McCraren Compliance

MSHA announces findings of March 2024 impact inspections completed at 14 mines with histories of repeated health, safety violations

Inspections identified 74 significant, substantial; 4 unwarrantable failure findings

WASHINGTON – The U.S. Department of Labor announced today that its Mine Safety and Health Administration completed impact inspections at 14 mines in 11 states in March 2024, issuing 199 violations and one safeguard.­­

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

Since 2023, MSHA’s impact inspections have identified 3,333 violations, including 959 significant and substantial and 63 unwarrantable failure findings. An S&S violation is one that 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 199 violations MSHA identified in March 2024, 74 were evaluated as S&S and four had an unwarrantable failure finding. The agency completed these inspections at mines in Alabama, Colorado, Illinois, Kentucky, Louisiana, Michigan, Oklahoma, Pennsylvania, Utah, Virginia and West Virginia.

“The results of March’s impact inspections uncovered several serious violations, including putting miners at risk of fire and explosion hazards and impeding miners’ ability to escape emergency situations,” said Assistant Secretary for Mine Safety and Health Chris Williamson.

The Crimson Oak Grove Mine — an underground coal mine in Jefferson County, Alabama — was selected for an impact inspection after the mine experienced an elevated citation rate during the previous quarter along with numerous hazard complaints.

Inspectors arrived at the Oak Grove mine on March 20, 2024, and secured the phone systems on the surface that provide communications to the underground mining sections. This stops miners on the surface from calling miners underground to warn them of MSHA’s presence. One inspector stayed on the surface to address safety hazards, another traveled the belt conveyors, and three inspectors and one supervisor traveled underground to both continuous mining machine sections.

The inspection resulted in a total of 39 citations and one order, 18 of which were designated as S&S violations. Specifically, MSHA inspectors found the following conditions existed at the mine:


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Original article published by MSHA

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