Coal mining deaths double in 2017

Authored by thehill.com and submitted by dareeza
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Workplace deaths in the coal mining industry increased last year to their highest point in three years.

A total of 15 miners died on the job in 2017, Mine Safety and Health Administration (MSHA) data show, compared with eight in 2016.

That year saw the fewest mining deaths since records began.

The 15th death occurred early Friday morning at a Revelation Energy mine in Fayette County in southern West Virginia, West Virginia Public Broadcasting reported.

Thurman Watts died when a piece of machinery he was operating traveled over a wall.

West Virginia saw the bulk of the 2017 miner deaths, with eight.

The Senate last month approved David Zatezalo, a former coal mining executive, to lead MSHA, the main agency responsible for coal mine safety.

Zatezalo faced numerous questions about his own safety record throughout the confirmation process. He was previously head of Rhino Resources when MSHA took multiple enforcement actions against the company.

Zatezalo sought to assure senators that he would take strong enforcement actions when necessary.

bobsaget91 on January 2nd, 2018 at 21:54 UTC »

Don't tell me regulations serve a purpose...!

JectorDelan on January 2nd, 2018 at 20:58 UTC »

No one knew coal mining could be so hard!

boinky-boink on January 2nd, 2018 at 20:15 UTC »

That must be why Trump is gloating about his role in aviation safety today!