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Miner safety advocates concerned by MSHA response to Rolling Thunder Mine incident

By Mike Tony
Charleston Gazette-Mail

The U.S. Mine Safety and Health Administration has told the Gazette-Mail it did not use a monitoring device that can aid emergency search and rescue opera-tions in its response to try to save a mine worker who died after officials say his Nicholas County mine was inundated with water last month.

The MSHA decision not to use a seismograph has perplexed miner safety ad-vocates who expected the agency would have given that option more consider-ation in its effort to rescue section foreman Steve Lipscomb, 42, of Elkview.

Lipscomb’s body was recovered at the Alpha Metallurgical Resources Inc.-controlled Rolling Thunder Mine in the Swiss area of Nicholas County on Nov. 13 after a 113-hour underground search mission that gripped West Virginians hoping for a different outcome.


The other 17 miners in Lipscomb’s crew were accounted for following the incident, according to officials.

Read the rest of the story at the Charleston Gazette-Mail

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