"Although these numbers demonstrate continuing improvements at our nation's mines, they also represent significant loss to the families and friends of 51 miners," said
Stickler pointed to a number of milestones the agency reached in 2008, including the first-ever completion of all mandated safety and health inspections, the first-ever issuance of a pattern of violation notice, the implementation of eight final rules, and the successful collection of delinquent penalties from several scofflaw mine operators.
Of the 51 fatalities reported, 28 of the victims were at surface operations, while 23 miners died in underground mining accidents. Fifteen workers died in accidents involving powered haulage - 10 in coal mines and five in metal/nonmetal mines - which was the leading cause of fatal mining accidents in the U.S. during 2008.
In 2008, MSHA assessed 198,700 civil penalties for violations of mine safety and health legal requirements, compared with 130,100 in 2007. The dollar amount of assessed penalties more than doubled in that time frame, from
Seventy-four flagrant violations were assessed in 2008, compared with 15 in 2007. They were assessed at a total for each year of
A detailed summary of MSHA's enforcement and assessment activities, along with the mining industry's safety and health performance between fiscal year 2000 and 2008, is available at www.msha.gov. MSHA gathers mining fatality data from the 50 states, the


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