The Miners Who Fought for Workplace Safety Have a Thing or Two to Teach OSHA Right Now

Source: InTheseTimes

June 2, 2020

 

In October 1993, Charles Patrick Hayes, or Pat, was working at a grain bin in Defuniak Springs, a small town in southern Alabama near Fairhope, where Pat was raised. Pat was knocking down corn from the walls of the silo when the crop caved off the sides and crushed him. Pat, just 19, suffocated to death. It took five hours to retrieve his body.

Pat’s father, Ron Hayes, quickly turned his grief into advocacy. A few months after Pat’s death, Hayes quit his job as an X-ray technician and manager of a clinical outpatient facility, and he founded a non-profit called the FIGHT Project, or Families In Grief Hold Together. For almost 30 years, Hayes traveled from Fairhope to Washington, D.C. (45 times by his count) pressuring legislators to improve federal worker safety regulations under the act, implemented in 1971, that created the Occupational Safety and Health Administration, or OSHA. According to Hayes, stricter enforcement of worker safety protocols may have saved his son’s life.

Although OSHA, which monitors most major employment sectors, including the agricultural, construction and service industries, has been criticized for lax regulations for almost 50 years, Covid-19 has brought worker safety back into the forefront of national news and rekindled the conversation around reform. If such reform is to happen, advocates say regulators can look for guidance from a conglomerate OSHA doesn’t monitor: the mining industry.

According to Tony Oppegard, an attorney who specializes in miner safety, the Mine Act is so much stronger than OSHA that “there’s no comparison.” Enacted in 1969, the inherent dangers in mining meant stricter regulations were implemented from the get go.

The Mine Act made mining much safer, and fatalities continue to decrease, with 24 on-the-job fatalities in 2019. While the decrease might be related to a loss of jobs—the coal industry has flatlined in recent years—experts say it’s also related to regulations in the Mine Act: For example, underground mines have to be inspected, at minimum, four times a year.

Meanwhile, OSHA guidelines have no requirement for the minimum number of inspections. That means a lot of businesses can essentially go unregulated. Along with a lack of inspections, there’s a lack of inspectors. While mines have about one inspector for every 50 miners, OSHA has just one inspector for every 79,000 workers. According to data compiled by the AFL-CIO, over 3.5 million injuries were reported to OSHA in 2017. In 2018, an average of 275 laborers died each day from workplace-related illnesses or injuries.

One of the biggest differences in these fatality numbers may also be a workplace right unique to the Mine Act: the broad right to refuse unsafe work.

Take Charles Howard. Howard worked in a number of underground coal mines around his home of Letcher County, Ky. since he was 18 years old. While Howard knew mining was dangerous work, as he grew older, he observed his supervisors making unsafe decisions to get the coal out cheaper and quicker, increasing the likelihood of injuries, illnesses and fatalities. Howard himself suffered multiple injuries while underground including a torn rotator cuff, a broken back, a traumatic brain injury and black lung—a fatal respiratory disease unique to coal miners.

So, between 1989 and when Howard retired in 2014, he fought hard for miner protections on the job site. This was easier under the Mine Act than OSHA because of a section called 105(c) which allows workers to refuse work they consider unsafe without getting fired—and quick temporary reinstatement pending a full investigation and hearing. Under 105(c), when one of Howard’s former employers, the Cumberland River Coal Company, tried to unlawfully fire him twice, Howard filed federal complaints with the help of Oppegard. After he filed, a federal review commission permanently reinstated Howard in his old job.

Under OSHA, this right isn’t nearly as strong. In order to refuse work, an employee has to prove they faced imminent danger of serious injury or death. That’s difficult to do in jobs that contain regular hazards. For example, in farming, workers could face silo explosions or extreme summer heat. In construction, laborers could fall off roofs or scaffolding. But it’s notoriously difficult to place the onus of these accidents on the employer.

But the Mine Act isn’t perfect, and OSHA can also learn from its failures. For example, under the act, safety violations can only lead to misdemeanor charges, not criminal convictions. So mining violations often mean little to no jail time for operators. When the Upper Big Branch Mine disaster, caused by a dust explosion, killed 29 West Virginia miners a decade ago, Don Blakenship, CEO of Massey Energy, spent just one year in prison.

According to Oppegard, a solution could be implementing an industrial manslaughter law under the Mine Act and OSHA, like one passed in Queensland, Australia. Now, if there’s criminal negligence in a mining death, Australian operators could receive 20 years in prison.

Howard, now 60 and retired, agrees that company management might feel more incentivized to protect workers if supervisors are personally responsible for injuries and illnesses on the job site. But, according to Howard, another problem is a lack of education around miner’s rights.

“They didn’t want me on the job because I stood up for my rights,” said Howard, who believes he was let go from multiple jobs because of his advocacy. “Other miners started saying, well we ain’t going to let them [the mining company] do that either.”

For Hayes, like Howard, one of the biggest problems with OSHA is not its scaffolding, but how the act has been implemented.

“I’ve always said OSHA is fair to business and workers both, but it’s been so mismanaged over the years,” Hayes said over the phone. “We’ve got to have a leader who knows what they’re doing.”

According to the AFL-CIO, under President Trump, a pro-business agenda means worker safety has been significantly deregulated since 2016, with budgets slashed and the number of OSHA inspectors at its lowest level in half a century.

Hayes, who recently suffered a series of strokes which he attributes to stress over reforming OSHA, is frustrated by the slow pace of change, but he’s not giving up. He has one wish for the legacy of his work: “I want to be remembered as the man who gave OSHA a heart.”

 

Written by: AUSTYN GAFFNEY

Nurse on front lines of COVID-19 fight on the Navajo Nation dies

Source: KOB 4 Eyewitness News

 

SHIPROCK, N.M.- One of the first healthcare workers to fight COVID-19 on the Navajo Nation died.

Valerina Singer, also known as Val, was a longtime nurse on the Navajo Nation.

As COVID-19 swept across the vast area, Singer was one of the first health care workers on the front lines.

She worked as a nurse at the Kayenta Health Center in a remote area of the Navajo Nation, treating COVID-19 patients.

Numerous family members and friends of Singer lined the highway for a procession.

Singer’s family said she was a pillar of the family.

They boasted that she was strong, smart and cared deeply about her patients.

Navajo Nation President Jonathan Nez said he is saddened by the loss, and is asking for others to pray for the Singer’s family, and other front line workers.

Copyright 2020 – KOB-TV LLC, A Hubbard Broadcasting Company

Gov. Justice Awards $1 Million for Reconnecting McDowell’s Renaissance Village Housing Construction Project

Source: American Federation of Teachers

May 28, 2020

CHARLESTON, W.Va.—Gov. Jim Justice today awarded Reconnecting McDowell $1 million from the Abandoned Mine Land Grants program, to be used for financing the construction of the Renaissance Village apartment building in Welch, W.Va.

Reconnecting McDowell is in the final stages of building Renaissance Village, which will provide previously unavailable modern rental apartments to teachers and others in McDowell County. The funding puts the project, slated to be open by the start of the fall 2020 school year, near the finishing line for financing.

“This is a make-or-break moment for investment in public education in America, as communities, families, states, and public schools and services around the country reel from the economic and public health devastation of the COVID-19 pandemic. With this grant, Gov. Justice has offered just-in-time financing to make Renaissance Village—the first multiple-floor construction in McDowell in decades—a reality. It’s an important show of support for the educators and families of McDowell,” said Randi Weingarten, president of the American Federation of Teachers, which spearheaded the Reconnecting McDowell public-private partnership.

“When educators can live in the community where they work, it makes it that much easier for them to focus on the educational needs, safety, health and well-being of their students, which is exactly what we’ve been working toward in McDowell for years. Thank you, Gov. Justice,” Weingarten said.

Fred Albert, president of AFT-West Virginia, said Renaissance Village is more than just another building. “It represents a tangible display of economic development in the county and an innovative and necessary way to recruit and retain great teachers,” Albert said.

Reconnecting McDowell applied for this highly competitive grant three years ago because part of the Welch property on which Renaissance Village is located is an abandoned mine.

The Abandoned Mine Land Grants funding comes from fees that had been paid by active coal mine operators on each ton of coal mined.

“McDowell County was once one of the state’s largest coal producers,” said Cecil Roberts, president of the United Mine Workers of America. “Sadly, the industry collapsed over the past several decades, and communities and families have suffered a terrible toll. It’s good to know that something good is coming out of this sad history. Coal miners of West Virginia are proud of our past and proud of what we are doing to help revive the county.”

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The AFT represents 1.7 million pre-K through 12th-grade teachers; paraprofessionals and other school-related personnel; higher education faculty and professional staff; federal, state and local government employees; nurses and healthcare workers; and early childhood educators.

Union Plus – Free Legal Document Review and Consultations Through July 31, 2020

MetLife Legal Plans is here to help union members and their families navigate this challenging time by offering no-cost document reviews and consultations through July 31, 2020.

 

Limited Time Offer: Free Document Review and Consultations

Union members can contact MetLife Legal Plans Network Attorneys through July 31, 2020 for no charge advice, consultations and document review for many issues, including:

  • Healthcare proxies or other estate planning
  • Home refinancing or personal insurance forms
  • Elder law questions for caregivers

 

Self-Help Document Library 

Union members will also have access to MetLife Legal Plans Self-Help Document Library to complete wills, living wills and power of attorney documents.

 

To access the Self-Help Document Library:

  • Click the button below and enter the access code: 9790010.
  • Click “Covered Services” in the top navigation and then select the “Self Help Documents” tab, and then click the “Access Now” button to browse the document library.

 

ACCESS FREE METLIFE LEGAL
SELF-HELP DOCUMENTS

 

If you need assistance, please contact Customer Service Center at 800-821-6400, Monday-Friday 8am – 8pm EDT.


If you are not enrolled in MetLife Legal Plans, you will need to state you are with Union Plus and provide the last four digits of your Social Security Number, and indicate that you are interested in the document review and consultations services being offered as part of the Disaster Relief Plan.
If you are a current enrollee, you will need to provide your membership number.

Navajo Nation president says the ‘curve is flattening’ with COVID-19 cases

Source: AZCentral.

Despite recently surpassing New York to have the highest COVID-19 infection rate in the country, Navajo Nation president Jonathan Nez said on Memorial Day that “the curve is flattening on the Navajo Nation.”

As of Monday, the Navajo Nation had 4,794 cases of COVID-19 and the number of deaths associated with the disease reached 157. Nearly 1,500 people have recovered from the virus, according to updated numbers from the Navajo Department of Health.

The infection rate in Kayenta outpaces even the worst-hit ZIP codes in New York City, although New York ZIP codes have far more COVID-19 deaths.

According to Nez, “The curve is flattening on the Navajo Nation, even as we test aggressively.”

“The Navajo Nation continues to test at a higher rate per capita than any state in the country,” he said in a statement Monday, adding that 14.6% of citizens have been tested so far. Meanwhile, 2.3% of the population in Arizona has been tested, according to the National Association of County and City Health Officials.

“Testing, contact tracing, and the public health orders that were implemented months ago requiring protective masks in public and weekend lockdowns are working and flattening the curve,” Nez said in the statement.

“The numbers are high, but it’s great to see that overall the rate of new cases is flattening, so let’s keep up the good practices and continue to pray for everyone,” Vice President Myron Lizer said in the statement.

Franklin Graham spends Memorial Day on Navajo Nation

Nez spent time on Memorial Day with Franklin Graham, son of the late Rev. Billy Graham and president of both the Billy Graham Evangelistic Association and Samaritan’s Purse.

Graham visited the Navajo Nation on Monday and discussed a coronavirus response plan, according to tweet from Graham.

“We are here to visit and just talk with their leadership because the locals here have just been decimated by coronavirus,” Franklin’s son Edward Graham said in a video on Twitter.

Graham, Nez and Lizer discussed a plan to place a Samaritan’s Purse field hospital on the Navajo Nation to help in the treatment of COVID-19 patients.

Samaritan’s Purse is an nondenominational evangelical Christian organization that provides medical aid to those in need around the world, according to their mission statement.

Written by: Tina Giuliano

Black lung is back: why more is needed to fight dust

Source: Mining Technology

Despite improvements in health and safety in US mining, dust inhalation remains a real threat, with black lung seeing a resurgence in cases. We speak to the Mine Safety and Health Administration about this challenge, and how it aims to tackle it.

US mining has enjoyed years of continued improvements with regard to safe operations, with falling fatalities highlighting an industry that is more aware than ever of the risks faced by its employees. Figures from the Mine Safety and Health Administration (MSHA) show that fatalities at US mining operations have fallen slightly in recent years, from 28 in 2017 to 27 in 2019, and significantly since the turn of the millennium, with the 85 deaths reported in 2000 close to triple the 2019 figure.

Yet while the industry does its best to clamp down on the hazardous practices it can control, such as implementing a culture of safety above all else and investing in adequate safety equipment, there is an inherent risk faced by miners in this sector: that of dust inhalation. Mining, by design, kicks up vast quantities of dust, and the enclosed subterranean spaces where many miners work are difficult to adequately ventilate, resulting in a significant threat to miners’ respiratory health.

Most worryingly, this trend is not improving, with reports from the US National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), a part of the country’s Center for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), noting that the prevalence of conditions such as coalworkers’ pneumoconiosis, known colloquially as ‘black lung’, is, in fact, increasing amongst US miners, raising questions about the industry’s response to the threat.

Significant risks and uneven progress

The production of dust poses significant risks for mineworkers, with both long-term health conditions arising from dust inhalation, and short-term risks of ignition and explosion, threatening miners.

Written by: JP Casey

Matewan massacre remembered 100 years later

Source: WV MetroNews

 

CHARLESTON, W.Va. — Tuesday marks the 100th anniversary of the Matewan massacre, in which Mingo County officials and detectives with Baldwin-Felts Detectives Inc. engaged in a conflict that would lead to the West Virginia Mine War.

Thirteen detectives traveled to Matewan to evict union coal miners out of their homes, which were owned by the Stone Mountain Coal Company. Matewan police chief Sid Hatfield and Mayor Cable Testerman confronted the detectives while armed miners stood away from the scene unknown to the detectives.

Eleven people died in an ensuing gun battle, including 7 detectives and Testerman. Hatfield and 17 miners were charged for murder but later acquitted.

Hatfield was fatally shot in August 1921 during an incident involving Baldwin-Felts detectives. Union members reacted with a march in Logan County, which ended in the Battle of Blair Mountain.

“Without these conflicts, without these miners rising up, we would have never become — by 1935 — the largest union in the United States of America with over 800,000 members,” United Mine Workers of America President Cecil Roberts said in a video released Monday.

Cecil Roberts: Postal Service a lifeline for rural West Virginia

Source: West Virginia Gazette

May 9, 2020

 

In the midst of the gravest crisis our nation has confronted in decades, it is beyond disappointing to see national political leaders use the coronavirus pandemic as an opportunity to destroy the United States Postal Service. The refusal by the White House and others in Congress to even consider providing the USPS with the help it desperately needs to survive is a slap in the face to every rural postal customer in America.

If the anti-public Postal Service politicians in Washington get their way, they will put lives at risk and raise costs to millions of rural Americans, including nearly a million people here in West Virginia. And they will put thousands of West Virginians who are employed by the USPS out of work, including hundreds of veterans.

West Virginia is the third-most rural state in the country, with 51% of the population living in rural areas. Rural Americans, who are more elderly and more isolated than those living in urban or suburban areas, count on the reliability and consistent pricing of the USPS for delivery of prescription drugs. During this pandemic, as many pharmacies in rural areas have shut down or drastically reduced hours, it is even more critical that the delivery of life-sustaining prescription drugs continues without disruption or increased costs.

The for-profit delivery companies, whose Washington lobbyists are driving the political attacks on the USPS, already charge more to deliver packages to rural areas than they do to cities and suburbs. The Postal Service, on the other hand, is required to charge the same fee to reliably deliver packages and letters anywhere in the country — and that fee is the only thing keeping the for-profit companies from raising their prices even more.

USPS handled an estimated 55% of the final stretch of Amazon’s deliveries in 2018. Indeed, Amazon, FedEx, UPS and the other delivery corporations rely on the Postal Service to get packages the “last mile” to your door, because they simply do not have the door-to-door network the Postal Service has. That is especially true in rural America.

As a Vietnam veteran, I am especially troubled by the effect wiping out the USPS would have on veterans, both those who work for it and those who rely on it. Rural Appalachian communities have always provided an outsized portion of our sons and daughters to the United States armed forces. When our nation calls, we answer, in higher proportions than other areas of the country.

There are more than 97,000 veterans employed by the Postal Service, or 18% of its entire workforce. That’s almost three times higher than the veterans’ share of the national workforce. And with more than 80% of veterans receiving their prescription drugs by mail, a lot of them living in rural America, the disruption of that critical lifeline becomes a matter of life or death for hundreds of thousands.

The USPS has always funded itself through the sale of stamps and postage. Taxpayer money has never been part of its budget. But because of bone-headed laws passed by Congress years ago that were designed to unfairly drive the Postal Service’s costs up, the USPS is now on the road to failure through no fault of its own. It needs help, and it needs it fast.

Lawmakers should be talking about how to reverse the ridiculous burden they placed on the USPS to pre-fund retirement health care costs for workers who have not even been born yet, not plotting ways to eliminate one of the most reliable and secure services in the history of our nation.

The UMWA stands with our brothers and sisters who work for the United States Postal Service. They are part of our families, they are our neighbors, they are our friends and most importantly they are the vital lifeline so many of our members and retirees need to remain healthy and connected to the world.

There are many urgent actions our government needs to take to preserve our people and our way of life in the current pandemic. Destroying the USPS is not one of them. I strongly urge West Virginia’s congressional delegation to reject the attacks on the public Postal Service and instead work to secure its future. That is the only sensible path forward for all West Virginians.

Mine workers’ union supports Salvation Army

Source: Estevan 

May 07, 2020

Estevan Salvation Army director of ministry Ronza Reynard accepts a cheque for $3,000 from Ashley Johnson, the financial secretary for the United Mine Workers of America Local 7606.

The union recently made the cheque presentation through a collection that they had for the food bank.

Johnson said they chose to support the Salvation Army because they know the food bank has been experiencing an increase in the number of clients in the community, and many of the mine employees know someone who has accessed the food bank’s services.

UMWA furious over Consol’s motion to dissolve Murray Energy

Source: WV MetroNews

April 29, 2020

 

CHARLESTON, W.Va.– The United Mine Workers of America is livid over a request by Consol Energy to have the assets of bankrupt coal producer Murray Energy liquidated.

Consol, one of Murray’s largest creditors, recently asked a bankruptcy judge to change the company’s Chapter 11 filing in which they are attempting to reorganize to a Chapter 7 filing which would require the immediate liquidation of all asserts.

“This is one of the most outrageous things I have ever seen a coal company do,” said United Mine Workers of American President Cecil Roberts in a statement about the action. “And that is saying a lot.”

Consol claims in its filing that Murray is mismanaged to the point that it will never be able to reorganize and should be liquidated immediately. But the union and Roberts claim if that were to happen, it could put nearly 2,000 coal miners out of work and leave them with no options for healthcare in the time of a global pandemic.

“We have very strong opinions about this sort of tactic which would put our members and their families at grave risk, cutting off their health care and forcing them to look for other work at the time of a global pandemic,” Roberts said.

The UMWA recently ratified a new contract with Murray, which had the blessings of the company’s creditors and was to be honored by the new company once it emerged from bankruptcy. Consol’s motion would be that the company never emerge.

Roberts bristled at Consol’s action and noted while he couldn’t bring the union’s normal pressure to bare due to the social distancing restrictions, he added the organization would not stand silent in the process.

“We cannot do what we would normally do, which is to get several thousand people out in front of Consol’s shiny headquarters and say a few things in protest,” Roberts said. “But that does not mean we will be silent about this. It seems clear that Consol’s plan puts people’s lives and livelihoods at risk. We will not stand idly by while it threatens our members, their families and their communities.”

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