Pubdate: Wed, 04 May 2005 Source: Courier-Journal, The (KY) Copyright: 2005 The Courier-Journal Contact: http://www.courier-journal.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/97 Note: Letters from the newspaper's circulation area receive publishing priority Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/testing.htm (Drug Testing) CRIMINAL NEGLIGENCE In the long history of coal mine enforcement, it's a rare thing for a coal operator to spend time in prison, even when clearly negligent practices lead to injury and death. That's why the sentence imposed on former operator Robert Ratliff by U.S. District Judge David Bunning, in the first such case he has handled, is so welcome. Judge Bunning has struck a blow for safer mines and saving miners. He has warned those who run these inherently dangerous workplaces they will be held personally responsible, up to and including time behind bars. One could empathize with Mr. Ratliff. He faces 60 days for safety violations that led to the death of one miner and the injury of two others. He has lost his company and his mining licenses. Cody Mining was fined $536,050. Worst, his son was terribly injured in the incident. Still, the prison time was justified. The state's top mining industry spokesman, Bill Caylor of the Kentucky Coal Association, put it well: "It shows when people break the law, they have to pay the price." Outlaw operations like Cody No. 1 not only are dangerous but also are unfair competitors of the majority of responsible mining firms. Cutting corners on safety saves money, but takes lives. There's still some unfinished business left by Cody No. 1, where investigators found a bag of marijuana and after a dead miner's urine tested positive for the synthetic narcotic painkiller hydrocodone. The full extent of drug use at the mine remains a mystery, because current law doesn't allow testing of survivors, even after the worst accidents. In the orgy of self-congratulation after the recent do-little General Assembly session, members failed to note that a bill to allow such testing couldn't even get a sponsor. That must change. The administration of Gov. Ernie Fletcher, whose regulators acted quickly after the Cody disaster, appears ready to push for testing to help get rid of drugs in the mines. Gov. Fletcher has been willing to brace the coal industry's politically powerful campaign givers by insisting on lawful mining and hauling operations and by supporting mine enforcement officials who want to do their jobs. He can go one step further by leading the effort to make Kentucky's mines drug-free. The lesson of the Ratliff case applies: To deal with drugs in the mines, the state must ensure not only that the workforce is clean but that bosses who look the other way are held responsible. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin