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5/19/2006   For Immediate Release Printer Friendly VersonPrint this page

Capito Introduces Legislation to Protect West Virginia Miners
MINER Act will reform mine safety regulations

WASHINGTON, DC - In response to the Sago and Alma mine tragedies, U.S. Rep. Shelley Moore Capito (R-WV) today introduced legislation to better ensure the safety of West Virginia's miners by drastically reforming mine safety regulations.  The legislation was cosponsored by Rep. Nick Rahall (D-WV). 

 

The legislation, the Mine Improvement and New Emergency Response Act of 2006 (MINER Act), is the House companion bill to legislation introduced by Senator Mike Enzi (R-WY), Chairman of the Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee (HELP Committee).  Chairman Enzi's bill, cosponsored by Senator Robert Byrd (D-WV) and Senator Jay Rockefeller (D-WV), was unanimously passed by the Senate HELP Committee earlier this week.

 

"The Sago and Alma mine disasters are dark spots in our nation's history that we can never let happen again," said Capito.  "At the very least, the federal government owes it to the family members who lost loved ones on those horrible days to reform our outdated mining regulations to ensure our coal miners' safety.  I am very encouraged by the bipartisan support this legislation has in both the House and the Senate, and I look forward to working with House leadership to advance this important legislation."

 

Key provisions of the MINER Act include:

 

Require each covered mine to develop and continuously update a written emergency

response plan;

 

Promote use of equipment and technology that is currently commercially available;

 

Require each mine's emergency response plan to be continuously reviewed, updated and re-certified by MSHA every six months;

 

Direct the Secretary of Labor to require, within three years, wireless two-way

communications and an electronic tracking system permitting those on the surface to

locate persons trapped underground;

 

Require each mine to make available two experienced rescue teams capable of a

one hour response time;

 

Require mine operators to make notification of all incidents/accidents which pose a

reasonable risk of death within 15 minutes, and sets a civil penalty of $5,000 to $60,000

for mine operators who fail to do so;

 

Establish a competitive grant program for new mine safety technology to be administered by NIOSH;

 

Establish an interagency working group to provide a formal means of sharing nonclassified technology that would have applicability to mine safety;

 

Raise the criminal penalty cap to $250,000 for first offenses and $500,000 for second offenses, and raise the maximum civil penalty for flagrant violations to $220,000;

 

Give MSHA the power to request an injunction (shutting down a mine) in cases where the mine has refused to pay a final order MSHA penalty;

 

Create a scholarship program available to miners and those who wish to become miners and MSHA enforcement staff to head off an anticipated shortage in trained and experienced miners and MSHA enforcement staff; and,

 

Establish the Sago Mine Safety Grants program to provide training grants to better identify, avoid and prevent unsafe working conditions in and around the mines. These grants will be made on an annual, competitive basis to provide education and training for employers and miners, with a special emphasis on smaller mines.

 

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