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    Feds show fake safety records in WV mine blast

    BEAVER, W.Va. (AP) — Federal investigators say they have proof that Massey Energy kept fake safety records to throw off inspectors at a West Virginia coal mine where 29 men died last year, the deadliest U.S. coal field disaster in four decades.

    In a private briefing Tuesday night, officials with the Mine Safety and Health Administration showed relatives of the Upper Big Branch miners side-by-side comparisons of books that purported to document the same shift. The agency was holding a public news conference on its findings Wednesday.

    In one authentic report, Massey recorded that a mining machine was shut down because of problems with ventilation and a potentially explosive accumulation of methane gas. The on-shift inspection report, meanwhile, indicated no problems with gas, said underground miner Bobbie Pauley, whose fiance Howard "Boone" Payne was among the men killed in the April 5, 2010, blast near Montcoal in southern West Virginia.

    "You put in an inspection report what you wanted the inspectors to see," Pauley said. "The books, they told two different stories. But I already knew that because I worked there."

    Massey was bought by Alpha natural Resources this month. Alpha spokesman Ted Pile said Wednesday the company was hearing about the faked reports for the first time.

    "It's a claim I'm sure we'll look into as we conduct our own review of what happened at Massey's Upper Big Branch mine." Pile said in an email.

    Pauley returned to Upper Big Branch only briefly after the explosion and now works at another former Massey operation bought out by Alpha. She was among about 30 people — nearly half of them lawyers — who attended the briefing for several hours at a mine safety training academy in Beaver.

    A public presentation for MSHA's latest findings was set for Wednesday morning. But Pauley and two other relatives, Gary Quarles and Clay Mullins, said the federal team offered nothing new and pushed back the timeline for completion of its final report for at least four more months. They'll now have to wait until October, at the earliest, for a comprehensive report.

    The explosion remains the subject of a criminal investigation by the U.S. Department of Justice, and MSHA has said it won't release some information to avoid hindering that probe. It largely reiterated its past public statements, offering detail but no blockbuster revelations, family members said.

    MSHA contends the explosion started with a small, naturally occurring release of methane gas that was then fueled by coal dust into a devastating inferno that tore through the mine in a series of explosions over a few minutes. The agency has blamed a poorly maintained cutting head on a piece of mining equipment for sparking the blast and a malfunctioning water sprayer for failing to douse it.

    An independent investigation commissioned by former Gov. Joe Manchin reached the same conclusion last month.

    Mullins, whose brother Rex died in the blast, said he was frustrated that MSHA continues to blame Massey for the well-documented and serious safety problems at Upper Big Branch, rather than accepting blame for its own failures.

    "It's a finger-pointing game: 'It's your fault. It's this guy's fault,'" he said. "This whole thing has been very frustrating. We didn't learn anything new.

    "Massey didn't do their job, providing these men with a safe work area. MSHA didn't do their job by enforcing the law and making them provide the men with a safe working environment. Same with the state. I blame all three parties," Mullins said. "And I still do. And I will, until the day I die."

    Although MSHA acknowledged it needs to do better, he said, it stopped short of apologizing.

    "I think they know they're a guilty party in this, too," he said. "They didn't say it that way, but they know."

    Manchin's study blamed former owner Massey Energy for ignoring the most basic safety practices in the industry, allowing highly explosive coal dust and methane gas to accumulate when it failed to provide either enough fresh air flow or enough pulverized limestone on the mine's walls to render coal dust inert.

    MSHA offered some more detail Tuesday, Pauley said, "but the bottom line is the same: It was preventable. It didn't have to happen."

    Quarles said the history of violations spoke for itself. MSHA knew there were problems at Upper Big Branch, he said. Inspectors were in the mine the day of the blast and did nothing.

    "Somebody should have stepped up and said we need to take a better look at this mine and, if we have to, go in and shut it down," he said.

    "I thought this meeting would give us quite a bit more, and then in a month that it would all be over," said Quarles, whose son Gary Wayne also died. "We didn't learn nothing I didn't already know."

    Quarles credited MSHA for acknowledging it could have done a better job.

    "And I hope they do," he said. "We don't want to see any more families going through what we had to go through."

     

    43 comments

    • Emma G  •  11 mths ago
      I wish this was actually surpising and that the person in charge of the company who did such a thing would go to jail, but that would only happen in another country.
      • oripunk3485 11 mths ago
        Remember, corporations are people only when they're expressing themselves with cash to candidates, or otherwise enjoying the benefits of legal personhood. But God forbid they be treated as people when they commit a crime.
      • Yoohoo 11 mths ago
        I doubt that they would go to jail in other countries either, greed is God.
    • PartOfThe99  •  11 mths ago
      I worked in a mine some years ago. No brakes on haulage equipment or personnel transports, improper ventilation on the mining faces, and using the wrong grade of diesel for underground. Yet the mine in 2006 received a safety award from MSHA.

      So how did all of this happen? I happened to work there during an MSHA inspection, and we were handed lockoput tags before the inspector arrived. Our job as maintenance was to lock out every piece of equipment down there. The miners were to close off every stope (active mining face). When the MSHA inspectors arrived, they were treated to a mine where nothing at all was working. The award was only given because there were so many hoiours without workplace injuries; meaning they got it because they were lucky, not because they were safety conscious
      mine foreman handed us a haldf
      • PartOfThe99 11 mths ago
        Sorry about the screwups. on my screen, this new format only shows the first two lines; the rest must be typed blind. Thanks, YAHOO!
      • treadhead 11 mths ago
        check the bottom right corner of the text box. It allows you to enlarge it.
      • Gregory 11 mths ago
        Please rewrite it. I'm interested in your experience!
    • Bo Loney  •  11 mths ago
      Time for somebody to go to prison.
      • robert 11 mths ago
        For life! People died!
      • C M 11 mths ago
        This is what you get when hard-right Repukians move to deregulate industries. You get chaos, cheating, profiteering, highly illegal behavior, palm-greasing, kickbacks, complete unsafe work environments, environmental disasters, unfair labor practices, the list goes on and on...

        Remember the BP/Gulf disaster - that's more of the same...
    • Jim M  •  11 mths ago
      The previous adminstration had lax standards accross the board when it came to safety and protection of workers and all Americans. This was considered an obstacle to business. They Ryan Budget would even make it worse. But as long as they can pay there 13 pieces of silver to have there political puppets not enforce the laws to protect the workes and all Americans. More of this will happen I am sad to say.
      • steve s 11 mths ago
        Politics has nothing to do with this, drooler.
      • Ray 11 mths ago
        Wrong Steve. The tea party and Republicans want these big corporations to self regulate themselves. So if they had it their way these companies would have no one to send these fake safety records to.
      • robert 11 mths ago
        Every administration since George Washington has protected corporate interests over worker safety. Workers need to protect themselves. That is the EXACT reason unions were invented.
    • C M  •  11 mths ago
      This is what you get when hard-right Republicans move to deregulate an industry: chaos, cheating, profiteering, highly illegal behavior, palm-greasing, kickbacks, completely unsafe work environments, environmental disasters, unfair labor practices (and other issues) reign supreme... The list of grievances could well be limitless.

      Remember the BP/Gulf disaster - that's more of the same...
      • josh 11 mths ago
        This proves the GOP is right less regulations create jobs. When workers die in unsafe working conditions the company will have to hire more workers.
    • Matt  •  11 mths ago
      Whenever any Republican talks about how there's too much regulation, someone ought to mention this horrible incident.

      Then watch them stutter and blink and make excuses.
    • jazzbooksfood  •  11 mths ago
      This article demonstrates just one reason why "self regulation" does not work & can not be allowed.

      Or, as Mr Reagan liked to say: "trust, but verify."
    • Anthony  •  11 mths ago
      The Mine Safety and Health Administration, or as Bachman would call it, the job killing administration. Why do we want to punish Massey's "success", when we ought to be cutting the budget of regulatory agencies to business can boom (no pun intended, but sarcasm is)
    • Armage  •  11 mths ago
      This is what happens when profit goes before people, America needs to unionize and make companies accountable for wages as safe work conditions.
    • Bryan  •  11 mths ago
      Since none of the usual right wing posters have anything to say for themselves on this one I will say it for them? Here goes.... OH YEAH???? WELL TOUGH NOOGIES!!!! NO ONE FORCED THEM TO GO DOWN IN THAT MINE!!!! SO THERE!!!! BUNCHA LOOSER MINERS!!! NYAH NYAH!!!
      Yeah, i had to say LOOSERS instead of LOSERS so it would look authentic right wing nutcase. So how did i do? Maybe i can get a job writiting for glenn beck!
    • Larry  •  11 mths ago
      It would be laughable if it wasn't so damn deadly ...
    • the Truth Hurts  •  11 mths ago
      Was the Mining Safety & Health Administration Agency one of those that the Republicans wanted to decimate?
    • allen  •  11 mths ago
      Yessir!! We dont need no steenkin regulations! Why, when the mines they blow up, it frees up more of dat der coal we need to sell in order to afford the CEOs third solid gold Ferrari. Lots more outta work people we can just toss down the shaft after da fire be out. And every widow don't gotta pay for burial -- dey be buried already!

      Remember, keep da ebil gubment outta our lives! We rich business owners know better what's best for you...
    • JamesJ  •  11 mths ago
      Mine owners back "no regulations" Bachmann for President!
    • MrBarolo  •  11 mths ago
      But Republicans say business is oppressed by "burdensome" regulation. Costs jobs. Need to eliminate the government agencies tasked with protecting the public from liars like this. The market will magically do all the regulating we need.
      Explain your economics to the families of the dead.
    • TOMCAT  •  11 mths ago
      More reason to remove government intervention.
      They keep finding out the hidden safety cheats.
    • Robert Falls  •  11 mths ago
      Money talks, and has forever.
    • A Yahoo! User  •  11 mths ago
      There better be prison terms. The people who perpetrated this should be charged with murder. This wasn't negligence, it was fraud and they intentionally sent those men into an unsafe work environment for profit.

      I'd like to see the people in charge considered for the death penalty. It would send an unmistakable message to American corporate dirtbags nation wide.
    • Alice  •  11 mths ago
      More of that gubmint interference for you! We don't need gubmint being a baby sitter! These companies will look out for their workers and their clients, because market forces will pressure them into it!

      The fools who continue to promote (and vote for) that line of thinking have to be the most ignorant in the nation. Businesses in every industry you can think of have proved again and again over DECADES that they will injure and kill workers, put the customers' lives at risk, and poison the air, water and soil without thinking twice if there's even a chance doing so will help an executive pick up an annual bonus, or if it even might boost shareholder value by even a penny a share.

      Whether it's mining, finance, food, medicine, manufacturing or anything else, these guys have to be watched as closely as is possible, or people DIE.
    • Phil  •  11 mths ago
      Right wingers take note--THIS is why America is moving towards socialism and bigger government. Time continues to prove that rich men, big business owners, cannot generally be trusted. They care about lining their pockets, and when they can't do it legally (remember child labor? No worker safety laws? Paying blacks and women much less, if hiring them at all?) they'll happily dirty-deal to screw over the worker for their own interest. Trickle down economy is a joke. Sadly, raising the taxes on the wealthy won't work either--they'll just take 100% of their business to China and India, with all their money in swiss banks. Monarchs are bad news, but not nearly as bad as merchants ruling a country.
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