David Dye Quotes (24 Quotes)


    At this time, we have no information that would suggest that the explosion was related to a recurrence of any of the conditions that were required to be abated before the explosion.

    Alcohol and drug abuse by miners threatens the safety of their colleagues, and that cannot be tolerated.

    All of us at MSHA deeply grieve the loss of these miners' lives, and I want to assure their families and friends that we are conducting an uncompromising investigation into this accident. We will uncover the truth of why this tragedy happened, and how we can best protect miners in the future.

    I am asking miners and management at every mine operation to do the right thing Take one hour out for safety's sake this Monday. Be proactive in preventing future accidents and saving lives.

    We can all take a moment to congratulate ourselves here today, but only a moment. One mining fatality, one mining injury, one occupational illness is one too many, and you know we still have work to do.


    MSHA took strong enforcement action by levying the highest fines possible, and we're disappointed with the decision and are reviewing our options.

    A few short years ago, those numbers would have been laughed at as impossible goals. Our agency is constantly examining its strategies and looking at outcomes to determine how we can help the mining industry drive fatality, injury and illness rates down to zero.

    Responses to this request for information will assist the agency in determining an appropriate course of action as necessary to improve mine rescue capabilities.

    We will use every tool at our disposal to go after operators that refuse to pay their penalties for mine safety violations, and that includes holding the people who control them personally responsible.

    MSHA and the state will do all we can to determine what caused this accident so we can continue to improve the safety protections for all miners.

    The simple, cost-efficient, just plain effective things, those are the things we are most likely to mandate first.

    MSHA vigorously investigates all acts of unlawful conduct that threaten miners' safety and refers those cases involving criminal conduct to the United States Attorney's Office for prosecution.

    Education can be an effective tool in building public awareness and broadcasting our safety message to kids and, in turn, to their parents.

    This emergency rulemaking will require the use of proven technologies and techniques to help miners evacuate quickly and safely after a mine accident. We are using the emergency temporary standard to get help into the field as fast as possible. MSHA is moving forward on every front to better protect miners' safety and health.

    MSHA is pursuing promising wireless technologies to help ensure safe working environments for miners and improve rescue teams' abilities to locate them should an accident occur. MSHA is dedicated to conducting a thorough evaluation of existing technologies and pursuing promising technological advances to ensure that every step is taken to improve mine safety.

    Much more work needs to be done. But this updates the information and frames the issue for us better. We bracketed the best and worst case.

    MSHA is moving quickly and aggressively to evaluate technology that may help save the lives of miners in this nation. We will test these systems - as well as other promising technologies that arise - to provide miners and mine operators with useful data on the effectiveness of devices such as these in making mines safer workplaces.

    MSHA will take every step to protect the miners' interest in a fair and open investigation into this tragic accident, including ensuring that the UMWA can participate fully as the miners' representative. We made a commitment to the miners and the families on this. We are elated that the court agreed that the rights of miners' representatives must be protected.

    In order to get to the next level -- to make it down that final slope toward zero -- we must address the difficult questions of what motivates and drives people's decisions and choices about safety and health in the workplace.

    This year's tragic mine accidents in West Virginia require immediate action to put in place addition safety requirements to help miners successfully evacuate a mine when an emergency occurs.

    MSHA and the entire mining community extend our deepest condolences when miners are in danger.

    both a strong marketplace among community hospitals for information technology and our competitive success within that marketplace.

    We are very interested in interviewing Mr. McCloy as part of our investigation, and we hope it would be appropriate to do so soon.

    MSHA and the industry have worked long and hard together to take care of many of the obvious physical hazards, the ones that could be fixed with better engineering, better equipment, and better technology. We're now down to the hardest thing of all to fix, the human aspect of safety.


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