July 2, 2009
Massey loses last appeal over Cannelton mine
4th Circuit upholds Judge Goodwin's 2008 ruling that coal firm violated labor laws
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CHARLESTON, W.Va. -- Massey Energy violated federal labor law by refusing to keep union coal miners on its payroll after it bought Cannelton Industries in October 2004, according to a federal court ruling issued late Wednesday.

Massey acquired Cannelton from Horizon Natural Resources, then in bankruptcy.

The U.S. Fourth Circuit Court of Appeals, based in Richmond, Va., upheld an August 2008 ruling by U.S. District Judge Joseph R. Goodwin in Charleston. Both rulings upheld the November 2007 decision by Paul Bogas, administrative law judge for the National Labor Relations Board.

Bogas ruled that Massey discriminated against former Cannelton employees by refusing to hire them, "on the basis of their membership in the predecessor's bargaining unit and their pro-union sentiments."

Massey set up two new non-union companies -- Spartan Mining Co. and Mammoth Coal Co. -- to operate Cannelton's mines and coal preparation plant County along the Kanawha River in eastern Kanawha.

United Mine Workers President Cecil E. Robert praised Wednesday's decision.

"We look forward to the day when miners who were illegally discriminated against get their rightful jobs back, and to all the miners at the Mammoth mine having the benefit and protection of working under a UMWA contract," Roberts said.

A Massey Energy statement noted, "Although we disagree with the decision of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit, it is important to note while appealing ... Goodwin's decision requiring Mammoth Coal Co. to hire these individuals, Mammoth Coal made job offers to these 85 miners.

"From these 85 extended offers of employment, only nine miners accepted the employment opportunity. Today, seven of these miners remain with the company," Massey stated.

"Massey had to extend offers to hire these guys back," said UMW spokesman Phil Smith, "but Cannelton was a non-union environment, and most of those miners did not want to work in that environment."

Bogas issued his ruling after a two-week trial held in Montgomery in 2007. Massey appealed his ruling to the full NLRB.

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