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Judi Lynn

(160,530 posts)
Thu May 29, 2014, 11:20 PM May 2014

The War On Coal Miners: How Companies Hide The Threat Of Black Lung From Watchdogs And Workers

The War On Coal Miners: How Companies Hide The Threat Of Black Lung From Watchdogs And Workers
Posted: 05/29/2014 10:14 pm EDT Updated: 10 minutes ago

The dust was so thick that Justin Greenwell could barely see what was in front of him.

A 29-year-old miner, Greenwell had grown accustomed to working in the coal dust below ground in the Parkway Mine in Muhlenberg County, Kentucky. Yet the prevalence of the dust in the air bothered Greenwell more and more. He'd labored for seven years in the mines, and already he was experiencing shortness of breath when he worked on his farm on the weekends.

Prolonged exposure to coal dust leads to coal worker's pneumoconiosis, known colloquially as black lung. It's a miserable disease that forces miners to live out their last days coughing and gasping for air. To protect employees, mine operators are required by law to keep their coal dust levels in check. While inspectors do some of the monitoring, the operators themselves also collect samples and provide them to federal regulators to prove they're in compliance.

According to Greenwell, there was a simple reason the Parkway Mine managed to avoid fines despite all the dust: Its operator, Armstrong Coal, a subsidiary of St. Louis-based Armstrong Energy, was submitting misleading samples to regulators.

"It's been going on since I started there," Greenwell alleged in an interview. "All these guys in management, they know it's wrong. But they don't care about our health."

More:
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2014/05/29/black-lung-disease-kentucky-coal-dust_n_5368878.html

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The War On Coal Miners: How Companies Hide The Threat Of Black Lung From Watchdogs And Workers (Original Post) Judi Lynn May 2014 OP
Kicked and recommended. Uncle Joe May 2014 #1
K&R intaglio May 2014 #2
There is a striking moment in "Harlan County USA" . . . Brigid Jun 2014 #3

Brigid

(17,621 posts)
3. There is a striking moment in "Harlan County USA" . . .
Sun Jun 1, 2014, 09:28 AM
Jun 2014

In which a doctor (a pathologist, I assume) uses a pair of tweezers to hold up for the cameras what's left of the lung tissue of a coal miner who died of black lung disease. It kind of put the kibosh on the sleazy coal operator's insistence that there is no evidence that years in their coal mines doesn't cause lung problems. If you haven't seen "Harlan County USA," do so.

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