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UPSHUR, the United States, Jan. 5 (Xinhuanet) -- An eastern U.S. coal mine,
where an underground explosion killed 12 miners this week, has been cited for
hundreds of federal safety violations since it opened in 1999, U.S. media
reported Thursday.
Among the infractions were at least 16 related to failures to prevent or
adequately monitor the buildup of explosive gases in the Sago Mine, Upshur
County, West Virginia.
Although the bodies of the 12 miners were removed from the mine Wednesday,
U.S. authorities are yet to determine the cause of the explosion that trapped
the miners Monday.
Meanwhile, government records show that the Sago Mine has been cited
repeatedly for not having an adequate ventilation plan and for violating rules
requiring safety inspections before each eight-hour shift.
The number of infractions issued to the mine last year was higher than
would be normally issued to a mine that size, according to data from the U.S.
Mine Safety and Health Administration (MSHA).
Since 2000, the incidence of injuries at Sago was also higher than average
-- more than twice the national rate.
In 2005, the mine was cited for nine times for failing to properly enact a
"mine ventilation plan," with three of those violations considered by the MSHA
as "significant and substantial."
Also, the mine was cited for seven times last year for failing to properly
conduct a "pre-shift examination," the safety inspection mandated before each
shift of workers is allowed to enter the mine.
Moreover, the mine had extensive safety problems that led the agency to
close parts of it 18 times last year.
In all, the Sago Mine received 276 violations in 2004 and 2005, including
120 that were considered "significant and substantial."
During that time, the government sought 33,600 U.S. dollars in fines and
the mine's owner paid 23,986 dollars.
Compared with three other similar-sized mines in West Virginia, the Sago
Mine had far more violations during that period.
In the United States, coal mine fatalities have dropped dramatically over
the past century from a high of 3,242 in 1907 toa record low 22 in 2005, MSHA
records show.
The coal industry also has shrunk to just more than 100,000 workers, but
the fatality rate today is a fraction of what it was at the industry's peak of
863,000 workers in 1923.
The injury rate in the coal-mining industry was barely above the national
workplace injury rate in 2004, the most recent year for which Labor Department
data are available.
Coal-mine employees suffered 5.6 work-related injuries or illnesses per 100
employees, compared with 4.8 injuries and illnesses for the entire
private-sector workforce. Enditem |