MSHA Report: Roof Bolter Was Electrocuted In Boone County Mine

The agency said in its preliminary report that he’d come in contact with a hook energized by a 480-volt cable that supplied power to a roof bolting machine.

Federal investigators shared more details about what caused the death of a coal miner in Boone County two weeks ago.

Kristopher Ball, a roof bolter, was electrocuted at the Coalburg Tunnel Mine Sept. 1, according to the Mine Safety and Health Administration.

The agency said in its preliminary report that he’d come in contact with a hook energized by a 480-volt cable that supplied power to a roof bolting machine. Ball, 33, had 12 years of experience.

Ball’s death came less than two weeks after that of William Richards on Aug. 17 at the Tunnel Ridge Mine in Ohio County.

Ball is the fourth coal miner killed on the job in West Virginia this year. Nine coal miners have died nationwide this year, approaching the 10 mine fatalities that occurred last year.

May 6, 1968: Incident at Hominy Falls Traps 25 Miners for Days

 On May 6, 1968, a continuous miner machine cut into an unmapped coal mine at Hominy Falls in Nicholas County. The incident unleashed a torrent of water from the old abandoned mine into the Gauley Coal & Coke Saxsewell No. 8 mine. Most miners made it out unharmed, but 25 were cut off from the entrance. The next 10 days were filled with tension and, often, despair.

The 25 men were in two groups: the 15 located closest to the surface kept in contact with rescuers and were found alive after six days. The other 10 were deeper in the mine and presumed dead. The rescuers, though, forged on, kept pumping out water, and inched closer to the trapped men. Finally, one rescuer saw a fresh footprint and called to his fellow searchers. On May 16—10 days after the disaster—the rescue team discovered that four of the miners had drowned tragically during the original accident. But, amazingly, six had survived under ground for a week and a half, bringing the total number of survivors to 21. Their recovery became known as the “Miracle of Hominy Falls.”

Record Low Year for On-the-Job Coal Mining Deaths

The nation’s coal mines are nearing a record low mark for on-the-job deaths for the third year in a row and have a chance to keep the number of fatal accidents in single digits for the first time.

With just a day left in 2016, U.S. coal mines have recorded nine deaths. West Virginia had four, Kentucky had two and there was one each in Alabama, Illinois and Pennsylvania. The low number can be attributed to far fewer coal mining jobs and tougher enforcement of mining safety rules.

“We know consistently things are getting better,” Mine Safety and Health Administration chief Joe Main said.

Industry cooperation has been crucial to making mines safer, he said, and “the angst that mine operators have with what (violations) we cite is dissipating as well.”

Dozens of mines have shuttered in recent years, especially in Appalachia. In 2011, there were about 91,000 working miners in the U.S. compared with 2015 when there were about 66,000, the lowest figure since the Energy Information Administration began collecting data in 1978. The 2016 numbers are not yet available.

Fewer mines and a smaller workforce amounts to fewer deaths and injuries, but Main noted that in 2011 — before employment numbers started to drop — a low mark was set for fatalities at 20. That was also a year after the deadly explosion at the Upper Big Branch mine in West Virginia killed 29 miners.

Previous lows in coal mining deaths were in 2014 with 16, and last year, with 11. For comparison, in 1966, the mining industry counted 233 deaths. A century ago there were 2,226.

Only one fatal accident was attributed to an explosion of gas or dust, which was to blame for the Upper Big Branch disaster. The lone explosion this year occurred July 29 at a Spartan Mining Company mine in Wyoming County, West Virginia.

Donald Workman, 58, and another miner were welding when they came in contact with methane at the surface of the mine, causing an ignition. Workman, who had worked in mines for 40 years, died six days after the blast.

Other deaths this year included wall collapses and a miner who crashed in a personal vehicle on an access road.

There have been 16 fatalities in 2016 in non-coal mines that produce gravel, sand, limestone and mineable metals. That mark also continued a downward trend, with 17 in 2015 and 30 in 2014.

Main said a lot of hard work by inspectors and industry leaders has gone into the three record-setting years. He also appeared to warn the incoming Trump administration against changing the successful formula.

“There’s a lot of ingredients that went into the recipe to make the cake that we now have in terms of having the outcomes of the safest years in mining history,” Main said. “If you start taking ingredients out of that, the cake’s not going to be as good, I can tell you that.”

Coal Miner Killed Monday in Monongalia Co. Mining Accident

State regulators say a coal miner is dead following an accident at a Monongalia County mine.

The West Virginia Office of Miners’ Health, Safety and Training said Tuesday that 49-year-old Raymond Scott Savage of Maidsville was killed Monday night at Redbone Mining Company’s Crawdad No. 1 Mine.

The office says in a news release that Savage was struck by a piece of rock while operating a roof bolting machine. He was a section foreman.

Inspectors are investigating the accident.

State figures show the accident is the fifth mining fatality this year. The most recent, in May, was an accident called a coal burst at a Patriot Coal mine in Boone County. Two miners were killed in that accident.

A man answering calls at the Redbone facility declined comment.  

Two Miners Die in Boone County Mine

Officials from the federal Mine Safety and Health Administration say two workers were trapped and killed in an accident at a West Virginia coal mine. 

The incident occurred at Patriot Coal’s Brody No. 1 Mine in Wharton, Boone County.

Updated Tuesday, May 13, 2014 at 1:21 p.m.

Patriot Coal says the miners were fatality injured while the mine was conducting retreat mining operations. This type of mining is considered one of the most dangerous.

It’s a method of leaving pillars to support the roof but since there is profitable coal left in those pillars, the operator pulls them causing an intentional collapse.

MSHA’s website says last year, the mine produced nearly 1-million tons of coal.

Patriot also confirmed that Brody Mine is also considered the Black Stallion Mine where employees were given a 60 day notice of potential layoffs late last month.

Updated Tuesday, May 13, 2014 at 9:25 a.m.

The West Virginia Office of Miners’ Health, Safety and Training (WVOMHS&T) confirms a fatal incident occurred last night at Patriot Coal’s Brody No. 1 Mine in Boone County. Eric D. Legg, 48, of Twilight, West Virginia, and Gary P. Hensley, 46, of Chapmanville, West Virginia, died in the incident, which occurred at approximately 8:47 p.m.  

No additional injuries have been reported, and no miners are reported trapped.  

WVOMHS&T inspectors are on site, and preliminary indications are that the incident resulted from a coal outburst. 

Original Post from Tuesday, May 13, 2014 at 8:51 a.m.

Amy Louviere of the Mine Safety and Health Administration told The Associated Press in an email Tuesday morning that a ground failure occurred at the mine around 8:30 p.m. Monday. She says the miners’ bodies have been recovered, and personnel from the agency are on the site. 

In October, the safety agency designated the mine as a pattern violator after  handing down 253 serious violations during a review period. An MSHA audit of Brody Mining’s records found injuries of miners that the operator failed to report to the federal agency. 

Patriot said in a statement at the time that it believed the mine didn’t qualify for the status and that it intended to contest it.

W.Va. miner killed on Friday identified

Update Monday October 7 9:00 a.m.

Leslie Fitzwater with the state Office of Miner’s Health Safety and training says 62-year-old Roger R. King from Moundsville died Friday. 

King died Friday after an accident at CONSOL Energy’s McElroy mine in Marshall County. He was employed as a longwall maintenance coordinator.

King had 42 years of mining experience with 17 years experience at McElroy mine.

According to an email from the The West Virginia Office of Miner’s Health Safety and Training the accident happened around  1 o’clock Friday afternoon.
 
The state mine safety office says preliminary information indicates the miner suffered a head injury while underground. Exactly what happened was not immediately clear.

King died on the way to the hospital.
 
Pennsylvania-based CONSOL didn’t immediately comment.

Information from the federal Mine Safety and Health Administration was not available right away because of the government shutdown.

“It is a terrible tragedy when the dangers that can accompany mining result in the loss of life,” said Governor Tomblin in a written statement.

“This miner and his family remain in the prayers and thoughts of Joanne and I, just as they surely do with all West Virginians.”
 

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