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"It's kind of like if you have racked up 50 speeding tickets, but you're challenging all of them and it takes three years for it to go through the court system. If you get another speeding ticket, the police can't call you a repeat offender because none of these previous ones have been finalized yet," Monforton said. Some of the appeals center around minor, common infractions: Performance Coal Company, the Massey subsidiary that runs Upper Big Branch, continues to dispute a $305 fine for excessive accumulation of combustible materials in January 2007. Others, however, are more serious: The largest fines Performance Coal have faced there came this January, when federal officials filed two penalties totaling more than $136,000 for not developing or following a proper ventilation plan. It's clear that companies are focusing their appeals on the costlier fines. In 2009, companies protested roughly two-thirds of the $141 million in penalties assessed by federal regulators. A backlog of some 82,000 violations and $210 million in contested penalties is pending before a review commission. Appeals can drag on for years. AP's analysis showed that 36 percent of the more than 500 violations faced by Performance Coal in 2007 remain in dispute. The most serious offenses are deemed "significant and substantial" violations. Regulators consider the mine's history of those violations to determine whether it has a pattern of problems. If the operator can't reduce the number of violations, then MSHA can require the withdrawal of all miners from an area where significant violations have been cited. Roughly 38 percent of Performance Coal's violations in the past three years have been labeled "significant and substantial." The company has protested two-thirds of them. Dennis O'Dell, health and safety director for the United Mine Workers labor union, said while one problem may get fixed the companies are still able to repeat the lapse later without any recourse for safety officials to fix the trend. As a bonus, after years of appeals, mining firms are winning average reductions of 47 percent from the review process, he said. Upper Big Branch is a non-union mine. "If I'm an operator, why wouldn't I do it," O'Dell said. "But in the end, you've endangered miners lives because of it. It's not the right thing to do."
[Associated
Press;
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