Current:Home > NewsCoal miners getting new protections from silica dust linked to black lung disease -WealthSync Hub
Coal miners getting new protections from silica dust linked to black lung disease
View
Date:2025-04-26 11:09:40
WASHINGTON (AP) — Coal miners will be better protected from poisonous silica dust that has contributed to the premature deaths of thousands of mine workers from a respiratory ailment commonly known as “black lung” disease, the Labor Department said Tuesday as it issued a new federal rule on miners’ safety.
The final rule, announced by Acting Labor Secretary Julie Su, cuts in half the permissible exposure limit for crystalline silica for an 8-hour shift.
Mine workers, community advocates and elected officials from Appalachian states have pushed for the stricter rule, noting that health problems have grown in recent years as miners dig through more layers of rock to gain access to coal seams when deposits closer to the surface have long been tapped. The increased drilling generates deadly silica dust and has caused severe forms of pneumoconiosis, better known as black lung disease, even among younger miners, some in their 30s and 40s.
“It is unconscionable that our nation’s miners have worked without adequate protection from silica dust despite it being a known health hazard for decades,” Su said Tuesday. “Today, we’re making it clear that no job should be a death sentence, and every worker has the right to come home healthy and safe at the end of the day.’'
In Central Appalachia, an estimated one in five tenured coal miners has black lung disease. The condition reduces their life expectancy by an average of 12 years and makes it a “struggle to get through a phone call or play with their grandkids without losing their breath,’' Su said in a speech in Uniontown, Pennsylvania, where she appeared with Cecil Roberts, president of the United Mine Workers of America, and other union leaders.
“For too long, we accepted this as just the way things are for people who work in mines,’' Su said. “They’ve had to work without the same protections from silica dust that people in other industries have, even though we’ve known about the harms of silica dust since Frances Perkins” who was labor secretary in the 1930s and 1940s.
The election-year rule shows “what it looks like to have the most pro-worker, pro-union president in history,’' Su said, a political comment referring to Democratic President Joe Biden.
Rebecca Shelton, director of policy at the Appalachian Citizens Law Center, which pressed for stricter rules to protect miners, said the group was reviewing the rule closely to ensure that regulators from the Mine Safety and Health Administration accounted for comments by health professionals, attorneys and miners who have worked on the rule for years.
“There are too many lives at stake to get this wrong, and we’ll do whatever we can to ensure that this rule provides the protection that miners deserve,’' Shelton said.
Democratic senators from Ohio, West Virginia, Pennsylvania and Virginia hailed the new rule, saying it will play an essential role in safeguarding miners.
A spokesman for the National Mining Association said the group was reviewing the rule but supports the lower limits. The mining lobby has pushed to allow use of administrative controls and personal protective equipment to meet safety standards. “Unfortunately, those recommendations were not included in the final rule,″ said spokesman Conor Bernstein.
Vonda Robinson, whose husband, John, who was diagnosed with black lung a decade ago at age 47, said she’s felt hopeful as officials considered the rule changes. But she was skeptical how the rule will be enforced.
Robinson, who lives in rural Nickelsville, Virginia, near the Tennessee border, said the mine safety office does not have enough staff or resources to adequately protect workers and their families.
“You can have rules, but until you back it up with enforcement, it’s not going to mean anything,” she said in an interview. “If they’re going to put out these rulings, you need to hire more people.”
The White House requested a $50 million increase to the mine safety office’s budget for the current year, most of which would have been earmarked for more inspectors and enforcement. Congress rejected it, keeping the budget at the 2023 level of $388 million.
Vonda Robinson said her husband struggles every day. John Robinson worked in the mines for almost three decades. Two years ago, the couple met with a physician about a lung transplant.
“Until you see it and live with it, you don’t understand,” Vonda Robinson said. “And knowing what we’re looking at now -- miners being diagnosed at 32 – they’ll probably never seen their children graduate or have grandchildren. It really upsets me.”
The Labor Department rule lowers the permissible exposure limit of respirable crystalline silica to 50 micrograms per cubic meter of air for a full-shift exposure, calculated as an 8-hour average. If a miner’s exposure exceeds the limit, mine operators must take immediate corrective actions.
The rule is in line with exposure levels imposed by the Occupational Safety and Health Administration on construction and other non-mining industries. And it’s the standard the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention was recommending as far back as 1974.
The Labor Department began studying silica and its impact on workers’ health nearly a century ago, but the focus on stopping exposure in the workplace largely bypassed coal miners. Instead, regulations centered on coal dust, a separate hazard created by crushing or pulverizing coal rock that also contributes to black lung.
In the decades since, silica dust has become a major problem as Appalachian miners cut through layers of sandstone to reach less accessible coal seams in mountaintop mines where coal closer to the surface has long been tapped. Silica dust is 20 times more toxic than coal dust and causes severe forms of black lung disease after even a few years of exposure.
veryGood! (87763)
Related
- US wholesale inflation accelerated in November in sign that some price pressures remain elevated
- It's only fitting Ukraine gets something that would have belonged to Russia
- Attorneys for college taken over by DeSantis allies threaten to sue ‘alternate’ school
- 4 Baton Rouge officers charged in connection with brave cave scandal
- Bill Belichick's salary at North Carolina: School releases football coach's contract details
- NYC flooding updates: Sewers can't handle torrential rain; city reels after snarled travel
- Southern California, Lincoln Riley top Misery Index because they can't be taken seriously
- Connecticut enacts its most sweeping gun control law since the Sandy Hook shooting
- Trump wants to turn the clock on daylight saving time
- Taylor Swift Brings Her Squad to Cheer on Travis Kelce at NFL Game at MetLife Stadium
Ranking
- Questlove charts 50 years of SNL musical hits (and misses)
- New York City works to dry out after severe flooding: Outside was like a lake
- Late-night shows return after writers strike as actors resume talks that could end their standoff
- In France, workers build a castle from scratch the 13th century way
- Backstage at New York's Jingle Ball with Jimmy Fallon, 'Queer Eye' and Meghan Trainor
- Rishi Sunak needs to rally his flagging Conservatives. He hopes a dash of populism will do the trick
- Valentino returns to Paris’ Les Beaux-Arts with modern twist; Burton bids farewell at McQueen
- Taiwan unveils first domestically made submarine to help defend against possible Chinese attack
Recommendation
Newly elected West Virginia lawmaker arrested and accused of making terroristic threats
In France, workers build a castle from scratch the 13th century way
Video shows bloodied Black man surrounded by officers during Florida traffic stop
New York Mets manager Buck Showalter not returning in 2024 after disappointing season
Meet the volunteers risking their lives to deliver Christmas gifts to children in Haiti
Supreme Court to hear cases on agency power, guns and online speech in new term
Attorney General Garland says in interview he’d resign if Biden asked him to take action on Trump
Emergency services on scene after more than 30 trapped in church roof collapse