Trump administration moves to shutter mine safety offices in coal country
Libby Lindsay spent 21 years working underground as a miner for Bethlehem Steel in West Virginia. She saw many safety improvements over the years, and always felt grateful that she could call the local Mine Safety and Health Administration office whenever she wondered whether a rule was being followed. She joined the safety committees launched by the local chapter of the United Mine Workers, which collaborated with the agency to watchdog coal companies. She understood the price that had been paid for the regulations it enforced. Every law was written in blood, she said. Its there because somebody was injured or killed.
Still, she and others who work the nations mines worry President Donald Trump is about to limit the agencys local reach. As his administration targets federal buildings for closure and sale, 35 of its offices are on the list. Fifteen are in Appalachian coalfields, with seven in eastern Kentucky alone and the others concentrated in southern West Virginia and southeastern Pennsylvania. Of the remaining 20 offices, many are in the West, in remote corners of Wyoming, Nevada, and Colorado. Miners advocates worry these closures could reduce the capacity of an agency thats vastly improved mining safety over the past 50 years or so and could play a vital role as the Trump administration promotes fossil fuels like coal, and as decarbonization efforts increase the need for lithium and other metals.
Since its inception in 1977, the agency has operated under the auspices of the Department of Labor to reduce the risks of what has always been one of the worlds most dangerous jobs. Before Congress created the agency, known as MSHA, hundreds of miners died each year, in explosions, tunnel collapses, and equipment malfunctions. (The number was far higher through the 1940s, often reaching into the thousands.) Last year, 31 people died in mining accidents, according to the agencys data. Even after accounting for coals steady decline, that tally, while still tragic, reflects major strides in safety.
https://www.govexec.com/management/2025/03/trump-administration-moves-shutter-mine-safety-offices-coal-country/404175/
https://www.nbcnews.com/politics/2024-elections/west-virginia-president-results
