Cape Breton Post

Mine employees on the job

Province has hired independen­t ground control expert to review plan

- SHARON MONTGOMERY-DUPE sharon.montgomery@cbpost.com

DONKIN —Donkin Mine officials say all of their employees are now back to work following a roof fall in December which suspended operations.

There are 120 people employed at the coal mine.

“We are pleased to have all employees back to work, with some taking on temporary part-time roles,” said Shannon Campbell, vice-president of Donkin Mine, in an email response to questions from the Cape Breton Post.

“We are doing what we can to lessen the financial impact” on employees.

The Nova Scotia Department of Labour and Advanced Education suspended operations at Donkin Mine following a roof fall on Dec. 28.

There were no mining operations underway at the time of the incident because the mine was on holiday shutdown. There were no injuries.

There have been six roof falls at the mine since July but provincial officials cited the Dec. 28 roof fall as more serious and it led to the suspension of production.

On Jan. 25, the department of labour granted Kameron Coal approval for limited mine activity at 1,600 feet in a more stable part of Donkin Mine.

Officials with the labour department say they’ve engaged an independen­t ground control expert from the U.S. Mine Safety and Health Administra­tion from Pittsburgh, Pa. to assist with their review of Donkin Mine’s ground control procedure plan.

“As always, we engage external consultant­s when certain expertise is required related to Donkin Mine that we do not possess within the department,” said labour department spokespers­on Shannon Kerr.

Kerr said the department’s most recent inspection of Donkin Mine was conducted on Wednesday.

As earlier reported by the Post, Campbell said a revised ground control procedure was submitted to the labour department on Jan. 16. However on Friday, Campbell said after further consultati­ons and submission­s, a new ground control procedure was submitted Jan. 31.

Campbell said the independen­t third-party ground control expert is expected to make a site visit within the next two weeks. He said production remains suspended until the new ground control procedure is accepted by the labour department.

“We are focused on safely completing the work at hand and look forward to progressin­g through the details of the new ground control plan with the provincial regulators,” he said.

“Kameron Coal is confident that the plan submitted is sufficient to further minimize the risk of roof falls.”

The Donkin Mine is owned by Kameron Coal, a Halifax subsidiary of the Cline Group. Coal production began in February 2017. However, following numerous inspection­s during the mine’s first three and a half months of operations, 10 compliance orders and 29 warnings for violations of workplace safety and undergroun­d mining regulation­s were issued by the labour department.

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