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Department of Labor completed impact inspections at 15 mines with histories of repeated health, safety violations in June 2024

MSHA identifies 31 significant and substantial violations, 3 unwarrantable failure findings

WASHINGTON – The U.S. Department of Labor announced today that its Mine Safety and Health Administration completed impact inspections at 15 mines in 12 states in June 2024 and cited mine operators for 195 violations.

The agency began conducting impact inspections after an April 2010 explosion in West Virginia at the Upper Big Branch Mine killed 29 miners. 

MSHA’s impact inspections since 2023 have identified 4,075 violations, including 1,119 significant and substantial and 71 unwarrantable failure findings. An S&S violation could contribute in a significant and substantial way to the cause and effect of a safety or health hazard. Violations designated as unwarrantable failures occur when an inspector finds aggravated conduct that constitutes more than ordinary negligence.

The agency conducts impact inspections at mines that merit increased agency attention and enforcement due to poor compliance history; previous accidents, injuries, and illnesses; and other compliance concerns. Of the 195 violations in June 2024, 31 were evaluated as S&S and three had unwarrantable failure findings. MSHA completed these inspections at mines in California, Georgia, Idaho, Illinois, Kentucky, Minnesota, Missouri, New Mexico, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Virginia and West Virginia.

“MSHA impact inspections in June 2024 highlight the hazards created when mine operators fail to follow approved ventilation plans that protect miners from explosions and exposure to respirable dust,” said Assistant Secretary for Mine Safety and Health Chris Williamson. “The Biden-Harris administration’s continued focus on good jobs includes using enforcement tools to identify and eliminate hazards so miners are able to return home each day to their families and their communities safe and healthy.”

Road Fork #52 Mine operated by Spartan Mining Company LLC in Wyoming County, West Virginia, was one of the mines selected for an impact inspection in June. MSHA chose the underground coal mine in response to complaints over the past year about hazardous conditions related to allowing unsafe methane accumulation, tampering with methane monitoring devices and failing to comply with the mine’s approved ventilation plan. 

In January 2024, a methane ignition occurred at the Road Fork mine but no injuries were suffered. The mine liberates more than four million cubic feet of methane in a 24-hour period and is currently on a 5-day 103(i) methane spot inspection schedule. MSHA continues to monitor mines that liberate excessive quantities of methane or other explosive gases closely.

On June 24, 2024, an MSHA supervisor arrived at the Road Fork #52 Mine and immediately secured the phone lines before agency inspectors arrived. Once on site, agency inspectors traveled to all five working sections without miners on the surface calling miners underground to warn them of MSHA’s presence. The inspection led MSHA to issue 25 violations of mandatory safety and health standards, eight of which were S&S violations and two designated as unwarrantable failures. Inspectors found the mine operator failed to follow a federally approved mine ventilation plan and allowed particularly dangerous conditions to exist, which exposed miners to ignition and explosion hazards. MSHA inspectors found the following conditions existed at the mine:


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Original article published by MSHA

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