|
Re: OT A CASE FOR STRONG UNIONS: SAFETY VIOLATIONS AT WEST VIRGINIA MINE
In article <1136465419.259563.141340@g14g2000cwa.googlegroups.com>,
"Learning Richard" <learningrichard@gmail.com> wrote:
[color=blue]
> Why do workers need strong unions, even today? Read on:
>
> <[url]http://www.freep.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20060105/NEWS07/601050491/100[/url]
> 9>
>
> Nation/World
> HAZARDOUS WORKING CONDITIONS: Safety a problem at mine
>
> January 5, 2006
>
> Labor Department officials in Washington said Wednesday that West
> Virginia's Sago Coal Mine has had an above-average number of
> potentially fatal safety violations in recent years.
>
> And they denied that budget cuts and staff reductions have hindered the
> ability of the department's Mine Safety and Health Administration to
> ensure coal mine safety.
>
> Agency records indicate the mine was cited for 180 safety violations
> last year; inspectors designated 91 of them as "significant and
> substantial," meaning they could contribute to an immediate safety or
> health hazard.
>
> "The number of citations in 2005 would be quite a bit higher than
> normal for a mine that size," said Ray McKinney, head of the agency's
> mine-safety inspection.
>
> He said federal inspectors had spent 744 man-hours in the mine last
> year, nearly twice as much time as in the previous year, a reflection
> of concern about safety conditions.
>
> The mine is about 13,000 feet deep and has 141 employees, McKinney
> said.
>
> During a telephone news conference, McKinney and Robert Friend, acting
> deputy director of the MSHA, would not respond directly to charges from
> labor unions and mine industry critics that the number of "substantial
> and serious" violations in the mine have been growing for several
> years.
>
> Citations issued by mine inspectors last month at the end of the mine's
> most recent scheduled inspection ranged from problems such as faulty
> roof supports to inadequate ventilation and violations of regulations
> governing insulation of electric power cables, records show.
>
> Company officials have said they addressed all safety violations as
> they came to light.
>
> Most of the fines were for less than $200.
>
> Union officials said low fines failed to compel the company to correct
> dangerous conditions.
>
> The White House said the MSHA would conduct an investigation into the
> mine accident.
>
> "As we've done in the past, we hope to piece together how this accident
> happened, so we can take steps to prevent such a tragedy from ever
> occurring again," Friend said.
>
> He wouldn't say how the investigation would be conducted or whether the
> government would compel sworn testimony by officials of International
> Coal Group, the company that has operated the mine for about a year.[/color]
Rubbish!
--
"Once you learn to quit, it becomes a habit."
Vince Lombardi
|