December 18, 2010
UBB widow: 'I just knew'
Miners' families suffer through deadly year
Courtesy photo
Dorean and Joel Price visit Florida and Walt Disney World's Planet Hollywood. The photograph was taken just days before Joel Price was killed in the April 5 Upper Big Branch Mine explosion, along with 28 of his co-workers.
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AP Photo
Miners' helmet lights glow during a memorial service for the 29 men killed in the Upper Big Branch Mine on April 5.
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At about 12:30 a.m. Saturday, April 10, then-Gov. Joe Manchin made the public announcement: "We did not receive the miracle we prayed for."

The families had already been informed. But whoever told Dorean Price that her husband was dead is lost to her memory. What she remembers of the announcement is the outpouring of emotion, the anguish and the anger.

"People were screaming, turning over chairs, yelling," she said. "We were trying to get out of there."

Dorean and her family, including Joel's brothers, made their way out of the room and out the back of the mine building where the families had gathered.

Her sister, Alice, didn't make it out with them. She had stayed in the hallway when the mine officials said they had a big announcement.

"We got outside to the parking lot and one of the ministers said I'd better go back in and get my sister. She was sitting in the hallway, just crying."

Two weeks later, on April 25, President Obama led a memorial service in Beckley for the Upper Big Branch miners.

White crosses, one for each miner and each with a miners' cap, lined the front of the stage at the Raleigh County Convention Center. A photo display of the men served as the backdrop.

"Day after day, they would burrow into the coal, the fruits of their labor, what we so often take for granted: the electricity that lights up convention centers like this; that lights up our churches and homes, our schools and offices; the energy that powers our country and the world," Obama told the crowd. "Most days, they would emerge from the dark mine, squinting at the light. Most days, they would emerge, sweaty, dirty, dusted with coal. Most days, they would come home. Most days, but not that day."

Dorean Price and the other families met privately that day with the president.

"If it hadn't been under those circumstances, it would have been the highlight of my life," she said.

The entire event -- with Vice President Joe Biden, Rep. Nick J. Rahall and the ailing Sen. Robert C. Byrd -- was overwhelming. Dorean recalled that Obama and Biden both spoke knowingly about the disaster.

"[Obama] talked about it, knew what was going on. He said he was very concerned and wanted to get to the bottom of it," Dorean said.

The day after that, Massey Energy's Board of Directors held a news conference in Charleston. The company began what's turned into a full-court public relations press, aimed at blaming the disaster on ventilation changes ordered by MSHA.

Board member Bobby Inman told the media that sometimes mining accidents just happen, and challenged statements by regulators that all coal-mine explosions are preventable.

"All accidents are preventable if you shut down production," Inman said. "Mining is -- there is no way around it -- is a dangerous business."

At first, Dorean paid close attention to the investigation. But as it drags on, keeping track of developments becomes more difficult.

"I want to know why it happened," said Dorean, a supervisor at the Beckley VA Medical Center. "Safety is our first concern for our staff, for our patients. I don't think they took it serious enough."

MSHA has promised to regularly update the families, and to hold public hearings into the mine disaster. But so far, all investigation interviews have taken place behind closed doors, and MSHA hasn't met with the families since mid-September.

In an interview last week, MSHA chief Joe Main said his agency simply hasn't had anything new to report.

Main said mine explosion investigations are complicated and doing them right takes a long time. He noted that the federal probe of the 2001 Jim Walter Resources explosion that killed 13 Alabama coal miners took nearly 14 months.

"I believe that the families are owed a thorough investigation of Upper Big Branch and a clear answer," Main said.

Back to the coal mine

Joel Price would have been 56 on Dec. 1. Dorean knew the day was coming, but for some reason she was thinking there were 31 days in November.

"I guess that's what made it somewhat difficult," she said. "I kept getting texts from family saying, 'I love you.' I was wondering what was going on."

It wasn't until Dorean talked to her secretary that she realized she'd gotten her days mixed up.

Joel and Dorean were married for 10 years. Joel was a day treatment specialist at a mental health center in Fayette County when they met, but went back into mining after they got married. The work was physically demanding, but the money was better.

"I left it up to him," Dorean says of that decision.

Three years ago, Dorean was treated for breast cancer. She's been cancer free ever since, but the treatment wasn't easy. She and her sister would drive to Charleston, fly to Philadelphia, spend the night there, and then she'd get her treatment and fly back.

Joel had cared for her during the exhausting treatments. She remembers him finding her in bed after her first treatment when he got home from the mine.

"He was used to seeing me up and about and very active . . .  . He just choked up from seeing me in bed," she said.

Dorean's treatments were finished by May 2008 and the two would have another two years together.

Now, she lives in their house in Beckley, alone. She's getting used to changing her own oil, sweeping the snow off her walkways -- doing the things Joel used to do for her.

One night during the Disney vacation, Joel and Dorean ate at Planet Hollywood just outside their hotel. Then they walked around, talking about who they would to invite to their wedding vow renewal ceremony in June. They had already picked out the rings.

As they walked, Joel seemed so happy to have time away from work and with his wife.

"But then I remember him saying, 'The guys I work with, they'll stick their necks out for you. I know that every guy I work with, they have my back and they know I've got their back.'"

In Monday's Charleston Gazette: MSHA chief Joe Main looks back on the coal industry's deadliest year since 1992.

Reach Ken Ward Jr. at kw...@wvgazette.com or 304-348-1702.

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Copyright 2011 The Charleston Gazette. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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