Pubdate: Fri, 11 Jun 2004 Source: Courier-Journal, The (KY) Copyright: 2004 The Courier-Journal Contact: http://www.courier-journal.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/97 Author: Kimberly Hefling, Associated Press Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/testing.htm (Drug Testing) STATE BOARD CONSIDERS DRUG AND ALCOHOL TESTS FOR MINERS MADISONVILLE, Ky. - When allegations of drug use by miners arise at the scene of an accident, investigators do not order drug tests to check, a state official said yesterday. "We just don't have the authority to do that," Tony Oppegard, general counsel for the Kentucky Department of Mines and Minerals, said at a public hearing. The forum was held by the Kentucky Mining Board to gather information about the best way to curtail drug and alcohol substance abuse by miners. The board is expected to make a recommendation to the General Assembly later this year. Its members are examining issues such as when - or if - - drug tests should be mandated and whether a mining company or the state should pay for them. It also is gathering information about company policies pertaining to drug use and testing. During an investigation last June at the Cody Mining Co. in Floyd County after one miner was killed and another was seriously injured, marijuana was found at the scene. Another employee told investigators he saw two miners crushing painkillers and inhaling them. Drug and alcohol use at coal mines is illegal. But to test for drugs, "you can only do it through an autopsy," said Holly McCoy, a spokeswoman for the Mines and Minerals Department. "If there is a fatality, you can find out about the person who was dead, but you can't find out about anybody else involved in the accident." A dozen people attended the hearing, but only three people spoke. Heath Lovell, of Dodge Hill Mining in Sturgis, told board members he believes there is reluctance in the mining industry to speak because more regulation is feared. He said one solution might be to have toll-free telephone numbers that miners could call anonymously to report drug or alcohol use by others on the job. "They as employees don't like to point fingers," Lovell said. He said his mine, with 180 workers, already mandates drug tests for miners involved in an accident. "We don't want anybody to have to work with somebody under the influence of drugs and or alcohol," Lovell said. Edgar Oldham, who represents labor interests on the mining board, encouraged people at yesterday's meeting to speak out about the issue or the "board may come up with something you don't like." A second hearing will be held Aug. 19 at Jenny Wiley State Resort Park in Prestonsburg. The board will accept written comments until Sept. 18. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin