61-year-old W.Va. miner remembered for generosity as funerals begin for blast victims

By AP
Friday, April 9, 2010

Funerals begin for victims of W.Va. mine blast

MULLENS, W.Va. — As grieving relatives began burying some of the 25 coal miners killed in a massive underground explosion, crews prepared to drop a camera into the mine Friday on the increasingly slim chance that anyone survived.

The Rev. Gary Pollard of Mullens Family Worship Center said Friday that Benny Willingham was going to be remembered for his generosity and how he lived his life for God. Willingham recently gave a used car to a stranger and was known for other acts of kindness.

Willingham was a Vietnam veteran and became a Christian 19 years ago this week. He was a miner for over 30 years.

“We are praying for a miracle,” President Barack Obama said in Washington as he offered his condolences to the victims’ families Friday.

Officials have not said what caused the blast, but they believe high levels of methane gas may have played a role. They also were not sure what was causing the smoke but said a fire could be burning underground.

As crews waited for the hole to be drilled so a camera could be dropped in, more than 300 people packed the Mullens Pentacostal Holiness Church for the funeral of Benny Willingham, a 61-year-old miner who was five weeks from retiring when he died.

He was remembered as a devout and generous man who recently gave a used car to a stranger. He had been a miner for more than 30 years and became a born-again Christian 19 years ago this week.

“He wasn’t just a weekend warrior,” said the Rev. Gary Pollard of the Mullens Family Worship Center.

In the days since the explosion, details have emerged about an extensive list of safety violations at the mine. Federal regulators issued evacuation orders for all or parts of it more than 60 times since the start of 2009, according to a report prepared for Democratic Sen. Robert Byrd of West Virginia.

In 2007, the mine met criteria to be declared by the Mine Safety and Health Administration as having a pattern of violations. That declaration would have allowed for stricter oversight by the federal agency, including the potential shutdown of the mine, but Massey was able to reduce the number of the most serious violations and avoid it.

Pam Napper, whose 25-year-old son Josh died, said he had been sent home early the Friday before the explosion because of concerns about ventilation in the mine. He called her at 3:30 p.m. and she asked why he wasn’t at work, where he usually stayed until at least 5:30.

“He said, ‘Mom, the ventilation’s bad,’” Pam Napper recalled. “And they sent him out of the mines. Everybody. He went back to work Monday.”

Before that, apparently over Easter weekend, he wrote a letter to his mother, his fiancee and his 19-month-old daughter, telling them that he would be looking down from heaven if anything happened to him.

“I just knew that Josh in his heart knew that something was going to happen,” Pam Napper said.

MSHA has appointed a team of investigators to look into the explosion, and Obama said he has asked federal mine safety officials to report next week on what may have caused the blast.

“It’s clear that more needs to be done,” Obama said of mine safety.

The U.S. House and Senate plan to hold hearings, though they won’t set a date until rescue efforts are over. Byrd said lawmakers will scrutinize Massey’s practices.

There have been no signs of life inside the mine since the day of the explosion, but officials and miners’ families prayed the four miners somehow made it to a refuge chamber that has enough room for more than a dozen miners and is stocked with four days’ worth of oxygen, food and water. It’s possible that with fewer miners inside, they could survive for longer than four days.

They got far enough Friday to see that no one was in one of two chambers that had not been checked. But as they tried to get to the last chamber, they found signs of fire and smoke and had to retreat before they could determine if any miners were inside. It was not clear what might have been burning, said Kevin Stricklin of the Mine Safety and Health Administration.

The refuge chamber is an expandable box activated by opening a door and pulling a lever. It takes about five minutes for the chamber to deploy, and “you would know very, very clearly if it had been deployed,” said Rory Paton-Ash, a spokesman for the manufacturer, Strata Safety.

Search teams had gotten frustratingly close a day earlier to answers for the families of the missing miners — just 500 feet from the emergency chambers where any survivors would be — then were ordered to retreat because of volatile gas.

With the air deemed slightly safer four days after the blast and nitrogen being pumped in from above ground to neutralize explosive methane gas, rescuers went back in just before 2 a.m., navigating rubble strewn with bodies, twisted railroad track, shattered concrete block walls and mounds of dust.

Massey Energy has been repeatedly cited and fined for problems with the system that vents methane and for allowing combustible dust to build up. CEO Don Blankenship has strongly defended the company’s record and disputed accusations from miners that he puts coal profits ahead of safety.

Of the 25 confirmed dead, 18 bodies remain inside. Seven bodies were removed earlier in the week. Two other miners survived, and one of them remains hospitalized.

Jennifer Renner, 22, of Charleston knew Cory Davis, who was among those killed in the blast. She said she understands the need to protect rescuers but also believes the miners still inside Upper Big Branch deserve to be brought out as quickly as possible.

“They’re in pretty much a mountain tomb right now,” said Renner, the daughter of a longtime coal miner who has a tattoo on her calf with a mining helmet, pick and shovel with “Daddy” streamed across it. “I think they’ve done their shift there and I think it’s time to get them out.”

Associated Press Writers Allen G. Breed, Greg Bluestein, Tim Huber, Tom Breen, Dena Potter and John Raby and videojournalist Mark Carlson in West Virginia; Mitch Weiss and Mike Baker in North Carolina; Ray Henry in Atlanta; and Sam Hananel in Washington contributed to this report.

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