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Thursday, May 08, 2008

Crandall Canyon Officials Could Face Criminal Prosecution

Yet another report showing the Crandall Canyon mine collapse could have been prevented was released today. The House Education and Labor Committee, led by Rep. George Miller (D-CA), released the report after months of investigation. The disaster at the Crandall Canyon mine in Utah killed six miners and three rescue workers in August 2007.

The report, like two other reports released in March, finds that both the mine's operator and the Mine Safety and Health Administration are to blame.

In March 2007, four months before the disaster, a different collapse, or bump, occurred at a nearby part of Crandall Canyon mine. According to the report, officials managing mine operations and officials at Murray Energy, the mine's owner, new of the March incident but failed to report it to federal regulators — a direct violation of federal rules. The report states, "It is quite possible that, had MSHA known the full severity of the March bump," MSHA would not have allowed the mine to continue operations.

But MSHA still bears responsibility. MSHA was informally made aware of the March bump, but claims the mine's operators "downplayed" its significance. Regardless, MSHA foolishly approved (under intense pressure from the mine's operators) a plan for the company to conduct retreat mining at Crandall Canyon. Retreat mining is a dangerous technique in which miners remove support pillars in order to intentionally collapse areas of the mine no longer in use.

Because the mine's officials ignored federal law, Miller has referred them to the Justice Department for further investigation:

Last month, I sent a criminal referral to the Department of Justice, recommending that it investigate whether the mine's general manager, Laine W. Adair, individually or in conspiracy with others, willfully concealed or covered a material fact or made materially false representations in a matter under the jurisdiction of the executive branch, specifically MSHA…

Visit the committee's website to download the report and learn more.



Posted by Matt Madia



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