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appalachiablue

(43,110 posts)
Sat Jul 21, 2018, 07:26 PM Jul 2018

Trump Wants To Weaken *Coal Miner Protections As Black Lung* Makes A Comeback

*Trump Wants To Weaken Coal Miner Protections As Black Lung Disease Makes A Comeback, Think Progress, July 20, 18.

- New study finds 20 percent of tenured coal miners in central Appalachia have black lung disease.

After reaching a low point in the late 1990s, new studies are showing that black lung disease has made a startling resurgence, especially among coal workers in the central Appalachian region. More than 10 percent of America’s coal miners with 25 or more years of experience have black lung disease, also known as coal workers’ pneumoconiosis. In central Appalachia — areas of West Virginia, Kentucky, Virginia, and Tennessee — it’s even higher. More than 20 percent of coal workers in the area with the same amount of tenure have been diagnosed with the disease, according to a new study by experts at the federal government’s National Institute of Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH).

The dramatic increase in cases of black lung disease is occurring at the same time that the Trump administration is seeking ways weaken coal dust rules that protect coal miners from the disease — a move that would reduce costs for coal companies, which have been strong financial backers of Trump. Black lung is a common term for several respiratory diseases that share a single cause: breathing in coal mine dust. Over time, black lung disease causes a person’s lungs to become coated in the black particulates that miners inhaled during their time in the mines. Their passageways are marked by dark scars and hard nodules.

..The new study, “Continued Increase in Prevalence of Coal Workers’ Pneumoconiosis in the United States, 1970-2017,” also found that the most severe form of the disease — progressive massive fibrosis — now occurs in five percent of veteran miners in the central Appalachian region, the highest rate ever recorded. The researchers reviewed nearly fifty years of coal miner X-rays taken as part of a national NIOSH effort to identify disease among working coal miners. They compared the last five years of X-rays with those taken earlier.

It appears lawmakers, however, have not been spurred to take action to help protect coal miners in response to the rise in black lung cases. Kentucky lawmakers, for example, passed a bill earlier this year that will make it harder for miners to obtain workers’ compensation benefits. Kentucky is one of the states that has witnessed the resurgence in the most advanced form of black lung disease. The new law, which went into effect on July 14, drastically reduces the number of physicians in Kentucky permitted to read the chest X-rays when coal miners file a black lung claim. Six doctors in Kentucky will now be eligible to conduct the exams, according to an NPR review of federal black lung cases.

*NPR Review, 'Black Lung Rate Hits 25-Year High In Appalachian Coal Mining States,' July 19, 2018.
https://www.npr.org/2018/07/19/630470150/black-lung-rate-hits-25-year-high-in-appalachian-coal-mining-states



Only five years ago, a study found that the disease was sickening about seven percent of underground miners with more than 25 years’ experience, significantly lower than the 10 percent figure cited in the most recent study. The growth in cases of black lung disease is occurring as President Donald Trump has pledged to revive the beleaguered industry. At the same time as Trump is trying to put more coal miners back work, his administration is examining ways to weaken rules aimed at fighting the disease. The administration explains such moves could create a “less burdensome” regulatory environment for coal companies.
On April 4, in response to industry complaints about coal dust rules imposed by the Obama administration, Trump’s Mine Safety and Health Administration (MSHA) submitted a draft request for information on the agency’s regulation to protect coal miners from black lung disease. This was part of a first step toward diminishing protections for coal workers...

Read More, https://thinkprogress.org/as-black-lung-disease-makes-comeback-trump-seeks-to-weaken-coal-miner-protections-3c802d50eaab/

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Trump Wants To Weaken *Coal Miner Protections As Black Lung* Makes A Comeback (Original Post) appalachiablue Jul 2018 OP
'Kentucky lawmakers, for example, passed a bill earlier this year that will make it harder elleng Jul 2018 #1
Healthcare as well. Iliyah Jul 2018 #2
Can't wait for a fav to show up, "Mr. Coal,' The Expert...:) appalachiablue Jul 2018 #3
And how many Appalachian miners will continue Golden Raisin Jul 2018 #4
Not to pile on-- dawg day Jul 2018 #5
The pile grows.. appalachiablue Jul 2018 #6

elleng

(136,868 posts)
1. 'Kentucky lawmakers, for example, passed a bill earlier this year that will make it harder
Sat Jul 21, 2018, 07:33 PM
Jul 2018

for miners to obtain workers’ compensation benefits. Kentucky is one of the states that has witnessed the resurgence in the most advanced form of black lung disease. The new law, which went into effect on July 14, drastically reduces the number of physicians in Kentucky permitted to read the chest X-rays when coal miners file a black lung claim.'

Thanks, Kentucky. Thanks, McConnell/R.Paul, etc etc etc.

Golden Raisin

(4,687 posts)
4. And how many Appalachian miners will continue
Sat Jul 21, 2018, 08:12 PM
Jul 2018

under any circumstances to vote Republican and Kentucky miners for Trump and McConnell?

dawg day

(7,947 posts)
5. Not to pile on--
Sat Jul 21, 2018, 10:04 PM
Jul 2018

But seriously, what did they think would happen? All those WVa-ans-- did they think Trump was going to do anything for them?
I'm continually amazed at how many people even now say, "He SAID he'd do this" and that was enough for them to believe him, and they're not angry he just lied to them.

Anyone could "just say" what they want to hear. Are they really that gullible?

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