In wake of Crandall Canyon, governor's new mining safety panel meets to discuss strategies
Newly formed Utah commission is seeking MSHA's cooperation
PRICE Now that the rescue effort at the Crandall Canyon Mine has ended, state leaders are turning their attention to developing strategies to make mining safer.
That was the mind-set of Monday's initial organizing meeting of the Utah Mine Safety Commission, held at the Western Energy Training Center in Helper. It was the first opportunity for the governor's hand-picked, eight-member group to discuss how the state can work to prevent disasters like Crandall Canyon, which claimed the lives of six miners along with three rescuers.
The Utah tragedy has brought the safety of coal mining into question again as critics openly ask if everything is being done to keep workers safe.
Of the 17 states with underground mining operations, Utah is among seven with no state safety inspection programs for coal mines. For the past 30 years, Utah has instead followed federal Mine Safety and Health Administration safety regulations and enforcement.
In his opening comments Monday, commission chairman Scott Matheson Jr. reiterated the panel's mission is not to investigate the Crandall Canyon accident but to review and recommend future measures the state can take regarding mine safety and emergency responses.
The MSHA investigation of the Crandall Canyon Mine activities will proceed as representatives assess the underground mine safety there. Additionally, investigators will interview miners to obtain their perspective on the accounts and events of Aug. 6, the day of the initial collapse.
MSHA senior adviser and attorney Jim Crawford told the commission that MSHA will try to accommodate the commission's needs for information without compromising MSHA's probe. He cautioned that some specifics may be withheld until MSHA's investigation is complete.
Matheson was adamant in questioning Crawford, stating that the governor's commission should be given access to any information it needs. Matheson said how much cooperation the commission receives from MSHA will determine his panel's ability to do its assigned job.
"You are going to be talking to a lot of people who are going to tell you a lot of things, some of which is going to be relevant to what we need to know to do our work. And we'd like to have access to that information," Matheson said.
"I'm not asking you to provide us information that you are going to give to the public in general. I'm asking you for the information that the Labor Commission, a state agency, is going to have access to and that the governor's office is going to have access to."
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