ENVIRONMENT

Pennsylvania’s SCSRs given tick

TESTS performed on a sample of self-contained self-rescuers carried by Pennsylvania’s underground mine inspectors have showed all units to be functional.

Angie Tomlinson

The tests were prompted by reports identifying problems with the emergency air packs of mine inspectors from the West Virginia Office of Miners’ Health, Safety and Training.

According to the August report, nine of Monroeville-based CSE Corp’s SR-100 SCSRs were exposed to extreme heat and found to have decay and other problems. The tests were conducted on a breathing simulator at Ocenco in Wisconsin, which also manufactures SCSRs.

The Department of Environmental Protection carried out a random test on SCSRs used by Pennsylvania mine inspectors to determine if a problem existed in Pennsylvania.

The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health and CSE tested 13 units from the commonwealth September 13 to 15. The results showed that all units were functional. One SCSR would have required the person wearing it to breathe into the unit to fully inflate the breathing bag, but it still would have functioned properly in an emergency situation.

The test protocol met NIOSH standards for certification of self-contained self-rescuers.

Kentucky also had units tested at NIOSH and CSE, with results similar to those for Pennsylvania.

NIOSH also tested units collected by the Mine Safety and Health Administration from its field inspectors throughout the country, and the results were similar to those for Kentucky and Pennsylvania.

In the spring, after fatal accidents in West Virginia and Kentucky, MSHA promulgated new federal standards – now underway in Pennsylvania and other regions – that require mine operators to conduct self-contained self-rescuer testing and provide miners with training on the units every 90 days. The previous training requirement was once a year.

This action resulted from reports that miners involved in those accidents had operable units that may not have been activated, deployed or used properly. The most recent tests focused specifically on units used by mine inspectors.

Taken together, the reports and test results reinforce the need for greater attention to inspection, maintenance and training, especially where miners practise activating and donning the emergency packs to ensure their familiarity with the units in the event of a real emergency, the DEP said.

Miner training and SCSR testing has been ongoing in Pennsylvania since the spring. The commonwealth now also specifically requires SCSR testing and training every 90 days for its mine inspection staff.

In February, after the tragedies in West Virginia and Kentucky, Governor Edward Rendell ordered a re-inspection of 35 underground bituminous mines and 34 underground anthracite and industrial mineral mines in Pennsylvania. The re-inspection, which covered approximately 4700 miners, found the mines to be operating safely.

The enhanced inspections were conducted by the DEP’s Bureau of Mine Safety and targeted working sections, seals, escapeways and electrical equipment. The re-inspections were carried out in conjunction with MSHA, which targeted belt conveyor entries.

Rendell has implemented a series of changes to enhance mine safety, including revising mine permitting and inspection procedures so DEP’s mine safety experts play a direct role, putting in place stringent requirements for verification of underground mine maps and revising training protocols for mine safety personnel.

Legislative changes have also been proposed to create a Mine Safety Board with the authority to develop and adopt regulations to keep pace with changing mine safety technology, make the mine operator/owner primarily responsible for safety compliance at the mine and allow the department to assess fines and penalties for noncompliance.

The General Assembly has yet to act on the governor’s changes, which were first proposed in July 2004 and introduced in the House and Senate in fall 2005. Because the Legislature adjourned its two-year session without acting on the bills, the measure must be re-introduced in January.

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