Floyd County Coal Company and Agent Sentenced for Submitting False Coal Dust Sampling
By Lilly Adkins
BSN Associate Editor
PIKEVILLE — Black Diamond Coal Company, LLC and Walter Perkins, a certified dust examiner, were sentenced on Thursday for violating the Mine Safety and Health Administration’s (MSHA) regulations requiring accurate respirable coal-dust-sampling in underground coal mines, a release from the U.S. Attorney’s Office said.
Black Diamond was sentenced to pay a fine of $200,000 and also to two years of probation, for submitting false samples and Perkins, 45, of Harlan County, was sentenced to a 12-month split sentence, with six months to be served in prison and six months to be served in home detention, followed by one year of supervised release, for lying to MSHA special investigators.
Respirable coal dust causes pneumoconiosis or “black lung“ disease in coal workers. Black lung is a progressive and irreversible disease leading to lung failure and death. However, it is preventable by reducing the levels of respirable coal dust miners are exposed to while in the mines, the release also said.
According to court documents, on Oct. 6 and 7, 2020, Black Diamond Coal submitted dust-sampling results to MSHA for its required quarterly sampling. Those results were abnormally low and led to inquiries from the MSHA Barbourville District Office, the release said and on Oct. 8, 2020, MSHA inspectors and investigators visited the Black Diamond Number 1 Mine in Floyd County.
There, they found the company’s continuous personal dust monitor (CPDM) running on the surface, in the first aid trailer, the release said, but it should have been worn by a miner underground, as he worked his normal shift, to accurately sample the coal dust underground.
A forensic analysis of the CPDM confirmed that it had not moved in days, despite Black Diamond submitting dust samples claiming it was conducting its required sampling underground, in accordance with MSHA’s mandatory health and safety regulations, the release said.
Perkins was employed by Black Diamond and certified by MSHA as a dust-examiner, the release said and MSHA trained him on how to properly conduct the required dust-sampling.
After they confronted Perkins with the CPDM running in the first aid trailer, he claimed he had given it to a miner operating the continuous mining machine, but the operator had returned it to him stating that the CPDM had stopped working because of a fault, the release said.
“That was false and Perkins later admitted that he never gave the CPDM to the miner operator and the device never experienced a fault,” the release also said.
“Enforcement of mandatory health standards is a top priority for me and this Administration,” said Assistant Secretary for Mine Safety and Health Chris Williamson. “The Mine Safety and Health Administration can only protect miners from the risk of developing black lung disease if it has accurate sampling results. Given the troubling spike in black lung cases in Appalachia, we must hold accountable those who choose not to comply with the law and put miners’ health and lives at risk.”
“The purpose of these safety regulations is to prevent a progressive and irreversible disease,” said Carlton S. Shier, IV, United States Attorney for the Eastern District of Kentucky. “If employers falsify the dust sampling, not only are they are violating the law they are dramatically reducing the safety of their employees. That is simply unacceptable, and compelled us to prosecute this case.”
“Mine operators bear the responsibility for the safety and health of the miners they employ, and when operators avoid their legal obligation, the U.S. Department of Labor will use its enforcement powers to hold them accountable,” said Solicitor of Labor Seema Nanda. “We thank the United States Attorney’s Office for partnering with us to enforce critical health regulations designed to prevent black lung.”
The investigation of the case was conducted by MSHA’s Barbourville District Office. Assistant United States Attorney Emily Greenfield and Special Assistant United States Attorney Jason Grover, from the Department of Labor, represented the United States.