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David



Joined: 29 Dec 2003
Posts: 12230
Location: Louisiana

Posted: Sun Jan 22, 2006 12:35 am    Post subject: Bodies of Miners found  

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David



Joined: 29 Dec 2003
Posts: 12230
Location: Louisiana

Posted: Sun Jan 22, 2006 12:36 am    Post subject:  

http://apnews.excite.com/article/20060122/D8F9FBF8C.html

Jan 21, 10:02 PM (ET)

By LAWRENCE MESSINA

(AP) Mourners exit the Bright Star Freewill Baptist Church in Melville, W.Va., Saturday, Jan. 21, 2006,...
Full Image

MELVILLE, W.Va. (AP) - Rescuers on Saturday found the bodies of two miners who disappeared after a conveyor belt caught fire deep inside a coal mine, bringing to 14 the number of West Virginia miners killed on the job in less than a month.

The bodies were found in an area of the mine where rescue teams had been battling the intense blaze for more than 40 hours. Rescuers could not enter that portion of the mine until the flames had been mostly extinguished and the tunnels cooled down.

"We have found the two miners we were looking for," said Doug Conaway, director of the state Office of Miners' Health Training and Safety. "Unfortunately, we don't have a positive outcome."

The miners became separated Thursday evening as their 12-member crew tried to escape a conveyor belt fire at Aracoma Coal's Alma No. 1 mine in Melville, about 60 miles southwest of Charleston. The rest of the crew and nine other miners working in a different section of the mine escaped unharmed.

"We have two brave miners that have perished," Gov. Joe Manchin told reporters.

Conaway said it appeared the two miners made a "valiant effort" to escape, but were blocked by high temperatures and thick smoke.

Saturday's deaths bring to 14 the number of West Virginia miners killed on the job since Jan. 2. Earlier this month, 12 miners died as a result of an explosion at the Sago Mine, more than 180 miles away on the northern side of the state. The sole survivor of that accident remained hospitalized in a light coma Saturday.

The governor pledged to introduce legislation Monday dealing with rapid responses in emergencies, electronic tracking technology and reserve oxygen stations for underground miners.

"These two men who perished in this mine, the 12 men who perished in the Sago Mine, I can only say to each of those families ... that they have not died in vain," Manchin said.
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Classically Liberal



Joined: 02 Jan 2005
Posts: 2256
Location: Charleston, WV

Posted: Mon Jan 23, 2006 3:51 pm    Post subject:  

Quote: CHARLESTON, W.Va. - Mine safety legislation was sent to West Virginia lawmakers Monday and congressional hearings got under way as state and federal officials, spurred by the deaths of 14 miners in West Virginia since the beginning of the year, pledged to make conditions safer.

The bodies of the latest two victims were found during the weekend after a fire deep inside a mine in southern West Virginia. Twelve others died in early January following an explosion in the northern part of the state.

"These deaths I believe were entirely preventable," Sen. Robert C. Byrd (news, bio, voting record), D-W.Va., said Monday at a hearing in Washington. "And we owe the families of these deceased and noble and great and brave men a hard look of what happened and why."

Legislation drafted during the weekend by Gov. Joe Manchin's staff was sent to the state Senate during the morning. Manchin called for it to be passed before legislators go home at the end of the day.

"I think it's a very important message to send to those grieving families across the state of West Virginia, and across the nation, that we are serious about mine safety," state Senate President Earl Ray Tomblin told senators after the bill was introduced. Tomblin's district includes Aracoma Coal's Alma No. 1 mine at Melville, site of last week's mine fire.

Manchin's proposals would require mine operators to immediately call a new state hot line to report an accident or face a $100,000 fine. It also would require operators to cache extra breathing packs inside their mines and issue miners gear to pinpoint their location underground and allow them to communicate with the surface in emergencies.

It wasn't clear if the Democratic governor could get the votes to pass the measures in a single day. A vote to suspend the rules and pass a bill that fast would require a four-fifths vote in each chamber.

Senate Minority Leader Vic Sprouse predicted "complete Republican support," but he said that if the measures are too complex lawmakers should spend more time on them.

"I don't see people marching on the Capitol if these don't get passed in one day," said Sprouse.

In Washington, Byrd spoke at a Senate Appropriations subcommittee on mine safety. Sen. Mike Enzi, R-Wyo., who chairs the Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee, also planned a hearing.

Byrd criticized the federal Mine Safety and Health Administration, saying he had no complaint with "the rescuers who risked their lives" trying to save trapped miners but with "the leadership in MSHA's Washington office."

The Bush administration is reviewing safety equipment in mines after scrapping similar initiatives started by the Clinton administration. Miners' advocates said pulling those initiatives stopped potentially important safety rules from becoming reality; the Republicans cited changing priorities and resource concerns.

The National Mining Association and the United Mine Workers of America said Sunday that they, too, want a major overhaul of state and federal mine safety laws.

Nationally, there were 22 mine deaths in 2005, a record low. Three of them were in West Virginia, the nation's second-largest coal producer.

If Congress takes action, it would be the third time that a West Virginia tragedy has had nationwide ramifications.

The Mine Safety and Health Act was written a year after a 1968 explosion at Farmington killed 78 miners, including an uncle of Manchin. Federal laws governing the construction of mine drainage settling ponds were adopted after 125 people where killed when an impoundment gave way in 1972, spilling a flash flood that ripped through communities along Buffalo Creek, less than 20 miles from the Alma mine.



AP

Things are getting FRANTIC over this. The Gov. is speaking right now. Gonna be a loooong day.
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Alula



Joined: 17 May 2005
Posts: 517

Posted: Mon Jan 23, 2006 11:20 pm    Post subject:  

I being too young to know my Grandfather when he passed and too young to
know the loss of my father who is not gone completely. I just wish I could sympathise with a sudden loss of wich I cannot except for a few very close calls. I send to you a hope for a brighter future and maybe they'll be lookin out for ya. Maybe they'll look out for all of us.
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LetsJustBeHuman



Joined: 31 Jan 2006
Posts: 5

Posted: Wed Feb 01, 2006 12:00 am    Post subject:  

I feel stories like these do not belong on political forums. I can identify with the loss they feel, for I lost my father too at a young age, but this isn't news. These are the risks they accepted as becoming coal miners and I'm sorry they lost their lives doing this, but stories and pictures like these are purely sensationalist.
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