Huntsman names a Utah Mine Safety panel
He says that Murray treated miners' kin 'unconscionably'
Gov. Jon Huntsman Jr. speaks at a press conference the day after three mine rescue workers were killed. Huntsman says it will be up to federal authorities to determine what went wrong at the mine.
Tom Smart, Deseret Morning News
Gov. Jon Huntsman Jr. named a Utah Mine Safety Commission Thursday, saying the families of the six miners trapped in the Crandall Canyon Mine had been "treated unconscionably" by mine co-owner Bob Murray.
The commission, which will be headed by Huntsman's former political opponent, Scott Matheson Jr., was created to help determine what the state's role should be in protecting coal miners.
Utah ceded mine safety to the federal government in 1977, a decision that the governor said may need to be reconsidered. But Huntsman said it will be up to federal authorities to determine what went wrong at the mine, a process that could take up to a year.
Matheson, a former U.S. attorney and University of Utah law school dean, ran as a Democratic candidate against Huntsman in the 2004 gubernatorial election. Matheson said the mine disaster "has shaken the state to its very core and has had a profound impact on all of us. It has been a great tragedy, and it's something we never want to see happen again."
He will be joined on the volunteer commission by state and local politicians including Huntington Mayor Hilary Gordon and Price Mayor Joe Piccolo as well as union and industry officials and former U.S. Sen. Jake Garn, a Republican.
One member of the new commission, Dennis O'Dell, who is the United Mine Workers' safety and health director, served on a similar group in West Virginia that came up with new regulations in the wake of the 2006 Sago mine disaster that left 12 dead.
The governor said the commission will hold public hearings in Huntington, Price and other communities before making what may be only the first round of recommendations to him this fall, in time to propose that the 2008 Legislature adopt new laws.
Senate Minority Leader Mike Dmitrich, D-Price, a lobbyist for the mining industry named to the commission, has said he doesn't believe the state needs to add to the federal safety regulations already in place.
But Huntsman said that "in the wake of this tragedy, I think it is an important and a fair discussion for us to be having. I don't want to guess or predetermine what the outcome may be."
The governor said he expects the public hearings will be "a very healing and cathartic aspect of the investigation." He said he has encountered miners who were afraid to talk about their working conditions.
"I told those with whom I spoke that they should not live for one second in fear," Huntsman said, promising that the miners and their families will have an opportunity to convey concerns.
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