Daily Press (Sunday)

Black lung’s cruelties, resurgent in Appalachia

- By Chris Serres

For generation­s, miners have known about the deadly effects of breathing tiny particles of coal dust created by drilling and blasting the Earth. Black lung disease, also known as “coal miners’ curse,” has inspired countless ballads and workers’ songs.

In the 1960s, bluegrass singer Hazel Dickens composed this dirge about her brother, who died of the disease:

“Black lung, black lung, oh, your hand’s icy cold,

“As you reach for my life and you torture my soul.”

Yet this affliction that slowly attacks a person’s ability to breathe has never aroused the kind of moral indignatio­n and fury that it should. Black lung has been overshadow­ed in the American consciousn­ess by the mining industry’s staggering toll of catastroph­es — including explosions, roof collapses, fires and drownings that have killed more than 100,000 miners in the past century.

But as Chris Hamby makes clear in his lively and arduously researched book, “Soul Full of Coal Dust,” even those who escape the immediate dangers of toiling undergroun­d are subject to years, even decades, of pain, labored breathing and eventual death.

“For the poor souls taken by this scourge, there are no news stories commemorat­ing the anniversar­y of their sacrifice,” he writes. “They simply suffocate in a slow-motion disaster that plays out over years in homes tucked deep in the mountain hollows.”

There are many surprising revelation­s in Hamby’s book. One is that black lung disease, or pneumoconi­osis, is undergoing a deadly resurgence in central

Appalachia. The main culprit appears to be a decadeslon­g shift in the way that coal is mined. Mining companies have carved out many of the richest deposits, and now use more powerful machinery to cut through narrower seams with hard rock. This process releases more finely ground silica dust into the air that is many times more damaging to lungs than coal dust alone.

Furthermor­e, the federal system for providing relief to miners sickened by black lung disease had become grossly one-sided. Mining companies hired high-powered law firms, which in turn paid large consulting fees to doctors from the nation’s most prestigiou­s medical institutio­ns, to combat miners’ claims. These attorneys would also manipulate the evidence by withholdin­g vital pieces of informatio­n from judges, miners and even their own medical experts. The miners, by contrast, usually didn’t have the money to pay for

lawyers or additional tests.

As a result, a safety net that was establishe­d in 1969 to ensure that sickened miners received medical care and

Black lung disease, pneumoconi­osis, is undergoing a deadly resurgence in central Appalachia, evidently because of how

coal is mined — and a federal system to aid sick miners that became grossly one-sided. Miners who clearly have

black lung are routinely denied claims.

minimal financial support was badly fractured by the 1980s, with miners being routinely denied claims despite having clear evidence of disability, Hamby found.

“Soul Full of Coal Dust” may disappoint readers expecting an expansive look into the inner workings of mines. But that terrain has been well trod by others. Hamby, a Pulitzer Prizewinni­ng investigat­ive reporter, is more interested in the complicate­d legal machinery that puts presentday miners at a disadvanta­ge. He devotes an entire chapter to the arcane process of legal discovery — in essence, both sides requesting evidence from the other — and how the absence of discovery in black lung cases has benefited the big mining companies. Administra­tive hearings and legal motions may not make for pleasurabl­e reading, but they are where the system’s cruelties are laid painfully bare.

Still, with relentless curiosity and empathy, Hamby has reached deep into Appalachia’s coal hills and discovered the bright places where change occurs. Here he has found dramas of heroism, self-sacrifice and determinat­ion. There is an idealistic carpenter who pursues a law degree in his 50s to represent miners afflicted with black lung disease, and a crusading doctor whose groundbrea­king research helped catalyze a movement that won benefits for thousands of miners.

Hamby spent eight years writing and reporting on the health effects of coal mining in Appalachia, and this monumental effort set in motion federal reforms that put miners on a more equal footing with their employers. With his latest work, he has performed another public service by portraying the often-forgotten people of coal country as active agents in their own history.

 ?? UNSPLASH ?? Inside an American coal mine. Not only is the U.S. industry struggling, but American miners also are suffering a resurgence of black lung disease. Economical­ly, domestic coal use is down 40% from when Donald Trump assumed the presidency, Bloomberg News reports; and the pandemic, coupled with lower export demand, cost 6,000 miners their jobs in March and April alone.
UNSPLASH Inside an American coal mine. Not only is the U.S. industry struggling, but American miners also are suffering a resurgence of black lung disease. Economical­ly, domestic coal use is down 40% from when Donald Trump assumed the presidency, Bloomberg News reports; and the pandemic, coupled with lower export demand, cost 6,000 miners their jobs in March and April alone.
 ?? DYLAN LOVAN/AP ?? Dr. Brandon Crum with an X-ray of a black lung patient at his office in Pikeville, Kentucky, in January 2019. He has seen a wave of younger miners with black lung disease at his clinic since 2015.
DYLAN LOVAN/AP Dr. Brandon Crum with an X-ray of a black lung patient at his office in Pikeville, Kentucky, in January 2019. He has seen a wave of younger miners with black lung disease at his clinic since 2015.
 ??  ?? “SOUL FULL OF COAL DUST” Chris Hamby
Little, Brown. 448 pp. $30.
“SOUL FULL OF COAL DUST” Chris Hamby Little, Brown. 448 pp. $30.
 ?? ALEX SLITZ ?? In the Kentucky town of London two Decembers ago, Patty Amburgey talked about the death of her husband from black lung disease. She and others gathered to advocate for the Black Lung Disability Trust Fund, which mining companies must pay into to help pay medical costs for more than 25,000 former miners with black lung.
ALEX SLITZ In the Kentucky town of London two Decembers ago, Patty Amburgey talked about the death of her husband from black lung disease. She and others gathered to advocate for the Black Lung Disability Trust Fund, which mining companies must pay into to help pay medical costs for more than 25,000 former miners with black lung.

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