November 18, 2010
Union supports MSHA dust rule
Safety officers, miners attend final hearing in wake of fatal UBB blast
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AUDIE MURPHY AWARDRead more in our Coal Tattoo blog. 

CHARLESTON, W.Va. -- United Mine Workers officials turned out Thursday to support the Obama administration's rule to require mine operators to do more to control the buildup of explosive coal dust in underground mines.

UMW safety officers and rank-and-file miners were among about two-dozen people who attended the last of four U.S. Mine Safety and Health Administration public hearings on an emergency rule governing "rock-dusting" of underground tunnels.

In September, MSHA chief Joe Main issued the rule to require coal companies to apply more crushed stone to the walls, floors and other surfaces underground to control potential dust ignitions. The rule has already taken effect on an emergency basis, and now MSHA is taking public input on a final version.

"MSHA has the full support of the United Mine Workers," said Linda Raisovich-Parsons, deputy director of the union's safety department. "Sufficient evidence exists to warrant an emergency temporary standard."

Experts from the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health urged a toughening of federal "rock dusting" standards in reports published in 2006 and 2009, but MSHA officials did not act until another NIOSH report was published this May, a month after 29 miners died in an explosion at Massey Energy's Upper Big Branch Mine in Raleigh County.

Coal dust is highly explosive, and can turn what might be minor ignitions of methane gas in underground mines into massive blasts that take many more lives. Federal and state investigators and independent experts believe that's what happened on April 5, when a huge explosion ripped through the UBB Mine, causing the worst U.S. coal-mining disaster in 40 years.

Mine safety experts have known for decades how to prevent coal dust explosions: Apply large amounts of "rock dust," usually powdered limestone, to wall and floor surfaces underground. Even if there is an explosion, the rock dust mixes with coal dust and helps prevent it from fueling a larger blast.

Under the 1969 federal Coal Mine Health and Safety Act, coal companies must apply enough rock dust so that "incombustible content" of mine dust in clean-air intake tunnels makes up at least 65 percent of all dust measured. In "return air" sources, rock dusting must be adequate to make the incombustible content 80 percent of all dust measured.

That 41-year-old law, though, is based on coal-dust surveys of U.S. mines conducted in the 1920s. More recent NIOSH studies, conducted after a series of disasters in 2006, found that more modern and highly mechanized mining practices produce significantly finer coal dust that requires more rock dust to control.

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