OAK HILL, W.Va. (AP) — Deep in the hills of West Virginia, coal mining and the dangers that come with it have been a part of families’ lives for generations. Death and tragedy are woven into history, but there’s also a fierce legacy of miners fighting for — and winning — protections that have benefited workers nationwide.
As black lung rates rise among workers — including those in their 30s and 40s — forced to dig through more rock filled with deadly silica to reach the remaining thin coal seams, some sick retired coal miners from central Appalachia are fighting back.
They are demanding the Trump administration enforce a rule approved last year by the U.S. Mine Safety and Health Administration that would cut the federal limit for allowable respirable crystalline silica dust exposure by half. This rule is designed to help protect all types of miners nationwide from the current driving force of black lung and other illnesses.
The silica rule was put on hold before it took effect in April after industry groups suing the government filed a request in court to block it, citing costs and difficulties implementing the rule. The administration did not push back against the lawsuit and was granted another extension in October due to the government shutdown.
Dozens of former miners from the hard-hit region traveled to Washington last month to protest the delay of the silica rule, along with cuts and proposed rollbacks to health and safety protections. Their opposition comes months after President Donald Trump signed executive orders allowing coal-fired plants to pollute more and streamlining the permitting process to open new areas for mineral production, including oil and natural gas drilling and mining of “beautiful, clean coal.”
At the time, he was celebrated at the White House by smiling miners in hard hats, who welcomed the administration’s pro-coal agenda.
https://www.chron.com/business/article/photo-essay-coal-miners-with-black-lung-fight-21144720.php