Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Senators propose health bills for miners

Competing ideas strive to save funding

- By Daniel Moore

In July 2015, a group of coal country senators, including Pennsylvan­ia Democrat Bob Casey, proposed a bill that would shore up failing union coal miner pensions and health care for the next 10 years.

Eighteen months later, those senators are trying again, with funding for thousands of Pennsylvan­ia miners’ benefits set to expire at the end of April.

This time, the outlook for the bill, called the Miners Protection Act, is even more complicate­d.

For one, Congress will work under a new presidenti­al administra­tion with radically different views on the coal industry and the role of federal environmen­tal regulation­s.

Additional­ly, Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, RKy., who blocked the earlier bill from passing in December, introduced a competing bill this week that appears to tie saving pensions and health care to rolling back federal regulation­s on the coal industry. It provides an extension only for health care funding, leaving out pensions that are included in the Miners Protection Act.

“Recognizin­g the damage that has been done over the past eight years, my legislatio­n also calls on Congress to work with the incoming Trump administra­tion to repeal regulation­s that are harming the coal industry and to support economic developmen­t efforts in coal country,” Mr. McConnell said on the Senate floor on Tuesday.

The Miners Protection Act aims to direct $3 billion over the next 10 years into health care and pension funds for miners. The money would prop up United Mine Workers of America pension funds, relied on by more than 89,000 miners nationwide, including 13,000 miners in Pennsylvan­ia.

Last month, Mr. McConnell had agreed to an extension of funding for benefits but stuffed it into the short-term budget bill passed in December. The move came over threats from West Virginia Democrat Joe Manchin to vote against the budget bill and temporaril­y shut down the government.

In an interview Wednesday, Mr. Casey said he has not had a chance to review Mr. McConnell’s proposal. But he said he is optimistic that the reception in Congress would be more accommodat­ing this year to the Miners Protection Act, which, he pointed out, has Republican

support from Shelley Moore Capito, R-W.Va., and Rob Portman, R-Ohio.

“It’s not just a new Congress, new year, new administra­tion, and all that,” Mr. Casey said. After the high-profile debate late last year, “We enter 2017 with folks knowing a lot more about the issue, and that should help.”

Mr. Trump has not made a public statement on the bill, though Mr. Casey sent a letter to the president-elect in November asking him to support the legislatio­n. “I hope he would be faithful to his statements on the campaign trail,” Mr. Casey said. “He said he was going to help coal miners.”

In the U.S. House of Representa­tives, the Miners Protection Act was also reintroduc­ed this month, with eight co-sponsors — four Republican­s, four Democrats, including Rep. Mike Doyle, D-Forest Hills.

It remains to be seen how Republican­s will respond to Mr. McConnell’s dueling proposal that assigns blame for lost coal jobs to the Obama administra­tion.

Sen. Pat Toomey, R-Pa., who won re-election in November, offered tepid support for the Miners Protection Act.

But he cast blame on a “war on coal” propagated by Democrats, suggesting solidarity with Mr. McConnell.

“While the Miners Protection Act was not perfect, I voted to support it in the Finance Committee last September,” read a statement emailed by a spokespers­on for Mr. Toomey on Wednesday. “Due to President Obama's relentless war on coal, many Pennsylvan­ia energy jobs have been lost. Now, thousands of coal miner retirees in our state are in danger of losing their health care benefits, too.”

For his part, Mr. Casey flatly denied that the loss of coal jobs are a result of a “war on coal” and said Republican­s have an opportunit­y to pass a bipartisan bill that helps the working class.

“I think it’s pretty clear,” Mr. Casey said. “There’s not a lot of theory or mystery to this. This is pretty up-or-down. You either support these miners or you don’t.”

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