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Murray Energy files suit against Labor Dept. over coal dust rule

3 min read

WASHINGTON – Murray Energy Corp. is suing the Obama administration, claiming that new federal regulations to cut the amount of coal dust in coal mines are overly burdensome and costly to the industry.

The lawsuit against the U.S. Labor Department’s Mine Safety and Health Administration was filed Thursday in the Sixth U.S. Court of Appeals in Cincinnati, seeking review of the federal rule.

The St. Clairsville, Ohio-based company argues the department failed to adequately take into account the input of technical experts and the coal industry.

“The Obama administration has no interest in protecting miners and, instead, is only seeking to further their own agenda, specifically, their ‘War on Coal,’ which has been destroying the jobs and livelihoods of thousands of coal miners and their families,” according to Gary Broadbent, the company’s assistant general counsel.

The Labor Department, which did not have immediate comment, said it believes that reducing coal dust – rather than just requiring protective gear – was needed if the United States hoped to reduce incidence of black lung disease. Symptoms of the disease include chronic coughing and shortness of breath and can lead to disability and death.

Murray Energy is the nation’s largest privately owned coal company, according to its website. The company employs a total of more than 7,200 workers in Pennsylvania, West Virginia, Ohio, Kentucky, Illinois and Utah.

The regulation, first proposed in 2010 and announced last month, is aimed at reducing black lung disease. It represents the broadest changes to coal dust regulations since the 1969 Coal Mine Health and Safety Act.

The regulation lowers the overall dust standard from 2.0 to 1.5 milligrams per cubic meter of air. For certain mines and miners with black lung disease, the standard is cut in half, from 1.0 to 0.5. The rule also increases the frequency of dust sampling, and requires coal operators to take immediate action when dust levels are high.

Murray Energy’s lawsuit argues the new 1.5 milligram standard is virtually unachievable with current technology and will cost the industry billions of dollars in unnecessary work stoppages.

The Labor Department has estimated the cost to the coal industry will be roughly $61 million in the first year then $30 million on an annual basis. It expects benefits from lower medical bills to be $36.9 million a year.

The department in 2010 called for cutting the standard to 1 milligram per cubic meter, a level recommended by the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health. But labor officials revised the proposal to 1.5 milligrams after taking in public comments, which included objections from coal companies and congressional Republicans about potential cost.

The new regulation, published Thursday in the Federal Register, takes effect Aug. 1. It will be phased in over two years.

The National Mining Association also has been critical of the new rule, saying the Obama administration did not consider other less burdensome ways to reduce exposure to coal dust, such as rotating miners and using proven personal protection technologies.

The trade group said this week it was still reviewing its options in possibly challenging the rule.

Richard Lazarus, a Harvard environmental law professor, said courts generally give federal agencies wide discretion in setting rules, but the outcome of the case will depend on the strength of the scientific record the Labor Department used to justify the rule.

“One should be able both to recognize the enormous benefits coal has provided the nation over the past 100-plus years without ignoring the no less compelling need to address the significant adverse effects of its use,” he said.

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