Judge: Stricter Regulation at Massey West Virginia Mine Not Justified

June 10, 2010

An administrative law judge ruled this week that there was no pattern of violations that would lead to stricter regulation at a Massey Energy Co. mine in Virginia.

A Federal Mine Safety and Health Review Commission judge ruled that 10 of 29 violations found at Massey’s Tiller No. 1 mine weren’t serious, dropping the total below the threshold of 25 to establish a pattern.

Federal Mine Safety and Health Administration director Joe Main said the decision shows flaws in the system for targeting mines with numerous health and safety violations. MSHA wanted to classify Tiller No. 1 as its first persistent violator.

Massey said the decision shows why there’s an appellate process.

The Virginia-based company is under investigation after an explosion killed 29 men at its Upper Big Branch mine in West Virginia on April 5.

Subscribe Insurance news headlines delivered to your email.
Get a free subscription to our popular email newsletter.

Latest Comments

  • June 11, 2010 at 9:27 am
    wudchuck says:
    apparently the 10, were minor and not major infractions and therefore allows them to be under the threshold. what amazes me, is true, that sometimes things are based on judge... read more
  • June 10, 2010 at 8:34 am
    SoFla Agent says:
    $5 and a cup of joe says the judge used to work at the MMS........
See all comments

Add a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

*

More News
More News Features