IC 6345 What the Superintendent of a Coal Mine Might Do to Prevent Injury from Falls of Roof

- Organization:
- The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
- Pages:
- 6
- File Size:
- 780 KB
- Publication Date:
- Sep 1, 1930
Abstract
A superintendent is one who has the oversight and charge of some organiza- tion or enterprise, with porer of direction.
The superintendent of a coal mine is the official who is in general charge of conducting the operation of the nine for the purpose of producing coal; he is accountable to his superiors for all matters that relate to the cost of production and safety in operation, ed under him are all the underground officials and other personnel making up the mine organization.
The responsibility of the superintendent covers all the principal phases of mining, purchases of materials, issuance of supplies, accounting, and upkeep of the property and equipriont.
In a broad sense, the superintendent must view his job as embraced under four gneral heads: (1) Construction, (2) instruction, (3) supervision; and (4) discipline.
The degree of efficiency with which each of these phases of his work is conducted is a measure of the safety factor which the superintendent injects into his job.
Injury to workmen and damage to property may be due to neglect of one of these general headings; as for example in the collapse of a scaffold there has been faulty construction which may be found upon investigation to have been the result of faulty instruction or lack of instruction. It may be that the condition of the scaffold was not ascertained in advance of its collapse through faulty supervision, or the discipline of the workmen had been neglected.
Citation
APA:
(1930) IC 6345 What the Superintendent of a Coal Mine Might Do to Prevent Injury from Falls of RoofMLA: IC 6345 What the Superintendent of a Coal Mine Might Do to Prevent Injury from Falls of Roof. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1930.