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Jim Hightower
Jim Hightower
23 May 2012
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Massey Energy's Manmade Hellhole

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In March of last year, Massey Energy Corp.'s official record book for recording unsafe conditions in its Upper Big Branch coal mine in West Virginia said flatly: "none observed." It turns out that this was a flat-out lie. Just one month later, Upper Big Branch exploded, killing 29 miners and devastating their families.

Massey's in-house "observers" had indeed found safety problems — as they often did in this shoddily run, notoriously dangerous mine. But the corporation kept a dual set of books in order to mislead state and federal safety regulators.

The official record book, which Massey and all other coal giants are required to keep for review by government inspectors, is filled with such rosy reports as "none observed." But the true dangers at Upper Big Branch and other Massey mines have been secretly recorded in a set of internal books that executives kept sealed in the corporate closet.

Massey's secret reports are, however, now out of the closet, thanks to a comprehensive, 15-month-long probe by a hundred-member team of federal mine-safety investigators. The team's findings reveal not only an ugly safety record, but also a truly ugly corporate culture.

The investigators concluded that Massey — an enormously profitable corporation — pushed an ethic of profits over safety. Its executives took premeditated, systematic steps to circumvent safety rules, including falsifying records, failing to maintain (and sometimes actually disabling) safety systems, and intimidating and even firing workers who tried to report hazards. The probe included interviews with 266 people — but, interestingly, 18 Massey honchos (including longtime CEO Don Blankenship) refused to be interviewed, invoking their right against self-incrimination.

No wonder they took the Fifth. Upper Big Branch was a disaster long before it exploded into an underground hell. Despite the corporate policy of deceit, the deep shaft simply had too many problems to hide — in the year before the catastrophic blast, Upper Big Branch had received more mandatory orders from government regulators to shut down unsafe areas than any other coal mine in America.

The president of the United Mine Workers of America, Cecil Roberts, bluntly says that Massey's executive suite, board of directors and the entire management structure showed "utter contempt for mine safety and health laws."

What we have here is another grotesque example of America's "de-reg follies." Corporate lobbyists and right-wing ideologues have yoked our nation to a policy of corporate carelessness that coldly accepts worker deaths as a necessary cost of doing business.

Disgustingly, 15 months after the shameful explosion, nothing has changed. While Massey Energy has been taken over by another mining giant, Alpha Natural Resources, the new owner has thumbed its nose at miners by hiring former Massey executives, including two who had direct oversight of Upper Big Branch. Then, in an astonishing affront to the families of the 29 dead miners, Alpha hired Massey's chief executive to run its mine safety program! This insult puts the "numb" in numbskull — and it was so crude that public outrage has now run the Massey chief out of Alpha.

The prize for Most Craven Performer, however, goes to Congress. Republicans and a handful of coal-backed Democrats have cynically blocked passage of tougher mine-safety laws to stop the senseless, murderous greed of coal profiteers. But now, the damning evidence assembled by the mine-safety team has both infuriated and emboldened grassroots reformers, and they do not intend to let the congressional scoundrels go unchallenged.

Gene Jones, for example, whose twin brother, Dean, was blown up in the Upper Big Branch conflagration, says he's personally going to Washington to confront each one of them.

"If you continue to wait (on Congress)," he says, "it's going to happen again. It's time to do something. I'm just going to speak out the best I can and be honest about it. And make them listen to me."

To help, contact West Virginia Watchdog at westvirginia.watchdog.org.

To find out more about Jim Hightower, and read features by other Creators Syndicate writers and cartoonists, visit the Creators Syndicate web page at www.creators.com.

COPYRIGHT 2011 CREATORS.COM


Comments

6 Comments | Post Comment
Would you please explain, Mr. High Minded Hightower, what "tougher mine safety laws" are going to do to help anybody if they are not enforced? Laws were on the books and not enforced. More laws on the books may make lovers of great prose like you satisfied, but they won't do a thing if they are not enforced.

Have a look first at the culture of indifference of government employees who have no accountability for anything they do before you go on your spree of rewriting the laws of the land on your quest to feel like you're doing something significant. Words and concepts and Hightower politically correct exhortations are cool, cool, cool, but only the actions count, and I don't see you doing much in that department.
Comment: #1
Posted by: Masako
Tue Jul 5, 2011 9:03 PM
Masako, you are so right. More laws, more laws, more uneforced laws. Always the appearance of doing something while in fact doing nothing. Overstretched big government staffed by indifferent workers is all one can see for miles, Hightower exposes much but it is his spectrum that prefers dog and pony shows to real action.



Comment: #2
Posted by: Tom
Wed Jul 6, 2011 7:32 AM
Well, Tom and Masako, what do you think should be done? Other than sitting there and 'blaming 'government' for everything. How can enforcement occur when government regulations have been eradicated, as Mr. hightower points out? Regulations are the foundation for enforcement, which is why corporate america fights them so much. I for one am glad that Mr. Hightower is calling out the individuals who are responsible for putting profit over people's lives (or the environment, or the poor, or the wellbeing of the elderly, etc.). It's people like the both of you, who leap to blame the glarlingly general ''big government' who help criminal corporations continue the abuses. If government is to blame, surely these corporations are innocent? I don't think so. I think its time we stop coddling these criminal organizations and fix our free market system. It would be nice if people showed some common sense - when an individual does wrong, that individual should be castigated, not some general, ghost of a threat, like 'big government'. Or perhaps you both already realize you are speaking out of the Massey Energy corporate public relations manual and are happy kowtowing to the masters there....
Comment: #3
Posted by: Mel Maryland
Wed Jul 6, 2011 8:13 AM
I like Hightower's style. He truly cares about making the world a better place, I believe. Whereas, a commentator such as Maher I often question his agenda: is he having fun, treating the audience as unsophisticated rubes, or just wanting to say things that benefit a narrow band of Maher's friends? I view Hightower and someone else I like, Beck, as having different views but each caring and wanting to do good for the community and the country. However, in this article, one sentence jumps off the page: 100 government investigators working fifteen months. I have two hopes. One, I hope they were not working solely on this case, like, they had many other cases at the same time. And I hope they were making $2,000 a month rather than $8000.
Comment: #4
Posted by: Mike Hayne
Thu Jul 7, 2011 6:15 AM
"...thanks to a comprehensive, 15-month-long probe by a hundred-member team of federal mine-safety investigators..." found that " Its executives took premeditated, systematic steps to circumvent safety rules, including falsifying records, failing to maintain (and sometimes actually disabling) safety systems..."

Safety rules were in place, no one has gutted the rules. It sounds like the givernment stepped in to close the barn door after the horses had left. The rules are in place and should be enforced before the tragedy occurs. Government took Massey's officials at their word, why? Is that what we pay taxes for them to do? Masako and I think the government is just as culpable as the execs, aftersight is not oversight.

Mel says " Other than sitting there and 'blaming 'government' for everything. " Shrug, All wars are started by government. Was Hitler some crazed civillian? Leave it, I like that spelling. The black soldiers refused treatment for STD's in the name of research, that was perpetrated by... government. The more government attempts to do and then does poorly the more I will blame them. The founders didn't trust government so they tried to limit it. I live in a world where people on the dole look at government as daddy day care. Fine, until the real fathers die in a mine. Government shares the blame because they said they could prevent it and instead they got in bed with the killers.

Comment: #5
Posted by: Tom
Fri Jul 8, 2011 9:32 AM
I think I should throw in my two cents into this conversation because of my 20 years of experience for being in charge of corporate environmental, health, and safety regulations for pesticide and fertilixer manufacturers. First, from my experience I noticed that during Republican administrations, I could sense a difference in the enforcement of regulations. Just like now during the budget fights, the Republicans are trying to protect their corporate campaign donors and are even talking about drastically cutting funds for the U.S.EPA . By doing so they know inspections and enforcement will be seriously be curtailed, and the EPA will have their hands tied. By and large, although I was representing the corporate side, I fould the EPA, state and federal, or any other regulatory agencies, were very helpfull when I had questions. Inspectors were generlly very helpfull and if we work with them were easy to get along with. In one case I even needed to encourage an inspector to give us a warning citation because the company was dragging their feet on complying with the regulation because the cost. But, I also had one inspector that walked in the front door and was obviously looking for a citation, almost as if he had a grudge against us.
I think what happened at Massy was partly the fault of an inspector not doing his job. Whether he was lazy or was being influence, he obviously ignored many violations he should of easy caught in the mine. I have never heard of it happening, but I could envision it very easily happening for an inspector who doesn't make a whole lot of money of being influenced. Another possibility I could see happening was the company talking to the inspector and insinuating they might possibly hire him in the future with a much higher salary. That happens all the time. Eventually the company may actually even hire the inspector, but after he's been there a while the ex-inspector often gets frustraded with the company not complying and eventually quits. After an inspector has gained some experience working with a company, they usually quit and find work with either a more reputable company, or a consulting firm.
I don't have the time to proof this, so please excuse my writing.
Comment: #6
Posted by: Durham
Fri Jul 8, 2011 6:33 PM
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