July 22, 2010
MSHA attacks Massey on Upper Big Branch ventilation
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WASHINGTON (AP) -- Mine safety officials are painting a portrait of ineptitude and confusion by officials at Massey Energy Co. in the months before an explosion at the company's West Virginia mine killed 29 men.

The depiction -- in an internal memo from a top official at the Mine Safety and Health Administration -- is part of a lengthy rebuttal to Massey's claims that the government forced it to make changes that would reduce the volume of fresh air in the mine before the blast.

A copy of the memo from deputy assistant secretary Gregory Wagner to the Labor Department's top lawyer was obtained by The Associated Press.

The memo adds to the bitter public feud that has played out between Massey and MSHA in the months since the Upper Big Branch mine tragedy in Montcoal, W.Va. Government officials have said Massey has a lax attitude toward safety, while Massey Chief Executive Don Blankenship insists he does not put profits ahead of safety.

The memo accuses Massey of making the claims about ventilation as part of a public relations strategy to deflect blame for the accident from the company. Wagner's memo states that Massey proposed in January to reduce the amount of air flowing to the working sections of the mine so it could redirect air to another area where it wanted to produce more coal.

Massey was "a company that routinely submitted plans that did not meet regulatory requirements and a company that had serious problems following its plans and managing the air flowing underground,'' the memo states.

Massey's conduct is the subject of state and federal investigations, as well as a criminal investigation launched by the Justice Department.

Jeff Gillenwater, a Massey spokesman, said the company "stands behind its previous statement about the role MSHA has and continues to have in the approval and changes in mine ventilation plans.''

Blankenship is to address the National Press Club in Washington on Thursday. Since the accident, he has contended that MSHA imposed a plan that reduced the volume of fresh air to the face of the longwall section of the mine where the blast occurred -- despite vigorous objections from Massey engineers. Mines rely on ventilation to remove methane gas and coal dust.

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On April 5, 2010 an explosion inside the Upper Big Branch mine in Montcoal, W.Va. killed 29 miners. It was the worst U.S. coal mining disaster in 40 years.
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