Two workers died after they were trapped as the ground failed at a West Virginia coal mine with a history of safety violations, federal and state officials said Tuesday.
The ground
failure occurred just about 8:45 p.m. Monday, trapping the workers,
safety agency officials told The Associated Press in emails. The miners'
bodies were recovered, and safety personnel were on the site of Brody
Mine No. 1 in Boone County, about 50 miles south of Charleston.
No
additional injuries or trapped workers were reported, spokeswoman
Leslie Fitzwater Smithson of the West Virginia Office of Miners' Health,
Safety and Training said in an email.
Preliminary indications show that a coal burst was responsible, according to state officials and mine owner Patriot Coal.
Coal
bursts are violent failures of ribs, roofs or floors in underground
mines, according to descriptions from the federal Mine Safety and Health
Administration and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
Monday's incident involved the ground, MSHA spokeswoman Amy Louviere
told The Associated Press in an email.
The bursts — a hazard in
mining for decades, according to the CDC — cause coal to be ejected into
the mine with enough energy to injure or kill miners.St. Louis-based Patriot said in an emailed statement that Monday's burst occurred during retreat mining operations — when pillars that support the roof are collapsed and removed from a completed area of work.
In October, the federal
safety agency designated Brody Mine as a pattern violator, meaning it
had repeatedly broken federal health and safety regulations in the
previous year.
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. The statement did not
address the mine's safety record.
During
MSHA's most recent review period from April 1, 2013, to March 31, the
mine was cited for 192 safety violations, including 33 for high or
reckless disregard for miners' health and safety. The mine also received
four citations this month for violations including damaged rollers or
other conveyor belt components.
Since
January, six accidents have occurred at the mine, including one
incident in which a miner's finger was caught in machinery and a portion
had to be amputated, according to MSHA's online records.
On
March 11, gas ignited in an entry of a section of the mine as workers
were extracting coal, according to MSHA. No miners were injured.
The remaining four accidents involved muscle strains and other minor incidents.The mine produced 954,741 tons of coal in 2013, MSHA records show, and it employs about 270 workers.
Among them were the two killed Monday: Eric D. Legg, 48, of Twilight and Gary P. Hensley, 46, of Chapmanville.
Robert
Rash, chief of the Wharton-Barrett Volunteer Fire Department, said he
grew up with Legg in the Wharton area. He said Legg became a coal miner
after he graduated from high school.
"That's
all that's around here, actually. Deep mine and strip mine," said Rash,
whose department was among the responders to the accident.
"I was sick to my stomach" after learning about the incident, he said.
He said Legg was always laughing and joking.
"He was a good guy. A real good guy," Rash said.
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