Current:Home > ContactKentucky House approves bill to reduce emergency-trained workers in small coal mines -ProfitPioneers Hub
Kentucky House approves bill to reduce emergency-trained workers in small coal mines
View
Date:2025-04-14 22:58:07
FRANKFORT, Ky. (AP) — The Kentucky House voted Monday to allow the state’s smallest coal mining operations to reduce the number of miners with emergency medical training assigned for each underground shift.
In a state once known as a coal producing powerhouse, supporters said the measure is needed to help keep the smallest mining operations in business amid the industry’s downturn. The bill’s critics warned it would roll back an important safeguard enacted years ago following a Kentucky mining fatality.
“It truly troubles me to think that we could potentially be trading the safety of our coal mining families for what appears to be a nominal financial benefit, if anything at all,” said Democratic state Rep. Ashley Tackett Laferty, who represents a coal-producing region in eastern Kentucky.
The measure — House Bill 85 — passed the House on a 75-18 vote and goes to the Senate next. Republicans have supermajorities in both chambers.
The bill would cut in half the number of mine emergency technicians required to work when a shift has 15 or fewer miners. Two METs are currently required per shift, but the bill would reduce it to one.
Republican state Rep. Bill Wesley said his bill is motivated by instances when entire shifts were shut down and miners sent home because not enough METs showed up for work.
“Nobody got paid,” Wesley said during the House debate. “Everyone was sent home. And I think that this is a needed bill to help all the coal miners.”
Tackett Laferty said she spoke to a miner with more than 20 years of experience who recalled just one instance when a mine was shut down due to a lack of METs. He told her the entire shift was rescheduled a few days later to make up for the lost production, she said.
Tony Oppegard, a mine safety attorney in Kentucky, has said the proposal would weaken safety standards.
“I think it’s shortsighted and there’s an easy solution,” he said in a recent phone interview. “The easy solution is mine operators can require more of their miners to be METs as a condition of employment.”
It would be an inexpensive option for coal operators, since METs generally are paid an extra $1 per hour, Oppegard said. With two METs per shift, the cost would be an extra $16 per shift, he said.
“That’s pennies for a coal company,” he said.
METs are miners trained to provide emergency medical care and to stabilize an injured miner’s condition. Oppegard said the requirement for two METs per shift was part of a larger safety measure passed by Kentucky lawmakers in 2007, and it stemmed from the 2005 death of an eastern Kentucky miner.
A federal inspection report said the miner was hit by a coal hauler at a Harlan County mine. He suffered “near-amputating injuries.” The report said his injuries were made worse because he was not given first aid before he was taken above ground to an ambulance. The report said workers in the mine had not been trained in first aid.
Tackett Laferty said the safeguard of having multiple METs on site isn’t what’s causing mines to close.
The bill’s supporters include Republican Rep. Jim Gooch Jr., who represents a coal region in western Kentucky. Gooch comes from a coal mining family and previously worked in mines himself. He said the bill is a recognition of the realities for some operators with as few as 10 employees working a shift.
“I don’t think it’s any threat to the safety of our miners,” he said.
Under the bill, two METs would still be required for shifts with more than 15 but fewer than 51 miners.
Coal employment numbers in Kentucky have fallen sharply over the last decade as demand for coal has declined.
Kentucky employed about 4,700 mine workers at the end of 2023, including about 2,700 in underground mines, compared to nearly 12,000 total miners in 2013, according to numbers provided by the state.
Cheaper natural gas prices and tougher environmental regulations have prompted electric providers to move away from buying coal.
___
Lovan reported from Louisville, Ky.
veryGood! (6)
Related
- US Open player compensation rises to a record $65 million, with singles champs getting $3.6 million
- Scientists say landfills release more planet-warming methane than previously thought
- Why Prince William and Kate Middleton Are Delighted With Prince George’s Role in Coronation
- Yellowstone National Park partially reopens after floods
- Olympic women's basketball bracket: Schedule, results, Team USA's path to gold
- Kim Kardashian, Kevin Hart and Sylvester Stallone are accused of massive water waste
- PHOTOS: A third of Pakistan is under water in catastrophic floods
- The Late Late Show With James Corden Shoots Down One Direction Reunion Rumors
- A Georgia governor’s latest work after politics: a children’s book on his cats ‘Veto’ and ‘Bill’
- The Lilo & Stitch Ohana Is Growing: Meet the Stars Joining Disney's Live-Action Movie
Ranking
- A steeplechase record at the 2024 Paris Olympics. Then a proposal. (He said yes.)
- Target's Spring Designer Collections Are Here: Shop These Styles from Rhode, Agua Bendita, and Fe Noel
- A record amount of seaweed is choking shores in the Caribbean
- Netflix Apologizes After Love Is Blind Live Reunion Is Delayed
- The seven biggest college football quarterback competitions include Michigan, Ohio State
- Opinion: Life hacks from India on how to stay cool (without an air conditioner)
- Kourtney Kardashian Supports Travis Barker at Coachella as Blink-182 Returns to the Stage
- Your local park has a hidden talent: helping fight climate change
Recommendation
British golfer Charley Hull blames injury, not lack of cigarettes, for poor Olympic start
It's Texas' hottest summer ever. Can the electric grid handle people turning up AC?
Federal judges deal the oil industry another setback in climate litigation
The Exact Moment Love Is Blind’s Paul Decided What to Tell Micah at Altar
US wholesale inflation accelerated in November in sign that some price pressures remain elevated
13 Products To Help Manage Your Pet's Anxiety While Traveling
Influencer Camila Coehlo Shares the Important Reason She Started Saying No
What the Inflation Reduction Act does and doesn't do about rising prices