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"In my honest opinion, if anyone else survives it, I will be surprised," James Griffith said. Doug Griffith, another of William Griffith's brothers and also a miner, sat down with his family after getting a briefing on the rescue effort, said his wife, Cindi. "He just said we really need to prepare for the worst," she said. "They don't feel like there's any hope." The mine produced more than 1.2 million tons of coal last year and uses the lowest-cost underground mining method, making it more profitable. It produces metallurgical coal that is used to make steel and sells for up to $200 a ton
-- more than double the price for the type of coal used by power plants. The confirmed death toll of 25 was the highest in a U.S. mine since 1984, when 27 people died in a fire at a mine in Orangeville, Utah. If the four missing bring the total to 29, it will be the worst U.S. coal mining disaster since a 1970 explosion killed 38 in Hyden, Ky.
The explosion and its aftermath have gripped communities that rely on the income the mines provide in the heart of coal country. Anna West, 34, joined about 300 people, many wearing the reflective orange stripes of the miners they love, to walk silently through the small town of Whitesville in a candlelight vigil for both the dead and missing. She was with her three young children, thinking of their father, Claude West Jr., who has been a miner for eight years, the last several at the Kanawha Eagle mine. "It could have just as well been my husband," she said. "My father was a miner, his father was a miner. "I already told my son that I don't want him to be a miner."
[Associated
Press;
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