonk said.

Some miners and their advocates are also dubious about relying on mine operators to tell MSHA about increases in dangerous dust.

“Our concern is that, if left to their own devices, operators will find another way, another loophole around this silica dust rule, and miners will continue to be exposed to dangerous levels of silica dust,” Muckian-Bates said.

But Williamson said he’s already heard from mine operators who, because of the new rule, are evaluating their mines to get ahead of things.

“We’re moving full steam ahead to implement this rule,” Williamson said. “So unless there’s, you know, a law that’s passed that tells me that I cannot do that, or there’s a court that, you know, put something in place, like an injunction, or issues an injunction that says I can’t, we’re moving full steam ahead. And we’ve asked everybody in the mining community, labor industry, everybody to come together and really do what’s right, and all of us to focus on protecting, you know, miners’ health.”

Since the fate of the new rule is now in the hands of the U.S. Congress, West Virginia Public Broadcasting reached out to all the state’s federal lawmakers to learn where they stand.

Replying by email, Sen. Joe Manchin’s office said they could not say anything on the record about the new rule or its implementation.

Also by email, Sen. Shelley Moore Capito said, “The safety of miners’ health is paramount,” and noted that the Senate version of the bill would actually increase funding for MSHA, not cut it, like the House version.

Representatives Carol Miller and Alex Mooney did not respond to our request for comment.

“I have full confidence that the Senate Democratic Caucus will prevent the Republicans from blocking this new silica rule,” Petsonk said. “But you know, if control of the Senate changes in the next year, this rule may be in jeopardy.”

Editor’s Note: This story is part of a series we’re calling “Public Health, Public Trust,” running through August. It is a collaboration with the Global Health Reporting Center and is supported by the Pulitzer Center. 

Electricity Rates And Silica Dust Regulations, This West Virginia Morning

On this West Virginia Morning, Appalachian Power has asked state regulators for permission to raise electricity rates for the first time in five years. As Curtis Tate reports, the public reaction has been less than receptive.

On this West Virginia Morning, Appalachian Power has asked state regulators for permission to raise electricity rates for the first time in five years. As Curtis Tate reports, the public reaction has been less than receptive.

Also in this episode, coal miners and their advocates have spent decades negotiating with the federal government to put safety rules in place that limit the miners’ exposure to toxic silica dust, which causes black lung and silicosis.

When a new rule was finalized in April, miners and their advocates celebrated. But even before it could take full effect, opponents threw up a new roadblock.

West Virginia Public Broadcasting’s Emily Rice brings the latest story from our series “Public Health, Public Trust” produced in partnership with the Global Health Reporting Center and with support from the Pulitzer Center.

West Virginia Morning is a production of West Virginia Public Broadcasting, which is solely responsible for its content.

Support for our news bureaus comes from Shepherd University.

Maria Young produced this episode.

Listen to West Virginia Morning weekdays at 7:43 a.m. on WVPB Radio or subscribe to the podcast and never miss an episode. #WVMorning

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