Massey’s mine in Montcoal has been cited for over 3,000 violations, over $2.2 million in fines

by Brad Johnson

Cross-posted from Think Progress.

Massey Energy is actively contesting millions of dollars of fines
for safety violations at its West Virginia coal mine where disaster
struck yesterday afternoon. Twenty-five miners were killed and another four are missing after a explosion took place at 3 pm Monday at Massey subsidiary Performance Coal Co.‘s Upper Big Branch
Mine-South between the towns of Montcoal and Naoma. It is “the most people killed in a U.S. mine since 1984, when 27 died in a fire at Emery Mining
Corp.‘s mine in Orangeville, Utah.” This deadly mine has been cited for
over 3,000 violations by the Mine Safety and Health Administration
(MSHA), 638 since 2009:

Since 1995, Massey’s Upper Big Branch-South Mine has been cited for 3,007 safety violations. Massey is contesting 353 violations, and 127 are delinquent. [MSHA]

Massey is contesting over a third (34.7 percent) of the
516 safety citations the Upper Big Branch-South Mine received in 2009,
its greatest count in the last 15 years. [MSHA]

In March 2010, 53 new safety citations were issued for Massey’s Upper Big Branch-South Mine, including violations of its mine ventilation plan. [MSHA]

Massey is now contesting $1,128,833 in fines for safety violations
at the deadly Upper Big Branch-South Mine, with a further $246,320 in
delinquent fines:

Over $2.2 million in fines have been assessed against Massey’s Upper Big Branch-South Mine since 1995, with $791,327
paid. Massey is contesting $1,128,833 in fines. Massey’s delinquent
fines total $246,320. [MSHA]

Massey is contesting $251,613 in fines for citations for Upper Big Branch-South Mine’s ventilation plan. [MSHA]

Before yesterday’s tragic explosion, there have been three
fatalities at Massey’s Upper Big Branch-South Mine in the last 12
years—one each in 1998, 2001, and 2003. Massey’s corrupt CEO, U.S. Chamber of Commerce board member Don Blankenship, has previously told employees that it was more important to “run coal” than follow safety regulations.

In 2002, President George W. Bush “named former Massey Energy official Stanley Suboleski to the MSHA review commission that decides all legal matters under the
Federal Mine Act,” and cut 170 positions from MSHA. Bush’s MSHA chief, Dick Stickler, was a former manager of Beth Energy mines, which “incurred injury rates double the national average.” On Oct. 21, 2009, the Senate confirmed
President Barack Obama’s choice to replace Stickler, Joe Main, a “career union official and mine safety expert.” Massey’s Suboleski is still an active review commissioner.

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