Why is it OK for the coal industry to break the law?
ASK THIS | August 10, 2007

Often after accidents like the one at Crandall Canyon, Utah, mine operators claim their mines had relatively few violations. Even if that's true -- and often it isn't -- 'relatively few' just isn’t good enough in a risky venture like coal mining, says Charleston Gazette reporter Ken Ward, Jr.


By Ken Ward, Jr.
The Charleston (W.Va.) Gazette
kward@wvgazette.com

As I write this, the news out of Crandall Canyon, Utah, is not looking good. The Associated Press reports that a tiny microphone lowered deep into the earth early Friday picked up no evidence that six coal miners caught in cave-in four days ago were still alive.

The national, and international, media continue their watch over the effort to rescue the miners – and to fill the never-ending television and Internet news cycle.

Media outlets of all stripes have turned mine owner Bob Murray into a household name. CNN got to pat itself on the back for getting its cameras into the mine. Reporters and scientists have dueled with Murray over whether an earthquake caused the mine collapse, or whether the mine collapse simply looked like an earthquake to the seismic detection systems.

But lost among the frenzy are some important questions. Well, maybe they're not lost – but they’re not being asked and answered very bluntly.

First and foremost, why is it acceptable for the coal industry to break the law?

Reporters from various media outlets – many of them thrown into doing stories about an industry they know little about – have held forth for us about whether Bob Murray's mines have a good safety record. Some accounts have concluded that Murray is a safety guru, and that his mines have an outstanding record. The Deseret Morning News quoted a University of Pennsylvania professor who said that other coal miners with disasters in recent years had "in the neighborhood" of 180 to 210 citations, compared with the 33 this year at Crandall Canyon.

The professor, Walter Licht, also opined a common coal industry complaint – that many violations are simply paperwork problems, or minor things that really don't pose much of a safety hazard.

"One of the mine inspectors can be in a mine and see a wrench lying on the ground that somebody can trip on, so they get a citation," Licht told the paper.   

One AP account said that Murray has "campaigned to improve mine safety," while his mines have "incurred millions of dollars in fines over the last 18 months." The AP story quoted another professor, R. Larry Grayson from the University of Missouri-Rolla, as saying the Crandall Canyon Mine had a remarkably good safety record.

"The injury rate for the last four years has been significantly below the national average," Grayson told the AP.

Other accounts have not been as flattering.

West Virginia Public Broadcasting reprised a series of stories that they did a few years ago, in which Murray (in a widely re-produced anecdote), urged federal inspectors to lay off his mines or face the wrath of his friend, Sen. Mitch McConnell, and McConnell's wife, Labor Secretary Elaine Chao.

"Mitch McConnell calls me one of the five finest men in America, and last I checked he was sleeping with your boss," Murray told the inspectors, according to notes obtained by public broadcasting.

The reprised public broadcasting story noted a 2001 incident in which a belt foreman at one of Murray's mines, Tom Ciszewski, had his armed ripped off by a conveyor belt and bled to death. Later, the story said, a belt repairman testified that Murray pressured workers not to shut down the belt "unless there's a man in it" and that he would fire them on the spot if they did.

Obviously, these reporters are working under deadline, and doing their best to give their readers, viewers and listeners a glimpse of Murray and his company's safety record.

But the federal Mine Safety and Health Administration engages in the same game in a "question and answer" sheet posted on its website. MSHA notes that Crandall Canyon's accident rates and citations were both below the national averages.

Beneath it all of this seems to be this assumption that violations of federal mine safety and health laws is acceptable – that the coal industry is simply unable to comply with all of the rules that history has taught are needed to protect what Congress declared to be the coal industry's "most previous resource – the miner."

I fall into this trap, too. It's hard not to. Over the years, when one coal company I cover has had miners die at its operations, I've frequently listed the hundreds of violations that those operations have been cited for. Almost every time, the company's publicist calls me to complain that I need to give the story some perspective, that their hundreds of violations aren't really anything out of the ordinary. There are mines around the country that make it through the year without deaths and injuries. Reporters should be asking why they can't all do that, and why they can't all follow the rules all the time. Industry lobbyists and regulators say that they won't settle for anything less than zero injuries and deaths – but then they want to play comparison games to avoid criticism when disaster strikes.

"We need a serious attitude adjustment," said Celeste Monforton, a former federal mine regulator who now teaches and studies at George Washington University. "Violating safety and health standards – and that's what citations are – is illegal.

"If an airplane had 50 safety violations, it sure wouldn't be cleared for takeoff," Monforton said. "Why is it OK for miners to be exposed to 50 or more hazards, and it's considered 'normal?' That attitude must become a thing of the past."

As I watch from our newsroom 1,800 miles away, I also have to wonder again about whether the media goes to far in trying to get scoops about the families of these trapped miners. It's a natural thing to want to tell the public who these men are, and to try to share a bit of what anguish their families are going through. I had one call from a national television network producer who wanted to do a story attacking federal officials for not releasing the names to the media. The public has a right to know, he told me over the phone.

I wondered aloud something along the lines of, "Don't you really mean that your network has the right to background these men, find phone numbers for all their family members, and go harass them during this terrible ordeal?"

I've often argued with federal and state mining regulators to get the names of miners who die on the job – but only after they have died, and after the families have been notified. The media needs to put a face on the issue of mine safety – and even putting the name of every miner killed on the job in the paper helps to do that.

Maybe during this terrible waiting for word of the miners' fate isn't the right time for this.

I'm reminded of the words written by my former Gazette colleague, Scott Finn, after he covered part of the wait for the families of the Sago disaster: “Sometimes we hurt people by our carelessness," he wrote. "In the heat of competition, in our desire to get the story, we sometimes push aside the needs of the people we cover.

"I don't know what the answer is here. In this decentralized system, such media circuses are probably inevitable. That doesn't make them right."

Some media outlets, including the local Salt Lake Tribune, have confirmed the names of most or all of the missing miners. I don't know the details of how they did so, or how intrusive that bit of reporting was. I hope reporters all behaved themselves. We in the media could use a little bit of education on the golden rule. And let's not forget, it's not as if the families caught up in mine rescue situations couldn't find a reporter to talk to – all they have to do is look outside of whatever company office, church or school they are huddled in to pray for the best.

Since the names are out there, we know that several of the miners are Mexican, and that some of their family members don't speak English very well. Maybe reporters need to ask regulators and Bob Murray if safety training, mine maps and various safety plans were provided in Spanish. I asked, and haven't gotten an answer yet.

I've covered the coal industry for a long time. But I learn something new about it every day. And, I still have to wonder why it is that the national media knows so little about an industry that provides the nation with half its electricity.

Despite having covered last year's three major coal-mining disasters, most of the national media still seem a little confused about the basics of coal mining. It's that confusion that led to the initial reporting – and to some continuing to allow Bob Murray to mislead the public – that an earthquake caused this mine collapse, rather than the mine collapse simply mimicking earthquake tremors picked up by seismic monitors.

One national reporter who has tried to lend a little context to the situation is AP's excellent science writer, Seth Borenstein. He was quick out of the box with a story explaining that the Crandall Canyon Mine was using an extremely dangerous form of mining known as "retreat mining," or "pulling pillars."

There are lots of questions reporters need to be asking of both the company, and the federal regulators.

Federal officials are saying the mine hasn't had any serious "roof falls" since  1998. But a roof fall is different from a "bump" such as the one that collapsed the Crandall Canyon Mine roof. Has the mine reported recent bumps? What is the history of bumps in this part of the Utah coalfields? And what role has "pulling pillars" played in bumps in the past?

The mine's maps indicate that Crandall Canyon used longwall mining to remove large amounts of coal on either side of its main entry tunnels. After this was done, the roof would have collapsed, as longwall mining leaves no coal pillars to hold it up. Once Bob Murray bought the mine, his company proposed to go in and get coal from the pillars that were holding up the roof in that central set of tunnels.

What sort of analysis did the company do to determine that this was safe, and would not lead to a bump? What sort of review of that analysis did federal or state regulators perform?

What sort of review of such things is typically done nationwide?

Are the engineers who review such things for the government understaffed? What sort of follow-up inspections of the pillar removal were being done?

Seth's story, which my paper ran on Tuesday, Aug. 7, started to get at these kinds of important questions. For his efforts, Seth was attacked by Bob Murray on national television. And when Murray told the audience that his mine was absolutely not using this mining method – despite a paper trail that suggests otherwise – federal Mine Safety and Health Administration officials stood by and watched, letting the misinformation go unchallenged.

That brings me to my final point. Maybe it made for great television, and correspondent Gary Tuchman was certainly pleased with himself. But pretty much everybody I've talked to in the coal industry thinks that the stunt of taking CNN cameras into the mine while six miners were still unaccounted for was irresponsible and dangerous. It remains unclear to me if MSHA approved this little show or not, despite an existing order that required any activity in the mine to receive the agency's specific authorization.

One longtime coal industry journalist – perhaps the only reporter in the country who exclusively covers mine safety – harshly criticized the move.

"If the news crews want to see what it is like inside of a mine, have them go to one of the tourist mines or another underground mine in Utah that isn't under a rescue mode of operation," wrote Ellen Smith, editor and publisher of Mine Safety and Health News. "If the news crews want to experience the feeling of 'seismic' activity, let them go on Disney's Big Thunder Mountain Railroad.

"I have defended the record of this mine from the first hour of this accident," Smith wrote. "I have defended the industry and the strides it has made since I began covering mine safety and health issues in 1989.

"But I will not defend what I see as high negligence and reckless disregard on the part of MSHA and Mr. Murray for allowing these people into the mine during this very serious rescue operation when 'seismic activity' continues to occur, and when no one knows why such a catastrophic failure occurred to begin with."

-

Double Standards?
Posted by Paul Hammond -
08/10/2007, 05:51 PM

Ken Ward asks "Why is it OK for the coal industry to break the law?"

According to the stats that I've been able to find, in 2005, there were 22 fatal injuries in the US coal mining industry, while in the same year there were over 43,000 highway fatalities in the US.

Why aren't reporters asking "Why is it OK for drivers to break the law?"

I'm guessing that it is a rare day when a reporter drives to the place where the story is happening at or below the posted speed limit, while not talking on the phone and paying full attention to the task of driving.

Perhaps that's the way Mr. Ward does it, but I suspect that it is rare.

The coal mining industry had steadily improved its safety record over the last 100 years, while continuing to produce the majority of America's energy. Characterizing "the coal industry" as a lawbreaker while turning a blind eye to far more deadly lawbreaking seems odd to me.

Is it just a matter of "them" (mining companies) and "us" (regular folks who drive cars every day)?


Incredibly bad comparison!
Posted by Greg Koelpien - Boilermaker's Local 449
08/10/2007, 06:47 PM

Is this guy saying that because more people die in motor vehicle accidents than inside coal mines, let's not get all worked up about it?

He fails to mention that there are far more automobile drivers than mine workers, so you would have to look at per-capita ratios to get any meaningful comparison.

Plus, almost all motor vehicle fatalities are the result of poor decisions make on the part of a driver of a vehicle: the decision to drink alcohol and drive; the decision to text-message, or apply makeup while driving; the decision to drive too fast for weather conditions, etc. They then injure or kill themselves, or an unfortunate nearby victim.

Most mine accidents seem to fall under institutionalized neglect or unsafe practices by owners, not miners themselves making poor decisions.




Mine disaster coverage
Posted by Tom Bethell -
08/11/2007, 09:13 AM

Ken Ward raises good questions about coverage of the unfolding Crandall Canyon mine disaster. I can think of some others:

(1) Relatively obscure but vital federal agencies like the Mine Safety and Health Administration (MSHA) need much closer scrutiny by the media. MSHA in recent years has been severely weakened by bad leadership at the very top (prior to the appointment of Richard Stickler), a culture of don’t-ask-for-trouble caution among district managers, declining morale in the ranks, and the departure, largely but not entirely via voluntary retirement, of many agency veterans. But no major-media reporter, thus far, has explored the consequences. How has MSHA’s performance been affected? Were inspectors in Utah being encouraged or discouraged from coming down hard on violations? A pattern of lax enforcement by MSHA directly contributed to the unsafe conditions that resulted in a fatal mine fire at Massey Energy’s Aracoma Alma Mine in West Virginia last year, just a few weeks after the Sago Mine disaster, but there has been little in-depth coverage of MSHA’s role in the fire or, for that matter, its handling of the tragic Sago Mine rescue operation. An agency with life-and-death responsibilities might not enjoy being looked into, but it would benefit, and so would all the men and women who depend on it for protection.

(2) Instead of feverishly intruding on the trapped miners’ waiting family members, reporters should be scouring the area for miners with relevant first-hand experience who are willing to talk, on or off the record, about actual conditions at the mine. Today (8/11), six days into the story, CNN has a piece in which some miners suggest that safety wasn’t Murray Energy’s first priority, but that’s as far as the story goes: no details. As Robert Capa used to say about war photography, “If your pictures aren’t good enough it’s because you’re not close enough.” There’s nothing easier than lining up the cameras and giving a mine owner lots of air time (leaving aside the question of what he chooses to do with it). It’s harder to find other points of view, but they’re out there and they’re at least equally valid.

More to come, if I can post a second comment...


Mine disaster coverage (cont'd)
Posted by Tom Bethell -
08/11/2007, 09:14 AM

(3) Someone has to stay on this story after it’s over. It will be wonderful if the miners are rescued, tragic if they’re not, but all the relevant facts about causality, lack of communication, adequacy or inadequacy of safety precautions, enforcement, mining plans, etc., will not be fully known for some time. This has been true of just about every mine disaster in modern times and will be true of Crandall Canyon, but will any major-media reporters still be paying attention when the high drama is past?

We can mine coal safely in this country, but only if coal miners can count on the media to keep the industry and its regulators under close, continual, informed scrutiny. Ken Ward is very, very good at that. Unfortunately, he’s almost alone.



Good stories coming out
Posted by Ken Ward Jr. - The Charleston Gazette
08/12/2007, 03:40 PM

Readers,

I just wanted to praise this story published Sunday in the Salt Lake Tribune, which gets into the issue about previous safety issues at Crandall Canyon, especially regarding a previous "bump" reported in March:

http://www.sltrib.com/ci_6605040 ...

The Tribune also had this story:
http://www.sltrib.com/ci_6605037 ...

Which addresses more about exactly what sort of incident this was.

My paper published this story, trying to provide some context to our readers about this kind of "bump" in a coal mine:

http://wvgazette.com/section/News/2007081121 ...

Ken Ward Jr.


Federal Review of Crandall Canyon Mining Plan
Posted by Danny Albritton -
08/14/2007, 11:59 PM

The question is what were the federal mine regulators thinking when they approved Murray's mining plan.

The former MSHA Administrator for Coal Mine Health and Safety, Michael Lawless (ironic!) was looking for a job about the time that Murray was trying to get his dangerous mining plan greased at MSHA. Under the management of Lawless, Murray's plan sailed through the approval process, Murray hired Lawless as a superintendent. In fact, Lawless was at the meeting when Murray, demanding that some of MSHA's more experienced, conscientous, ethical inspectors get screwed, delivered his famous my-good-buddy-sleeps-with-your-boss manifesto.

But wait. There's more. Lawless's wife stayed at MSHA, and was allowed to work from home all but a few days each month. That gave her - and by extension Mike, and by further extension Murray - unlimited access from home to the entire Management Information System, including trivia like when the upcomming inspections would be, and detailed medical information on every inspector.

If anybody really believes fiction like the Mine Act, it's a criminal offense punishable by prison and a fine for a mine operator to have knowledge of upcomming inspection dates. It's also illegal for anyone working at MSHA to be married to a mine manager, and each year MSHA employees file detailed financial statements. Lana Lawless's annual statements would really be some interesting reading.

So the upshot of my comment is: Why is it O.K. for the coal regulators to break the law?


More commentary on media coverage
Posted by Ken Ward Jr. - The Charleston Gazette
08/15/2007, 10:31 AM

The Huffington Post has this interesting commentary on coverage -- especially by The New York Times -- of the Utah mine collapse:

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/arianna-huffington/w ...


-

Mountaintop Mining
In the Winter 2004 issue of Nieman Reports, Ken Ward described how he went about uncovering a shocking lack of enforcement and a complete absence of oversight as mining companies turned mountains and rich forests into leveled-off grasslands in West Virginia.

Bruce Kushnick
Is basic American telephone service in a death spiral?
Bruce Kushnick questions whether AT&T and Verizon are trying to kill off the “plain old telephone service” that millions of Americans rely on. In a recent FCC filing cited by Kushnick, AT&T stated that landline utilities are from a bygone era, and asked to be relieved of its obligations to service them.

George Wilson
Obama gave a pass to out-of-control military spending
The GAO showed that contractors’ estimates have nothing to do with reality, and economic hard times may eventually force the President and Congress to rein in outrageously costly warships, planes and missile systems that don’t work. But that time isn’t here yet.

Martin Lobel
Some remedies for the Supreme Court power grab
It’s easy to find activism, impossible to find original intent behind the Roberts/Scalia group’s ruling on corporate political spending. Martin Lobel suggests six sharp, practical steps to deal with it.

Watchdog Blog
Barry Sussman
Scratch the Big Bonuses and Turn Them Over to Borrowers?
As an old assignment editor I’m used to asking questions and not being embarrassed if they expose me as naïve or wrong minded, because sometimes there’s a good story lurking. So here are a few simple questions. The biggest financial institutions are said to be on the verge of issuing $145 billion in bonuses. My [...]

Barry Sussman
A Simple Solution for Corporate ‘Free Speech’
A friend and contributor to Nieman Watchdog, Martin Lobel, sent this emaiI with the suggestion that people pass it along. Looks worth passing along to me. Here’s Marty: “I don’t know whether you’re as upset with the Supreme Court’s legislating in Citizens United v. FEC as I am, but there is a simple solution that is [...]

George Lardner Jr.
No 60 Votes Needed Here
Item: The New York Times reported Friday afternoon that “two more Democratic senators” said they would vote against a second term for Fed Reserve chairman Ben Bernanke. From there, the Times said this made it unclear “whether there were the 60 votes necessary to confirm Mr. Bernanke.” Excuse me? Sixty votes are not necessary to [...]

Blog main page >>
Web Essentials
Leading journalism sites, blogs...
Enter your e-mail address
Spotlight On

TWITTER
Follow Nieman Watchdog on Twitter.
(Nieman Watchdog)

Torture probe abandoned
For lack of interest, the Senate will not move ahead on the idea to appoint a commission to investigate detention, rendition and interrogation policies by the U.S. during the George W. Bush administration.
(Secrecy News)

Find John Brennan's op ed
Harry Shearer, working from a fantasy assignment desk, wants reporters to find a 2005 anti-Iraq war op ed that never was published.
(Huffington Post)

Those Mohammed cartoons
On Jan 2 a man with an axe tried to attack the Danish artist whose 12 depictions of the prophet Mohammed created a furor in 2005. After the failed attack, a Norwegian newspaper reprinted six of the drawings.
(Editors Weblog)

Afghanistan surge to rely heavily on private contractors
Private contractors are expected to make up at least half of the total military workforce in Afghanistan, according to Defense Department officials cited in a recent study from the Congressional Research Service. The number of contractors will likely increase by between 16,000 and 56,000 for a total of 120,000-160,000.
(TPM Muckraker)

Recession scars will be lasting
The aftershocks from deep recessions reverberate for years, even decades.
(USA Today)

The curious spending of a GOP pro-choice PAC
The money doesn't seem to actually go to supporting choice.
(Center for Public Integrity)

More Spotlights >>