Albany Times Union

Ex-coal CEO Murray files to get black lung benefits

He previously spent years fighting mine safety regulation­s

- By Associated Press Charleston, W. Va

Former coal CEO Robert E. Murray, who has fought federal regulation­s on the industry, has filed an applicatio­n with the U.S. Department of Labor for black lung benefits, according to a published report.

West Virginia Public Broadcasti­ng and Ohio Valley Resource report the former head of Murray Energy said on the form that he is still board chairman of the company but can no longer serve as president and CEO due to his health.

Murray has fought federal mine safety regulation­s for years. His company filed an unsuccessf­ul lawsuit in 2014 over regulation­s to cut the amount of coal dust in coal mines to reduce the incidence of black lung disease, saying they were overly burdensome and costly to the industry.

In the black lung claim, Murray, 80, says he is heavily dependent on oxygen and is “near death.”

Murray Energy Holdings emerged last month from federal bankruptcy protection under a new name and ownership group.

The new company, St. Clairsvill­e, Ohio-based American Consolidat­ed Natural Resources Inc., is the largest privately owned U.S. coal operator with active mines in Alabama, Kentucky, Ohio,

West Virginia and Utah.

West Virginia Public Broadcasti­ng and Ohio Valley Resource confirmed the authentici­ty of Murray ’s claim documents by entering his last name, birth date and a case ID number into an online portal maintained by the Labor Department. If the claim goes before an administra­tive law judge, some parts would become public.

Murray says in the claim that he worked undergroun­d while supervisin­g operations for several years.

“During my 63 years working in undergroun­d coal mines, I worked 16 years every day at the mining face undergroun­d and went undergroun­d every week until I was age 75,” Murray wrote.

Murray declined to speak on the record with the news outlets, but said he has black lung from working in undergroun­d mines and is entitled to benefits. He also disputed

that he fought regulation­s to stop black lung and threatened to file a lawsuit if a story was published indicating he fought federal regulation­s and benefits, the outlets said.

In a 2017 interview with The Associated Press, Murray, using an oxygen machine, insisted his lung issues weren’t coal related but were due to “idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis.”

“It’s not from the mining. It’s a different disease,” he said.

Murray told NPR last year that his lung disease was not caused by working in undergroun­d mines.

“It’s idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis, IPF, and it is not related to my work in the industry. They’ve checked for that,” Murray told NPR. “And it’s not — has anything to do with working in the coal mines, which I did for 17 years undergroun­d every day. And until I was 76, I went undergroun­d twice a week.”

 ?? Jae C. Hong / Associated Press ?? Robert Murray, founder and chairman of Cleveland-based Murray Energy Corp., filed an applicatio­n with the U.S. Department of Labor for black lung benefits.
Jae C. Hong / Associated Press Robert Murray, founder and chairman of Cleveland-based Murray Energy Corp., filed an applicatio­n with the U.S. Department of Labor for black lung benefits.

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