The Utah miner tragedy may have been criminal…
I have written a bit about the Crandall Canyon Mine collapse in Utah. You remember, the story was on the news for days and the mine’s owner Bob Murray took every chance he could to get on TV and talk about how safe the mine was and how he thought an earthquake actually caused the tragedy.
Well, he was wrong.
Yesterday, the Chairman of an investigation in Congress called for a criminal inquiry in to the collapse the death of nine miners.
This from the Associated Press:
WASHINGTON (AP) — A leading House Democrat wants federal prosecutors to open a criminal investigation into the deaths of nine people in a Utah mine collapse last year.
Democratic Rep. George Miller of California is the chairman of the House Education and Labor Committee. Miller says his investigation into the August 2007 deaths at Crandall Canyon led him to make a criminal referral to the Justice Department.
Miller says UtahAmerican Energy may have misled federal mine safety inspectors on how safe the mine was. He says investigation shows the company may have downplayed a “bump” that burst pillars in another section of the mine months before the accident.
The Labor Department is still investigating the Crandall Canyon collapse.
Miller feels the deaths were avoidable and he wants to know if there was a larger conspiracy here.
After reaching for the limelight during the vigil to try and get the miners out, Bob Murray suddenly went mute.
This from the Salt Lake City Tribune:
Adair, along with mine co-owner Bob Murray and three other officials with Murray Energy’s Utah subsidiaries, declined to be deposed by committee investigators, asserting their constitutional right against self-incrimination, the report said.
The president and a former principal of Agapito Associates Inc., the engineering firm that advised Murray Energy on the mine plan, also were subpoenaed to testify but invoked their Fifth Amendment right as well, according to the report.
So what now?
Again, the Tribune story:
The U.S. attorney for Utah said he will review a congressional request for a criminal investigation into whether the Crandall Canyon mine general manager “willfully misled” federal officials.
A spokeswoman for Brett Tolman, the state’s top federal law enforcement official, said he takes the request “very seriously” and will review the materials submitted by House Education and Labor Committee Chairman George Miller.
“As with other referrals that come to our office, we will carefully screen the material provided to us, work with agents to conduct further investigation as needed, and consider whether criminal charges are appropriate based on evidence in the case,” Melodie Rydalch said in a statement.
While the mine operations should be held accountable if they indeed did put the safety of their workers knowingly in harms way, the bigger finger should be pointed at the federal agency responsible for overseeing these operations, the Mine Safety and Health Administration. The administration’s own inspector general has said the agency was negligent, according to the New York Times.
Hopefully the miners and their families will have justice in the end.
May 9th, 2008 at 11:51 am
Does anyone recall the UMW strike in the 70’s? Jimmy Carter and our federal government stepprd in and basically assisted in ending the strike. I was n a high school. I still recall my father, a truck driver, and my grandfather, a steelworker, in awe of these men who now made an average of $100 a day. I also recall the same men saying how stupid the miners were because they had to pay $22 per month for healthcare and were not permitted by law to strike. This was one of the issues that should have sent shock waves throughout our country, but no, we were caught up in the $100 per day to have the guts to go underground like a mole to earn your money. My point is, just like 30 years ago, it takes guts to do that job. This man Murray made me sick to see his face on TV talking about how safe the mine was and the cause is not theirs, it is all siesmic. Certainly, there is seismic activity every where in the world, all the time.
Would we be better off living underground while we have nuclear power plants on the surface providing the tremendous power our world now requires? It may be safer. Or would we better off tearing 1500 feet of earth and vegitation to strip the land to acquire the coal? We could replant all we discarded. We would have the power we need.
The answers are almost worse than the questions The solutions are almost incomprehensible. We demand the safety of every worker, and it should always be so. Is there really a safe way to mine or are we kidding ourselves?