Federal Mine Safety Agency Holding Input Meetings Around US

The federal agency that oversees mining safety is holding public stakeholder meetings in six states, including West Virginia.

The Department of Labor’s Mine Safety and Health Administration is seeking information on safety improvements with hauling vehicles and bulldozers at surface mines and belt conveyors at surface and underground mines.

The West Virginia meeting is Sept. 11 at the National Mine Health and Safety Academy in Beckley.

The other meetings in August and September will be held in Alabama, Texas, Nevada, New York and Arlington, Virginia. The agency says it is part of a larger initiative that MSHA is undertaking to reduce accidents involving powered haulage.

Those type of accidents accounted for half of the 28 mining fatalities in 2017.

Officials Working to Make West Virginia Schools Safer

School officials in north-central West Virginia are working to make school buildings safer before classes begin this fall.

Officials said the moves are meant to keep out intruders and come on the heels of school shootings around the nation.

Harrison County Safety Director Ken Winkie told The Exponent-Telegram that improvements there include installing shatter-resistant glass on the first-floor windows of many buildings and upgrading security cameras. He said entrances to schools also are being converted to make them safer and crews are working on a silent alarm system for emergencies.

Marion County Superintendent Gary Price said officials there invested $1 million over the summer to upgrade security cameras.

Barbour County Superintendent Jeff Woofter said officials there continue to work with a software company that helps schools with security.

Marshall Holding Online Safety Conference

Marshall University is hosting an annual computer safety conference for middle school students and parents.

Participants can learn about preventing online bullying, avoiding identity scams, keeping their information and computers safe, and avoiding the dangers of social media.

The event will be held Monday and Tuesday. Monday’s session at the Big Sandy Superstore Arena in Huntington is aimed at middle-school students, while Tuesday night’s session at Huntington East Middle School is for adults.

The event is sponsored by the Marshall University Digital Forensics and Information Assurance program, the Huntington police department, the FBI and the Appalachian Institute of Digital Evidence.

For further information, contact Marshall digital forensics program director John Sammons at (304) 696-7241.

W.Va. Capitol Police Reinforces Safety Rules Ahead of Sunday Rally

A Black Lives Matter rally will be held outside the Capitol Complex in Charleston on Sunday.

After recent violence in Charlottesville, Va., the West Virginia Department of Military Affairs announced in a news release Friday that safety rules for the Capitol grounds are being reinforced ahead of the rally.

The use of firearms and certain knives and bludgeons are already prohibited from the Capitol’s campus, however, the Department of Military Affairs says some additional items are now banned, effective immediately. These items include:

  • Sticks, including those on signs
  • Helmets
  • Shields
  • Water guns or pistols
  • Capstun or pepper spray

Bicycles and animals will also be prohibited during Sunday’s event in the Capitol’s North Plaza.
Other items may be prohibited if they appear to be a risk to people or property. The Department of Military Affairs asks that visitors use common sense and be mindful of the items prohibited before they enter the Capitol grounds. 

Backbacks, coolers, and bags brought on to the campus could be searched. 

Masks, hoods, or face coverings on the Capitol grounds or other public spaces are also prohibited. 

The Department of Military Affairs and the Capitol Police will be coordinating its safety and security measures with other law enforcement agencies as well as with the Kanawha County Prosecuting Attorney’s Office.

Marshall University to Make Safety Improvements on Campus

Marshall University has begun taking steps to increase security measures around campus after a survey revealed students felt less safe walking outside at night.

The university has begun a series of on-campus improvements in response to a survey conducted earlier in the academic year in which 40 percent of students said they felt unsafe walking at night. The survey results and changes follow five armed robberies across the street from the main campus between October 2016 and April 2017.

Physical Plant Director Dale Osburn says they will update campus lighting as well as trim tree branches to promote open viewing.

Lawmakers Consider Beefing Up Gas Industry Safety

Lawmakers are considering a change to the way natural gas accidents are reported at the state level.

The House Industry and Labor Committee took up a bill Tuesday that clarifies who is alerted in the event of an accident on a natural gas well site or pipeline.

House Bill 4323 requires all such incidents be reported to the West Virginia Division of Homeland Security and Emergency Management within fifteen minutes or face a 50 thousand dollar fine.

The bill was produced through the work of a special commission set up to review and update existing laws and regulations governing the state’s oil and natural gas industry.

Some members of the Industry and Labor Committee felt that the penalty was too high given the short amount of time allowed to report an incident, so an amendment was added to the bill. The change allows the Director of the Division of Homeland Security and Emergency Management to assess a fine between $2500 dollars and $50,000 dollars for not reporting the incident.

Larry Malone is the Director of Policy for Governor Tomblin, and is the Chairman of the West Virginia Commission on Oil and Natural Gas Industry Safety. He says the amendment adds flexibility, but it doesn’t hurt the integrity of the bill.

“It doesn’t really change the fact that you could be assessed $50,000 dollars, it just provides the director with some discretion based upon the situation about whether he assesses the maximum fine or some fine that’s in-between, but again, to-date, nobody has been assessed, no company’s been assessed that fine, because they have all understood and responded appropriately when they have these types of emergency incidents,” Malone explained.

The committee passed House Bill 4323, 16 to 5. It now moves to the House Energy Committee before going to the full House for consideration.

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