February 10, 2012

Flashlights Improperly Marked with MSHA Emblem

From: MSHA

Bayco Products Flashlight Model Numbers XXP-5420B, XXP-5420G, XPP-5422B, and XPP-5422G were improperly labeled with the MSHA emblem making it appear they were MSHA approved products. Bayco’s website and advertising materials also improperly identified the flashlights as MSHA Approved. These flashlights are NOT MSHA approved and must not be used where MSHA approved equipment is required. Bayco flashlights with the MSHA emblem do not comply with Title 30 Code of Federal Regulations §75.1703 and 75.1703-1.

See MSHA notice attached below.

BaycoFlashlight292012

January 31, 2012

MSHA’s Accident Prevention Program: New Miner/New Hire Training

Training a new miner, a newly hired experienced miner, or any miner assigned to a task in which they have no previous experience is very important. These statistics for 2011 illustrate that importance.

New Miner Training

 

Mine Operators should consider adopting more training programs that emphasize the tasks and activities new miners will be performing. Whether a miner is new to the industry or is experienced and new to the mine, there may be inherent dangers associated with geological conditions, different types of equipment used or specific practices of which these miners may not be aware.

January 25, 2012

MSHA shuts Ky. mine over coal fire, other hazards

MORGANTOWN, W.Va. (AP) – Federal inspectors issued 174 citations and 19 orders at troubled coal mines last month, and shut down a Kentucky operation with explosives near a burning pile of coal.

The Mine Safety and Health Administration says it issued 32 citations and 12 orders against Coal Creek Mining LLC’s No. 2 Mine in Floyd County, Ky.

Inspectors found a 5- by 10-foot coal pile on fire about 23 feet from two unsecured cases of explosives.

They also found a 5-gallon oil bucket full of burning coal near a portal and loose coal up to 30 inches deep under conveyor belts and near ignition sources.

January 19, 2012

Panel aims to improve mine safety programs

By Don Hopey, Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Miner self-rescue techniques, equipment and training are much better now than they were before the Sago mine disaster in January 2006, but an interdisciplinary committee of the National Academies has begun a yearlong study to determine if they could be better.

The interdisciplinary committee, which held its first three-day meeting in southwestern Pennsylvania last week, will review technological advances that could help miners escape and study how judgement and decision making is affected in a mining explosion or cave-in situation.

January 12, 2012

Slips, Trips & Falls Hazard Alert

From: MSHA

In 2010, 23 percent of all aggregates sector injuries were due to a slip or fall. During this period, about 400 persons fell or lost their footing and suffered an injury. 

January 5, 2012

Mine safety advocate reacts to Capito’s bill

From: West Virginia Public Broadcasting

January 4, 2012 · Republican Congresswoman Shelley Moore Capito introduced a new mine safety bill shortly after the federal Mine Safety and Health Administration released its report into what happened at Upper Big Branch.

California Democrat George Miller introduced the Robert C. Byrd Mine Safety Protection Act of 2010. It was meant to address issues learned at the Upper Big Branch explosion. It failed to pass the House along party lines. The National Mining Association and Republicans cited the need to find out the results of ongoing investigations before voting in favor of new laws.

December 23, 2011

MSHA issues hundreds of citations in November

From: AP

CHARLESTON, W.Va. — November inspections of problem U.S. mines produced 315 citations and orders at 10 coal operations and six metal/nonmetal mines.

The Mine Safety and Health Administration says coal mines got 200 of those citations and 50 of the orders.

MSHA increased inspections at mines with a poor compliance history after the 2010 explosion that killed 29 men in West Virginia’s Upper Big Branch mine.

Daystar Coal LLC’s No. 3 Mine in Pike County, Ky., drew 52 citations and 11 orders when inspectors found a bearing on a conveyor tailpiece glowing orange and smoking. Explosive coal dust was floating in the air and loose coal was piled 18 inches deep.

December 16, 2011

Cliffs Natural Resources receives safety achievement from MSHA

From: The State Journal (WV)

Cliffs Natural Resources touted a mine safety award for working 34,868 straight employee hours without a lost workday.

Cliffs announced Dec. 14 the U.S. Department of Labor’s Mine Safety and Health Administration awarded Cliffs Logan County Coal’s Elklick Tipple with the Certificate of Achievement in Safety as part of its Sentinels of Safety award program. The Elklick Tipple, where coal is loaded onto trains, received the Certificate of Achievement in Safety for the Large Coal Processing Facility Group for its outstanding safety record in 2010, during which the Elklick Tipple worked a total of 34,868 employee-hours without a lost workday injury.

December 8, 2011

Fatal Accident Investigation Report: UBB

From: MSHA

Performance Coal Company
Performance Coal Company
Upper Big Branch Mine-South
Massey Energy Company
Mine ID: 46-08436

Fatal Underground Mine Explosion
April 5, 2010


Due to the extensive nature of this report, we have chosen to break it down into pieces. This should make viewing this report a bit easier. We are providing you with the report without the appendices included, the report with the appendices included, the appendices in one file, and the appendices as separate files. You may download any of these files.

December 1, 2011

MSHA puts 8 mines on notice for potential patterns of violations

From: MSHA

ARLINGTON, Va. — The U.S. Department of Labor’s Mine Safety and Health Administration today announced that eight mines around the country have received letters putting them on notice that each has a potential pattern of violations of mandatory health or safety standards under Section 104(e) of the Federal Mine Safety and Health Act of 1977. The PPOV screening from which these letters resulted represents the second since MSHA established the current criteria and procedures in September 2010.

The eight mines that received letters are as follows:

  1. Marfork Coal Co. Inc.’s Parker Peerless Mine in Raleigh County, W.Va.