Now, at 62, he struggles to breath and accomplish basic tasks such
as shopping and showering, and relies on a federal fund for
ex-miners with black lung disease to pay for an oxygen tank and
doctor visits.
"The benefits are a lifeline," Shrewsbury said between labored
breaths after a treatment at the Bluestone Health Center, an
industrial-style building set against a leafy landscape in
Princeton, West Virginia.
That lifeline is threatened. The Black Lung Disability Trust Fund is
as risk of insolvency due to soaring debt and a slashing of
coal-company contributions through a tax cut scheduled for the end
of the year, according to a report the U.S. Government
Accountability Office plans to publish soon, two sources briefed on
the study told Reuters.
That shortfall - which comes as black lung rates hit highs not seen
in decades - could force the fund to restrict benefits or shift some
of the financial burden to taxpayers, the sources said on condition
of anonymity. The fund currently provides medical coverage and
monthly payments for living expenses to more than 15,000 people,
according to a Congressional report published this year.
(For a graphic on rising black-lung rates, see: https://tmsnrt.rs/2IHoOIf
. For a WIDER IMAGE photo essay, see: https://reut.rs/2Lbj4HI .)
The coal industry, meanwhile, is lobbying Congress to ensure the
scheduled tax reduction goes forward, arguing the payments have
already been too high at a difficult time for mining companies and
that the fund has been abused by undeserving applicants.
“More often than not, we are being called upon to provide
compensation for previous or current smokers,” said Bruce Watzman,
head of regulatory affairs for the National Mining Association.
He said that view was based on "discussions with those administering
this program for companies" but conceded he had no research on
black-lung benefits paying for smoking-related diseases.
Medical experts dispute that argument, saying the disease - an
incurable illness caused by inhaling coal dust - is easy to
distinguish with x-rays.
"It is not caused by smoking,” said Dr. David Blackley, head of
Respiratory Disease Studies at the National Institute for
Occupational Safety and Health.
The Labor Department, which manages the fund, considers all
potential causes of an applicant’s lung problems before awarding
benefits, said Amy Louviere, a spokeswoman for the department's Mine
Safety and Health Administration. The approval rate for applications
was about 20 percent last year, according to department data.
Coal companies are currently required to pay a $1.10 per ton excise
tax on underground coal production to finance the fund. That amount
will revert to the 1977 level of 50 cents at the end of the year if
Congress does not extend the current rate.
The fund has already been forced to borrow more than $6 billion from
the U.S. Treasury to finance benefits during the life of the
program, according to the Treasury Department. About half of the
fund's revenue now goes to servicing that debt.
A bipartisan effort by lawmakers to extend the current coal tax
failed this year after the mining association lobbied Republican
House leadership not to take it up. Watzman said he was "not at
liberty" to identify members of Congress who oppose extending the
tax.
Matt Sparks, a spokesman for House Majority Leader Kevin McCarthy’s
office, did not respond to requests for comment.
Lawmakers expect discussion of the tax to resume after the GAO
report is released.
“We need to take care of the miners,” said Virginia Republican
Congressman Morgan Griffith, who represents a district that has seen
one of the biggest surges in the disease. “We first need to have all
facts on the table.”
The mining association and large miners such as Peabody Energy, Arch
Coal, and Consol Energy are already pressing their case, according
to Congressional lobbying records that show the black lung fund
among the subjects discussed in their recent meetings with
lawmakers.
Peabody CEO Michelle Constantine declined to comment. Arch spokesman
Logan Bonacorsi and Consol spokesman Zachary Smith did not respond
to requests for comment.
The upcoming GAO report was requested in 2016 by Democratic
Congressmen Bobby Scott of Virginia and Sander Levin of Michigan and
has undergone review by the administration of President Donald
Trump, who has focused on slashing regulation to help the coal
industry.
White House spokeswoman Kelly Love did not respond to a request for
comment on the administration’s position on the excise tax.
[to top of second column] |
BLACK LUNG RESURGENCE
The fund pays benefits to miners severely disabled by black lung in
cases where no coal company can be found to directly provide
support. That typically occurs when a company has gone belly-up – an
increasingly common scenario as the nation's utilities shift to
cheaper natural gas and cleaner solar and wind power.
Some 2,600 medical claims were transferred from companies to the
fund in 2017 due to bankruptcies, according to a Congressional
report this year.
Government research shows the incidence of black lung rebounding,
despite improved safety measures adopted decades ago - such as dust
screens and ventilation – that had nearly eradicated the disease in
the 1990s.
In February, the National Institute for Occupational Safety and
Health confirmed 416 cases of advanced black lung disease in three
medical clinics in rural Virginia from 2013 to 2017 - the highest
concentration of cases ever seen. It also confirmed a 2016-2017
investigation by National Public Radio that found many hundreds more
cases in southwestern Virginia, southern West Virginia and eastern
Kentucky.
“This is history moving in the wrong direction,” said Kirsten
Almberg, an assistant professor of environmental and occupational
health at the University of Illinois at Chicago.
Almberg authored an analysis of Labor Department data showing that
nearly half the 4,679 benefits claims from miners with the worst
form of black lung disease were made since 2000.
Ex-miners and regional health experts blame the resurgence on longer
hours spent in deeper parts of old, played-out mines, along with lax
safety measures and the use of heavy machines to blast through
layers of rock.
“We didn’t use curtains. We rarely used ventilators. We thought we
were invincible,” said Greg Jones, who left mining in March and now
coordinates benefits applications at the Tug River Black Lung Clinic
in Gary, West Virginia.
Brandon Crum, a radiologist at the United Medical Group in
Pikeville, Kentucky, said he has personally diagnosed more than 150
cases of advanced black lung disease since 2016, many in younger
miners.
Crum, whose own family worked the mines for a century, said many of
these people face a lifetime unable to work, inundated with medical
bills.
“Any kind of asset or financial stability you would take away from
these miners and their families would be devastating,” he said.
"APPLICATION REJECTED"
To qualify for benefits, a miner must apply to the Department of
Labor, which screens the applications based on medical and
employment documentation and then tries to find a responsible coal
company to pay the costs.
Jim Werth, the black lung clinic director at Stone Mountain Health
Services in St. Charles, Virginia, said his clinic has three people
on staff helping patients file for benefits. He rejected the idea
that the fund was covering undeserving applicants, saying the
process already makes it hard to qualify, with coal companies often
hiring doctors to dispute medical test results.
William McCool, 64, said it took him years to win benefits.
"I worked 40 years in the mines, and the benefits don't come
automatic," said McCool, who wore a gray baseball cap emblazoned
with a crossing pick-axe and shovel during an interview at the
Mountain Health Center in Whitesburg, Kentucky, where he receives
oxygen and physical therapy.
Kennith Adams - a 62-year old former miner who survived stage-four
colon cancer and is now suffering advanced black lung - had his
first application was rejected two years ago, he said. Consol argued
he did not work for the firm when he became ill. Adams had worked at
the Bishop Coal Company, which later got taken over by Consol.
Consol did not respond to a request for comment.
Adams and his wife Tammie are now hoping his latest application -
sent last month - will be approved to help them pay medical bills of
more than $12,000 a month.
"If he doesn’t get his medicine," his wife said, "he doesn’t stand a
chance."
(Reporting by Valerie Volcovici; Editing by Richard Valdmanis and
Brian Thevenot)
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