Muzi.com News Gallery Library Forum Celebrity Movies Chinastar Regions Channels
Set Home|Subscribe|Premium Home|MyMuzi

Home | Headlines | Photos | Region | People | Time | Events | Business | Sports | Showbiz | IT | Politics | Military | Society | Education | Life | Health | Most-viewed Story | Most-viewed Coverage
  Muzi.com : Muzi (English) : News
  Senate plans hearing on mine collapse
Last updated: 2007-08-23


Senate plans hearing on mine collapse
2007-08-23

Event
2007 Utah Coal Mine Accident
110th Congress
Even as crews began a last effort Thursday to find six trapped miners, lawmakers in Washington launched separate reviews of whether the mining that preceded the thunderous cave-in was too aggressive.

As a drill bored a sixth hole into the side of a mountain, Sen. Edward Kennedy, chairman of the Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee, demanded a litany of documents from the Labor Department about the Crandall Canyon Mine and its operators.

"The loss of life at the mine, and the devastating emotional toll on families of the victims, underscore the urgent need for a thorough examination of our federal system of mine safety," Kennedy, D-Mass., wrote to Labor Secretary Elaine Chao.

The six miners have been trapped since Aug. 6, and searchers have found no sign they survived. Three other miners were killed and six more injured last week when the shifting mountain crumbled around them as they tunneled toward the missing men. Tunneling has not resumed.

Kennedy wants to review several petitions the mine's co-owner, Bob Murray, made to the Mine Safety and Health Administration for changes in his mining plans at Crandall Canyon, among other documents. Experts have said the proposed changes were risky and could have led to the initial collapse.

The Senate Appropriations subcommittee that oversees labor issues announced plans for a hearing on the mine collapse when Congress returns from its summer break Sept. 5. The subcommittee wants to question Murray and MSHA chief Richard Stickler.

Officials with Murray's company did not return repeated requests for comment Thursday.

At the mine, crews began working on the sixth test hole to try to locate the men.

The federal Mine Safety and Health Administration said in a news release Thursday that no air samples or video images could be obtained from the fifth hole because it became plugged with mud.

Other holes provided only grainy video images of rubble and poor air sample readings, and efforts to signal the miners have met with silence.

The sixth hole will head toward an area where the miners were last believed to have been working, some 1,500 feet below the surface. It was expected to be completed over the weekend.

"This is the last hole," Murray said Wednesday night. Drilling it, he said, will "bring closure to me that I could never get them out alive."

Sonny Olsen, an attorney acting as spokesman for the families, said Thursday night that the families want drilling to continue even if the sixth hole fails to show signs of life. If rescue is not possible, the families want the men's bodies to be retrieved.

"Sealing up the mine with our loved ones inside without knowing if they've perished is outrageous to us," said Olsen, reading from a statement. "There's been no indication that these men are not alive. The families acknowledge that there's an issue with the air. These men are trained on how to survive in these kinds of environments."

Gov. Jon Huntsman said Thursday that the families of the missing men needed peace of mind.

"I do think the way the families have been treated is unconscionable," he said.

Murray has made a series of conflicting statements about whether mining will ever again take place at the mine, or elsewhere on the mountain.

On Wednesday night, he said the mine would be sealed and digging would cease at Crandall Canyon. "I can tell you right now, we are not going back into that mountain," he said.

He said MSHA would decide after the investigation how soon he could seal the mine. "I want out of it. I want to recover the equipment and get out of it as quickly as possible," Murray said.

___

Associated Press Writer Jennifer Talhelm in Washington contributed to this report.

 2007 Utah Mine Accident   110th Congress 
  Profile2 News55Gallery18Links  
  Year after Utah mine collapse, many failures clear (2008-08-06)
  Search for trapped Utah miners ends after 25 days (2007-09-02)
  Mine search over, Utah towns try to cope (2007-09-02)
  Search for 6 Utah miners is suspended (2007-08-31)
  Weather delays robot's search for miners (2007-08-28)
  Search to go on for trapped Utah miners (2007-08-27)
  Hole apparently finds no sign of miners (2007-08-26)
  Final hole being drilled in mine search (2007-08-23)
  Senate plans hearing on mine collapse (2007-08-23)
  Family of coal miners vent frustration (2007-08-22)
  AP Interview: Mine boss defends efforts (2007-08-22)
  Official says Utah miners likely buried (2007-08-21)
  Hope all but extinguished at Utah mine (2007-08-19)
  Utah mine rescuers to drill fifth hole (2007-08-19)
  Fourth hole shows no sign of Utah miners (2007-08-18)
  Rescuers suspend efforts at Utah mine (2007-08-18)
  Official says no sign of trapped Utah miners (2007-08-18)
  Dig for Utah miners halted in shifting mountain (2007-08-18)
  Rescuers suspend effort at Utah mine (2007-08-17)
  3 rescue workers killed at Utah mine (2007-08-17)
  Peruvians battle to find survivors in quake rubble (2007-08-17)
  Rescuers aim fourth drill at mountain (2007-08-16)
  Images, noises offer hope at Utah mine (2007-08-16)
  New images in mine cause for optimism (2007-08-16)
  Utah mine rescuers downplay underground noises (2007-08-16)


Stories Coverages

NewsGuide EventCityPeopleShowCompany 
 ENTSportsBIZEDULifeMilitaryPoliticsSocietyHealth 


[2009 Tiger Woods Accident]: Woods' fall from grace rekindles role-model debate (10:25 12/4)


[Anti-terror War in Pakistan]: Suicide attackers kill 36 at Pakistan mosque (10:25 12/4)

[Afghan Terror War]: US Marines launch large offensive in Afghanistan (10:25 12/4)


[Vietnam War]: US Marines launch large offensive in Afghanistan (10:25 12/4)


[2008 U.S. Layoff Crisis]: Unexpected drop in jobless rate sparks optimism (10:25 12/4)


[Roman Polanski Rape Case]: Roman Polanski begins house arrest in Gstaad (10:25 12/4)


[2009 White House Party-crasher]: Lawmakers demand testimony by WH social secretary (10:25 12/4)


[2009 Fort Hood Shootings]: Fort Hood unit deploys despite losing soldiers (10:25 12/4)

[2008 U.S. Recession]: Why Rich Consumers Matter More (10:25 12/4)


[2009 US Health Reform]: Senate votes to keep Medicare cuts in health bill (19:41 12/3)



Muzi.com

Muzi.com : About | Sitemap | Ads | Contact
All Rights Reserved 1994-2006 - All rights reserved.