Mining Publication: A Profile of Workers' Experiences and Preparedness in Responding to Underground Mine Fires
Original creation date: January 1996
The purpose of this study was to determine mine workers' state of fire-fighting preparedness and the technology being used to detect and respond to underground coal mine fires. To investigate this problem, 214 underground coal miners were interviewed by U.S. Bureau of Mines researchers. Frequency distributions of workers' responses are presented in this report, along with segments of narrative accounts, to profile miners' fire-fighting capabilities. The data indicated that much variability exists from mine to mine and that there are several important changes operators may undertake in order to make miners better prepared to deal with fire underground: select appropriate sensors, establish and test a warning and communication protocol, construct a system capable of delivering hundreds of gallons of water per minute for sustained periods, institute formal fire preparedness audits, develop case studies of events that occur at an operation to use as teaching and assessment tools, and provide structured practice that can be incorporated into fire drills.
Authors: C Vaught, BA Fotta, WJ Wiehagen, RS Conti, RS Fowkes
Report of Investigations - January 1996
Pittsburgh, PA: U.S. Department of the Interior, Bureau of Mines, Report of Investigations 9584. NTIS stock number: PB96-147848, 1996 Jan: 1-31
See Also
- The Emergency Communication Triangle
- Emergency Escape and Refuge Alternatives
- Emergency Response Planning for Small Mines: Who Needs It?
- Task Analysis
- Technology News 497 - "You Are My Sunshine": A New Video Release From NIOSH on the Sunshine Mine Fire
- Technology News 507 - NIOSH Safety Talk: The Emergency Communication Triangle
- Training for Safety in Emergencies Inoculating for Underground Coal Mine Emergencies
- Using the Internet to Train Emergency Command Center Personnel
- When Do You Take Refuge? Decisionmaking During Mine Emergency Escape
- Working in Noise with a Hearing Loss: Perceptions from Workers, Supervisors, and Hearing Conservation Program Managers
- Content source: National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health, Mining Program