IC 6671 Safety Progress in Anthracite and Bituminous-Coal Fields

- Organization:
- The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
- Pages:
- 20
- File Size:
- 1174 KB
- Publication Date:
- Dec 1, 1932
Abstract
The mining industry of the United States has for many years possessed the dubious aistinction of having the poorest accident rate of all of the major lines of industrial endeavor in this country, and until recently there ras little or nothing to show that any material improvement might be expected. However, there are now numerous trends indicating that the corner has ceen turned at last, and it is strongly hoped that the mining industry is likely to follow the railroads, the cement and other industries in operating with occurrence of only a reasonable amount of loss of life and limb through accidents.
The complete accident figures for metal and nonmetallic mineral mining for 1931 are not yet available, but fragmentary data shor that 1831 vill un- questionably have very low accident rates, probably the lowest in the history of our metal mines. One underground metal mine has produced over 14,000,000 tons of copper ore rithout a fatality; another metal mining company with an electric slovel operation has handled upwards of 75,000,000 tons of material, copper ore and waste, without the occurrence of a fatality; an iron-ore compan, which orns six mines (three underground, three open pit), has operated every one for a year or more without a lost-time accident with a con- siderable number of employees and a large production; and alot.er iron-ore producer with 30 mines and about 3,000 employees as an average of nearly 10 months of operation in 1931 without a lost-time accident. umerous other wonderful safety records of metal mines in 1931 indicate unmistaimbly tat the record of the noncoal mining industry of the United States as a role in 1931 will undoubtedly be found to be excellent.
According to the latest relatively complete figures (those of 1930) available for the coal industry, fewer than 650,000 persons are employed in and around the coal mines of the United States, the figures indicating at a little over 493,000 people are engaged in bituminous mining and a little under 151,CCO in anthracite mining. Bureau of Mines complete figures suc that 2,053 persons were killed and 103,821 non-fatally injured in our coal
Citation
APA:
(1932) IC 6671 Safety Progress in Anthracite and Bituminous-Coal FieldsMLA: IC 6671 Safety Progress in Anthracite and Bituminous-Coal Fields. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1932.