Thursday, August 16, 2007

Noises raise hope in Utah mine search


Bodee Allred, Crandall Canyon Mine Safety Director, right, hugs Emery County Sheriff LaMar Guymon for support at the Crandall Canyon mine command center near Huntington, Utah on Wednesday, Aug. 15, 2007. (AP Photo/The Salt Lake Tribune, Al Hartmann)


We don't need coal mining in the USA. The mines are useless. The coal is polluting. The 'best' coal, Anthracite Coal was mined into extinction a long time ago. We need alternative energy not more fossil fuel of any kind.

Under the Surface Mining Law a citizen may request an inspection if a violation is suspected. If your request provides a reasonable basis to believe that a violation exists, you also have the right to accompany the mine inspector when he completes the inspection. The procedure for requesting an inspection should begin with filing a request with the state regulatory agency, or in the states of Tennessee and Washington, filing directly with the Office of Surface Mining.
The request may be made in writing or orally, although an oral request must be followed by a written statement. The state regulatory agency must make an inspection if you provide it with a reason to believe that a violation exists. An inspection must be made within 15 days of the citizen request, or if there is reason to believe that an imminent danger to the public or environment exists, an immediate inspection is required. If the state regulatory authority does not conduct an inspection, or if you are dissatisfied with the inspection's thoroughness, you can request an informal review of that decision by the head of the agency. The agency must respond to a citizen's request for review in writing within a reasonable time period (usually no more than 30 days).
In states with an approved state regulatory program, you can file a citizen request with BOTH the state agency and Office of Surface Mining simultaneously. The state agency will bear the primary responsibility for conducting the inspection and for taking any enforcement action. If you make your request directly with the Office of Surface Mining the state regulatory authority will be notified and have 10 days to take action. If at the end of that period the state has not taken action, or not given good cause for their action, a federal inspection will be made.
Following is an electronic form that can be used to file a request for inspection. Sending this completed form will initiate the procedure described above -- the state and Office of Surface Mining will receive a copy and the state will investigate the facts you present on the form. Before sending this request for inspection form you may have questions or want to discuss the potential problem with the
state agency responsible for the mine you think is in violation. The sample down-loadable form may be used as a guide to ensure you have collected the necessary information. If you have questions about filing a request for inspection you may also contact a local Office of Surface Mining office.
Privacy Policy


If you're in the coal mining business and fear retribution submit the claim anonymously with a second complaint filed by a friend not involved with mining. Don't be intimidated to save lives. Have your friend follow up on the complaint on a regular basis and write the State Attorney General if there is no respect for your complaint. Save lives, don't play politics. Do it. Just do it.


Electronic Citizen request for inspection OMB Control #1029-0118, expiration date 6/30/2005
Name: What is your name?

Click for PDF large map of stricken Somalia area


More Than 600,000 Hungry in Somali 'Bread Basket'


A malnourished Somali child covers his face with an empty container in a village near the Somali town of Dinsor, southwestern Somalia. (Simon Maina/AFP/Getty Images)
NAIROBI—More than 600,000 people in war-ravaged southern Somalia are suffering from severe malnutrition in a part of country that used to be considered its "bread basket", according to an aid agency report.
The Food Security Analysis Unit, which groups several relief agencies, published an assessment of nutrition in Somalia's Lower and Middle Shabelle region late on Monday.
"Nutrition ... has deteriorated dramatically since March in the ... region, (which is) generally the most resilient and the bread basket of the country," the report said.
This was partly owing to poor rains, and partly to disruptions in trade caused by a conflict that has killed hundreds since the Ethiopia-backed interim government ousted Islamists from Mogadishu in December, sparking an insurgency.
The report estimated
inflation in the past three months to be roughly 40 to 60 percent.
"All of these shocks in a short period of time have resulted in a sudden-onset humanitarian emergency with high rates of acute and severe malnutrition affecting more than 600,000 people," it said.
The Horn of
Africa country, which has had no functioning government since the fall of Siad Barre's regime in 1991, has suffered an upsurge in clashes in past days.
Hundreds of thousands have fled their homes since the insurgency started.
"The number of people in need of assistance has increased to 1.5 million. Of this ... 295,000 require life-saving interventions," the report said.
Sudden on-set humanitarian emergency breaks in the Shabelle Regions of Somalia amid escalating civil insecurity (click here)
Released Jointly by The Food Security Analysis Unit for Somalia (FAO/FSAU) and FEWSNET Somalia
The food security and nutrition situation has deteriorated dramatically since March in the Lower and Middle Shabelle regions of Somalia, generally the most resilient region and 'bread basket' of the country. This region is reeling under the impact of multiple recent shocks, including the lowest cereal crop production in a decade (44% of Post War Average) due to below normal Gu season rains, sharp rates of inflation (40% to 60% increases in last three months), disruptions in trade and economic activities, a high and increasing concentration of displaced people fleeing from Mogadishu, deteriorating health conditions following an Acute Watery Diarrhoea outbreak and continuing and escalating civil insecurity. All of these shocks in a short period of time have resulted in a sudden on-set Humanitarian Emergency with high rates of acute and severe malnutrition affecting more than 600,000 people in Lower and Middle Shabelle and Mogadishu....