Westray Coal Mine Disaster

Pictou County, Nova Scotia

At 5:18am on 9 May 1992
the Westray coal mine exploded
killing 26 miners





In recognition of the grieving families and in commemoration of
the 26 miners who were killed in the Westray coal mine disaster,
we will remember them:

John Thomas Bates
Larry Arthur Bell
Bennie Joseph Benoit
Wayne Michael Conway
Ferris Todd Dewan
Adonis Joseph Dollimont
Robert Steven Doyle
Remi Joseph Drolet
Roy Edward Feltmate
Charles Robert Fraser
Myles Daniel Gillis
John Philip Halloran
Randolph Brian House
Trevor Martin Jahn
Laurence Elwyn James
Eugene William Johnson
Stephen Paul Lilley
Michael Frederick MacKay
Angus Joseph MacNeil
Glenn David Martin
Harry Alliston McCallum
Eric Earl McIsaac
George James Munroe
Danny James Poplar
Romeo Andrew Short
Peter Francis Vickers

We will remember them.


I make this pledge to the families. Westray will not be some vague memory of a tragic accident.  It will be a living, active presence in workplaces across Nova Scotia.  Your husbands, your fathers, your sons, your brothers, your friends, will never be forgotten.  Every time someone wants to cut a corner or bend a rule, we will remind them there can never be another Westray and this government will not allow it.
Minister of Transportation and Public Works
speaking on the floor of the Nova Scotia Legislature, 1 December 1997






Brief Westray overview

Coal – the rock that burns – is a fuel, a source of energy. Coal is composed mainly of carbon (50-98 percent), hydrogen (3-13 percent) and oxygen, with lesser amounts of nitrogen, sulphur and other elements. Some water is always present, as are grains of inorganic matter that form an incombustible residue known as ash.

A small lump of Nova Scotia coal, photographed in Canning on 7 April 2004
A small lump of coal

Coal provides a large part of the world's energy supply (a largely unknown fact). In the 1990s and continuing into the new millennium, coal was/is the primary energy source for about 55% of all electric power generation in the United States and Canada.  In Nova Scotia, coal accounts for about 80% of all electric power generation.

Electric Power from Coal
Nova Scotia
Year Generated
from coal
1993 71.4%
1994 79.9%
1995 78.1%
1996 85.8%
Source: 1996 Annual Report
Nova Scotia Power Incorporated

One kilogram of coal contains enough energy to generate about two kilowatt-hours of electrical energy – this figure varies considerably depending on the quality of the coal but 2 kWh per kilogram is a reasonably representative average for coal burned in a modern high-pressure boiler (producing steam at a pressure of about 1800 pounds per square inch) to drive a steam turbine to generate electricity.

Westray was an underground coal mine located in the tiny village of Plymouth, near Stellarton in Pictou County, Nova Scotia.  Westray was developed to mine coal from the Foord seam, long known for its high-quality coal and for being exceptionally gassy.

It has been known for centuries that methane-rich gases are trapped in most coal seams.  The quantity of gas trapped in any particular coal seam varies widely.  The Foord seam has been known since the mid-1800s as being exceptionally gassy.  Any digging or drilling activity that disturbs the Foord seam releases quantities of methane (firedamp), which doesn't matter much in an open-pit mine with lots of fresh air, but in an underground mine like Westray, methane mixed with air can be an extremely dangerous explosive.  The Foord seam contains roughly 100 to 500 cubic feet [3 to 15 cubic metres] of methane per ton of coal.

The Pictou coalfield, with its thick and gassy seams, has been mined for some 200 years.

...Foord coal has among the lowest sulphur content of any North American coal... The Oil Coal Seam (or Stellar Seam) – seven layers below Foord – was mined in the early 1850s and oil extracted from it was used to light Boston streets; that ended when oil was discovered in Pennsylvania in 1859...
— Halifax Chronicle-Herald, 11 May 1992


The Foord seam, which Westray was mining, has hosted at least eight mines.  The Allan mine, the most productive and the one that lay just northwest of Westray's workings, finally closed in the 1950s, but during its 40-year lifetime, it experienced at least eight methane explosions.  This history was well-known in Pictou County when the proposal to open a new mine, called Westray, was promoted in the late 1980s.

Local historian James Cameron has estimated that 576 deaths occurred between 1866 and 1972 in mining in Pictou County and that 625-650 died "from colliery misadventures in Pictou County" since coal mining began in the early 1800s.  In the Foord pit there is special danger "on account of the liability of cutting heavy feeders of gas"... – quoted from a report by Henry S. Poole, Inspector of Mines, in the Nova Scotia Department of Mines Annual Report, 1873.

Because of the promise of a substantial number of well-paid jobs in an economically depressed area, the development of the Westray mine received considerable political support from the provincial and federal governments despite the opposition of technical experts and despite the history of mining fatalities in the area.

Charlie Angus described it vividly: "When Curragh Resources' mining boss Clifford Frame started talking about opening a mine in the economically depressed area of Stellarton, Nova Scotia, in the late 1980s, politicians flocked to him like seagulls at the beach."

Pictou County has been a political powerhouse for decades.  The federal electoral district of Central Nova (which included Pictou County) was represented, from August 1983 to September 1984, by Brian Mulroney.  Mr. Mulroney's next job was Prime Minister of Canada from 17 September 1984 to 24 June 1993, a time which included the promotional phase, the construction and the entire working life of the Westray Coal Mine.

From September 1984 to September 1993 – including the promotional phase of the Westray Coal Mine, its construction and its entire working life – Pictou County was represented in Ottawa by MP Elmer MacKay, a member of the federal cabinet as Solicitor General of Canada, then Minister of National Revenue, then Minister of Public Works – powerful senior ministerial offices.

The Provincial MLA for Pictou East, which included the Westray Mine, was Donald Cameron, who had been elected as MLA in 1974 and appointed Minister of Fisheries in October 1978.  By the time Frame began promoting the Westray coal mine, Cameron, then Minister of Industry and a member of cabinet for more than a decade, had a deep understanding of the levers of power in the Nova Scotia government.  Mr. Cameron was Premier of Nova Scotia from 26 February 1991 to 11 June 1993.

The Westray mine was promoted by Curragh Resources Incorporated, an Ontario company controlled by Clifford Frame.  In November 1987, Curragh incorporated a subsidiary company, Westray Coal, to construct and operate the new mine.

On 9 September 1988, Westray finalized a deal for the purchase of coal interests in Pictou County then owned by Suncor Inc. – 75% owned by Sun Oil Company (Sunoco) – and signed an agreement with Nova Scotia Power Corporation — Nova Scotia's largest electric utility, then owned by the Nova Scotia government — which agreed to purchase Westray coal for its new coal-burning electric generating station at nearby Trenton, Nova Scotia.  A letter dated that same day was sent to Westray by Donald Cameron, provincial minister of industry, trade, and technology, which committed the province to a mining lease, a loan of $12,000,000 and a take-or-pay agreement for 275,000 tonnes of coal per year for fifteen years.

Relevant information is to be found in a 1986 report
"Suncor Inc. Pictou County Coal Project: Feasibility Study"
(a copy is on file at the Nova Scotia Legislative Library).


After two years of protracted and difficult negotiations, on 27 June 1990 a deal was finalized, between the Federal Government and Curragh Resources Inc., to provide funding for the development of the Westray coal mine.  Construction of the mine had been going forward for some time before that date.  Early in 1989, Curragh's subcontractor, Canadian Mining Development, began driving (constructing) the main access tunnels.

The mine was financed through massive infusions of Federal and Provincial funds in the form of loans and loan guarantees.  The Federal contribution consisted of an 85% guarantee of a $100,000,000 bank loan.  The Province of Nova Scotia contributed $12,000,000 by way of a fully-subordinated loan – meaning that this loan will be repaid only after all other lenders have been paid in full, and if there isn't enough money to go around (there wasn't), the provincial loan will not be paid back.  The Provincial government also entered into a rather controversial "Take or Pay Agreement" whereby the province agreed to purchase any excess coal which was not taken by the Nova Scotia Power Corporation.

The contribution by Curragh Resources Inc. to the project consisted of a $9,000,000 cash investment plus a "deferral" of management fees allegedly owing to Curragh.

The official opening of the mine was on 11 September 1991.

On 5 May 1992 — four days before the Westray mine exploded — the company's name was changed from Curragh Resources Incorporated to Curragh Incorporated.

The Westray mine commenced operations (began producing saleable coal) in June of 1991 amid claims of it being a veritable "State of the Art" operation utilizing the latest in mining technology and equipment with computerized safety monitoring devices which were said to be at the leading edge of current technology.  After the explosion, the claim that the mine was designed and built with state-of-the-art techonolgy was called into question.  The mine was plagued with serious ground control problems related directly to the geological configuration of the Foord seam.  This problem was exacerbated by the lack of competent planning.  The ground control problems led the Westray Mine Public Inquiry to conclude that "The cost of operating in such an adverse environment and the inherent uncertainties would suggest that the financial viability of the Westray project should have been in doubt from the very beginning".

Production was erratic during the brief (less than a year) life of Westray and production quotas were never realized.

At 5:18 Saturday morning, 9 May 1992, the mine blew up killing all 26 men working underground.  The explosion was so strong it blew the top off the mine entrance, more than a mile above, and blew away steel roof supports throughout the mine.  In the nearby towns, windows shattered and houses shook.

The mine ceased operations at the moment of the explosion and never re-opened.

Westray Coal Inc. and Curragh Inc. both went bankrupt.  Curragh's residual assets were subsequently acquired by 1235866 Ontario Inc. (which was owned by former Curragh creditors including the Yukon government).  The Province of Nova Scotia's $12,000,000 loan would never be repaid.  The Federal Government's 85% guarantee of Curragh's $100,000,000 bank loan was called by the bank after the explosion, and the government paid $85,000,000 to the bank — that money is gone forever (but, because these payments are now part of the government debt, the interest on the $12,000,000 is an expense paid every year by Nova Scotia taxpayers, while the interest on the $85,000,000 is an expense paid every year by Canadian taxpayers.)

More about the Westray Coal Mine Wikipedia

A little-known fact is that the Westray Coal Mine explosion and
the resulting bankruptcy of Westray Coal Inc. and Curragh Inc. had
a much stronger negative effect on the economy of the Yukon Territory
than on the economy of Nova Scotia.  Curragh Inc. had mining
operations in the Yukon that were a much larger part of the economy
of the Yukon Territory than the Westray Coal Mine's share of the
economy of Nova Scotia.  When Curragh's bankruptcy halted
all of Curragh's mining operations, Yukon's unemployment rate
soared, and many of Curragh's creditors in the Yukon
lost large sums of money.


Chronology: Westray explosion, 9-10 May 1992
by Halifax Chronicle-Herald


Chronology: Westray Mine Public Inquiry, May 1992 - 1996
by Westray Mine Public Inquiry


Chronology: Westray legal proceedings, May 1992 - May 1995
Source: The Queen versus Curragh Incorporated
Supreme Court of Canada, [1997] 1 S.C.R   20 March 1997

This court decision contains a detailed timeline of the legal proceedings associated with the Westray Criminal Trial.  The timeline begins about one-quarter of the way down the page, at
paragraph 22: "To appreciate the complicated background and procedural activity that occurred throughout the course of this case it is helpful to follow a time line..."


Curragh Resources Clifford Frame's website






Commemorative Projects of the Westray Families Group
    http://www.stfx.ca/research/Westray/Remembering%20Westray/comm_proj_rem_westray.htm


Westray Miners Memorial Park New Glasgow
    http://ns1763.ca/pictouco/westraymem.html






Westray in Hansard, 1987-1997
    http://alts.net/ns1625/westrayhansard1.html

Westray in Hansard, 1998-2002
    http://alts.net/ns1625/westrayhansard2.html

Westray-related items found in Hansard, such as:


July 1991

(Ten months before the mine exploded)
• In a letter to Labor Minister Leroy Legere, Liberal MLA Bernie Boudreau warns that the Westray coal mine "is potentially one of the most dangerous in the world."
• The minister responds: "I assume that my department and the mines safety people are doing as good a job at Westray as they are doing at all other mines in Nova Scotia."

Source: Maclean's, 15 July 1996
    http://www.geocities.com/SouthBeach/Lights/6602/pics.html

The Wayback Machine has archived copies of this document:
Running for Cover
Maclean's, 15 July 1996

Archived: 2001 June 08
http://web.archive.org/web/20010608204738/http://www.geocities.com/SouthBeach/Lights/6602/pics.html

Archived: 2001 November 17
http://web.archive.org/web/20011117180648/http://www.geocities.com/SouthBeach/Lights/6602/pics.html

Archived: 2002 January 10
http://web.archive.org/web/20020110005411/http://www.geocities.com/SouthBeach/Lights/6602/pics.html



Leroy Legere was Minister of Labour from February 1991 to November 1992.  In his report on the Westray Mine Disaster, Justice Peter Richard said that Legere "appeared to have a confused and uncertain appreciation of his role as a minister of the crown", that he had "little understanding of the operation of the Occupational Health and Safety Division of the Department of Labour" and that it was incumbent on Legere "to keep informed and to ensure that adequate remedial action was taken" once he was informed of deficiencies in his department — things Legere failed to do.
(All quotations taken from v2, pages 529-530, of the inquiry report.)


Leroy Legere appointed Southwest Region School Board boss News release, 29 June 2000

The Wayback Machine has archived copies of this document:
NDP comment on appointment of Leroy Legere as school board boss

Archived: 2002 July 06
http://web.archive.org/web/20020706060750/http://www.ndpcaucus.ns.ca/Caucus/News/Jun00/mm_swrsbceo.html

Archived: 2003 July 10
http://web.archive.org/web/20030710005734/http://www.ndpcaucus.ns.ca/Caucus/News/Jun00/mm_swrsbceo.html

Archived: 2004 March 09
http://web.archive.org/web/20040309170249/http://www.ndpcaucus.ns.ca/Caucus/News/Jun00/mm_swrsbceo.htmlv

Archived: 2005 January 02
http://web.archive.org/web/20050102001423/http://www.ndpcaucus.ns.ca/Caucus/News/Jun00/mm_swrsbceo.html

Archived: 2006 January 04
http://web.archive.org/web/20060104103032/http://ndpcaucus.ns.ca/Caucus/News/Jun00/mm_swrsbceo.html





Management intimidated workers, bullied compliant inspectors, and then evaporated into bankruptcy with millions of dollars in taxpayers' money

Dr. Susan Dodd, testifying before the Standing Committee on Justice and Human Rights in Ottawa, on 22 May 2002
...When I first started thinking about this, it didn't seem possible that...the burden of holding the culprits responsible would fall to bereaved relatives of the dead.  But not only was it possible, it's exactly what happened...ten years ago when the highly subsidized Curragh Resources (Westray coal mine) management intimidated workers, bullied compliant inspectors, and then evaporated into bankruptcy with millions of dollars in taxpayers' money...

We need to recognize organizational culture as something people make and remake on a daily basis, and that deaths like those in the Westray mine are not the inevitable outcomes of things left undone.  It's not a matter of neglect, but of the consequences of positive acts, of choices made in pursuit of profit, and these days, of increasingly deregulated workplaces.

Often the authors of those choices are hidden within the black box of the corporate hierarchy, and this black box is a culture within which corporate decision-makers decide on the priorities of the organization.  If this government wants people to believe there is justice in this country, it will need to draw on the rich literature on corporate criminology and develop ways to either shed light on the contents of such black boxes or to compensate for this lack of transparency by finding means to discipline the corporation as if it were an agent in its own right...
    http://cmte.parl.gc.ca/cmte/CommitteePublication.aspx?SourceId=15933


Susan Dodd


Unsettled accounts of Westray's Aftermath
Susan Dodd, 1999, PHD Dissertation for King's College, Halifax

The Writing of the Westray Story: A discourse analysis of the aftermath of the Westray coal mine explosion
by Susan M. Dodd, June 2002




Coping with traumatic, unjust loss – Understanding the long-term impact of the Westray Mine explosion

...although many studies have been conducted on grieving people, the loss experienced by family members of the fallen Westray miners is unique.  "This traumatic loss has been complicated by the senselessness of the event, the belief that justice has been denied, and the betrayal felt by many of the family members."  The aftermath of the disaster is well documented.  The response from the parent company (Curragh Resources) and the Government of Nova Scotia was that the explosion was an accident.  This explanation outraged family members of the deceased.  Their loved ones had openly criticized the dangerous conditions underground and had even reported the company to the provincial Department of Labour.  The families argued that the explosion was entirely foreseeable and preventable – that it was a case of criminal negligence... after a series of mishandled criminal prosecutions and despite the findings of the inquiry, no one was ever held accountable for the 26 deaths... Although the sample size is small, it is believed that the results still shed light on how people cope with losses that are perceived to be unfair...
— Source: Carleton Now May 2007 (Cover Story)
Carleton Now is the "flagship internal communications vehicle" of Carleton University, Ottawa






Risk Awareness and Risk Acceptance at the Westray Coal Mine
An attempt to understand miners' perceptions, motivations and actions prior to the accident.
by Gerald J.S. Wilde, Ph.D., Department of Psychology, Queen's University, Kingston, Ontario, Canada
April 1997
    http://pavlov.psyc.queensu.ca/faculty/wilde/westray.html

This report describes the results of an analysis of the public inquiry hearings held after the Westray Coal accident in May 1992. At the request of Mr. Justice K. Peter Richard, Commissioner, I investigated the content of the hearings in order to develop insight into the degree to which Westray employees perceived the risk of accident as imminent and why the miners either accepted or rejected the risk they perceived. While some miners terminated their employment with the mine because they were unwilling to accept the accident risk, others continued to work until the accident happened. Various factors that contributed to the employee perceptions of accident risk were identified, and it may be inferred that the perceived probability and expected seriousness of an accident was both high and general throughout the underground workforce. Moreover, the willingness to accept high levels of danger amongst those miners who did not quit may be atrributed to the operation of various factors, among which economic pressures and economic incentives played a major role. Mine management, rather than putting in place a safety-incentive programme of a type known to significantly improve cautious and accident-free performance, instituted instead a remuneration schedule with a progressive production bonus component that appears to have exacerbated risk acceptance and the frequency of imprudent practices among the miners. The pursuit of short-term economic gain may well have set the stage for the fatal explosion and the mine's premature demise.

At the top of his paper (next above), Dr. Wilde has the following quotation — from Day 33, February 20, 1996, of the transcript of the Westray Mine Public Inquiry Commission — in bold red type:
"One thing about Westray: the money was good if you worked the overtime and that."
    http://web.archive.org/web/20030216140457/http://alts.net/ns1625/960220am.html





They learned how to lie to themselves

Risk Management and Technology
by Roy Brander, Calgary, Alberta
Presentation to the National Defense Industrial Association Conference
Vancouver, 29 February 2000
    http://web.cuug.ab.ca/~branderr/risk_essay/NDIA/NDIA_lecture.html

The way we blind ourselves to honest assessment of risk goes back a long way.  I wrote an essay on risk management philosophy in general, giving Titanic as the specific example, and put it on the Web (see "The Titanic Disaster: An Enduring Example of Money Management vs. Risk Management" below) ... As individuals, we may learn from close shaves and warnings; as a society, we only learn from blood... The touchiest thing in risk management is the calculation of cost per fatality averted... Vaughn's five steps: New information would come in that signalled danger. Engineers would document the danger and express concern.  This evidence would be given close examination, but of course by a process that was aware that terrible schedule or money consequences would result from a negative decision.  However, unacceptable risks with life or mission cannot be just accepted; the positive decision would be that the risk itself was in fact tolerable.  What was a deviation at step one would, after further launches, become the new normal.  So the cycle could repeat — a few more percent of change each time... There were no lies told... It was far deeper than that.  They learned how to lie to themselves...
          (boldface emphasis added)





The RMS Titanic and its Times: When Accountants Ruled the Waves
by Roy Brander, Calgary, Alberta
(This is a slightly different version of "Risk Management and Technology" above)
Elias Kline Memorial Lecture, 69th Shock & Vibration Symposium
Minneapolis, October 1998
    http://www.cuug.ab.ca/~branderr/risk_essay/Kline_lecture.html

...The week in 1995 I wrote the original essay, thousands of semi-trailers in Canada were being pulled off the road to have their outer wheels inspected.  Two cars full of people had been killed in two weeks by semi wheels that had come loose and run wild.  It turned out that such things had been happening every month or two all along; this was just the first time that several fatalities had happened.  As individuals, we may learn from close shaves and warnings; as a society we only learn from blood... The touchiest thing in risk management is the calculation of cost per fatality averted.  It makes perfect sense to an engineer, but in public debate, such numbers can always be twisted in any direction... The problem for the engineer is to tackle these fears with his own art, which involves quantifying things.  The summary of one paper in those conference proceedings went right to the heart of the issue – he had calculated the cost per fatality averted for various different approaches of ship subdivision, so as to recommend which design to use.  This is good engineering and I wish all society thought that way; but I guarantee you that any politician or top bureaucrat will flee the room, eyes averted, if he shows them the paper; they'll want deniability in public debate... I think that all engineers face the same two kinds of problems in the end.  The junior ones have to crank out the most effective design they can, given a cost envelope and set of standards.  The senior ones have to run the calc in reverse, starting with a design that fits their conscience, to sit on the standards committees, and push for the cost envelope that will make it possible.  Sometimes they don't, or can't, push hard enough.  But to be fair, they do have a handicap – scientific people often don't communicate well with policy makers, or the general public.  They tend to argue with facts, formulas, simulations, and other kinds of sweet reason.  These don't work well.  What does work well are shameless appeals to emotion... Like baby seals covered in oil.  And always, always, casualty lists.  Best of all are individual stories of casualties, to make the deaths real.  We only learn from blood.
          (boldface emphasis added)





The Titanic Disaster: An Enduring Example of Money Management vs. Risk Management
by Roy Brander, Calgary, Alberta
Calgary, April 1995
(This is the original version of "Risk Management and Technology" above)

As I sit down to write, it is 11:40pm, April 14th, 1995.  Ignoring the time zone difference, it was 83 years ago this minute that the RMS Titanic, on her maiden voyage in 1912, struck an iceberg... Most of the problems all came from a larger, systemic problem: the owners and operators of steamships had for five decades taken larger and larger risks to save money – risks to which they had methodically blinded themselves.  The Titanic disaster suddenly ripped away the blindfolds and changed dozens of attitudes, practices, and standards almost literally overnight.  The perception persists that the Titanic was, if obviously not "unsinkable" (though the White Star line actually never used that word in advertising), then very safe, as safe as the art could build her.  That, despite various errors, the accident was mostly enormous bad luck.  Nothing could be further from the truth.  It was amazing good luck that there had been no similar accidents years earlier. For over 50 years, safety standards had been steadily deteriorating in various ways – almost always because of pressures to be "competitive"... The first great liner, the Great Eastern, built in 1858, was designed by I.K. Brunel, England's most celebrated engineer, who got every feature he wanted.  Great Eastern was not the most profitable ship, but she was a triumph of safety.  She had an entire inner hull two feet inside the outer.  Inside that, the ship was divided by 15 transverse bulkheads, and one lengthwise into 32 compartments.  Watertight lower decks further divided those... All risks need rational consideration, and some must be accepted... Even today however, it is still often the case that money management wins out over risk management...






The Westray Mine Explosion: An Examination of the Interaction Between the Mine Owner and the Media
by Trudie Richards
Canadian Journal of Communication, v21 n3 1996
    http://www.cjc-online.ca/viewarticle.php?id=377&layout=html

Abstract: Technological crises are predictable and inevitable, particularly in a high-risk industry such as mining. Corporations are advised to have a crisis communication plan to facilitate proactive behaviour. Such a plan presumes a commitment to honesty, openness, and ethical behaviour. Journalists are also encouraged to have a crisis communication plan so that they are prepared for inevitable events, informed about the industries in their area, and able to tell the story substantively, accurately, and in context. The Westray coal mine, owned by Curragh Incorporated of Toronto and located in Pictou County, Nova Scotia, exploded on May 9, 1992, killing the 26 miners who were underground. This paper analyzes the relationship between Curragh and the media, particularly during the week following the explosion. It observes that the relationship was severely tested, as is often the case in time of crisis and human tragedy. The paper also observes that neither Curragh nor the participating media had crisis communication plans, which negatively affected their performance. It concludes that Curragh did not satisfy legitimate media needs and that the company's lack of open, prompt, and accessible communication fed a media suspicion that officials had something to hide. On the other hand, journalists relied on human interest, made mistakes, and decontextualized their coverage of the story.






Researchers criticize Westray mine safety
by Amanda Leslie-Spinks, 1996
    http://www.ucalgary.ca/UofC/events/unicomm/Research/westray.html

...the job of gouging and moving coal is much like it was in the early 18th century. Methanometers have replaced canaries as early detection systems, but the linear process of extraction and the risks of methane gas and flammable coal dust haven t changed. Why then is the fatality rate for mine workers still five times the national average for workers?

Evidence from Westray shows a long-standing pattern of safety violations: combustion engines refueled with the motors running, a "volunteer" system for applying limestone to reduce coal dust concentrations, cigarette butts and oily rags littering the mine floor.

"We found at Westray a pattern of behaviour that sociologists call mock bureaucracy – a situation in which workers fail to follow regulations and the managers fail to enforce compliance," says Hynes, whose investigation of Westray is part of his doctoral research. Rules are ignored because they are perceived as "bureaucratic paraphernalia" without legitimacy in themselves. What is remarkable at Westray though, he says, is that rules tied to workers survival, which should be deeply meaningful, were ignored.

...a network of financial and political forces pushing managers to value production results over safety rules. For instance, an agreement with the Bank of Nova Scotia linked financing to production data. Government funding also depended on a commitment to the Nova Scotia Power Corporation to produce a certain number of tons of coal per year.

Miners had their own reasons for participating in unsafe working procedures. One worker left his job to avoid dangerous conditions, and suffered penalties in his UIC claim. In job-strapped Nova Scotia, brutal labour market discipline could have stopped miners from taking action.

But why would miners make matters worse by smoking in areas where explosions were a constant and predictable danger? Hynes and Prashad point to the culture of danger that has always surrounded mining. Memorials found in many mining towns depict the miner as a tragic hero and probably incline the workers to accept higher risks as part of their occupational identity. Hynes and Prasad conclude that while managers and miners broke safety rules for different reasons, they ended up supporting each other in making Westray a dangerous place...






Making Sense of Bad News: The Media, Sensemaking, and Organizational Crisis
by Caroline J. O'Connell and Albert J. Mills
Canadian Journal of Communication, v28 n3 2003
    http://www.cjc-online.ca/viewarticle.php?id=797&layout=html

Using Westray as an example, at a surface level, reports of events at the mine seem contrary to common sense and raise many questions. Why did miners (who stood to lose their lives), managers (who stood to lose their business and their reputations), and inspectors (who stood to lose their jobs and their credibility) appear to ignore dangerous levels of coal dust? What were they thinking? Did the situation make sense to them? Clearly, the press, and later the Richard inquiry, were able to make sense of events by imposing a common sense framework on events, thus rendering the accounts plausible. A Weickian account, on the other hand, suggests that we need to understand events not simply through what makes sense to us but through the processes by which a dominant sense of the organization came to be enacted by those involved.

The importance of Weick's (1995) approach is that it directs us away from rational accounts of organizations that focus on coping with or reproducing hierarchical notions of organization. Instead it directs our attention to the process of organizing and the social psychological linkages that encourage a sense of organization (Weick, 1969). Thus, as important as the Richard inquiry is in establishing responsibility and discouraging a repeat of the events that led to the disaster, another disaster will occur unless we understand the social psychological processes whereby people put themselves in harm's way...






Picking up the pieces: The personal legacies of Westray
Christopher G Davis and Norine Verberg.
Canadian Sociology and Anthropology Association
Congress of the Humanities and Social Sciences, Dalhousie University, 1 June 2003.
    http://www.stfx.ca/research/Westray/westray_talk%20(version%202).pdf

The explosion that took the life of 26 men in the Westray Coal Mine in May 1992 has come to represent much more than a loss experience felt by a handful of families.  Several commentators have noted the profound effects this event and its aftermath have had on the values and attitudes of Nova Scotians, but little is known about the longterm effect these events have had on family members of the men who died.  Drawing from personal interviews with more than fifty of these family members, I describe the personal legacies of Westray.  An emergent theme is that this event has shattered deeply held assumptions about the public accountability, trust, and belief in a just world... (emphasis added)






Patterns of 'Mock Bureaucracy' in Mining Disasters: An Analysis of the Westray Coal Mine Explosion
by Timothy Hynes and Pushkala Prasad
Journal of Management Studies, v34 n4 July 1997
    http://www.ingentaconnect.com/content/bpl/joms/1997/00000034/00000004/
          art00006;jsessionid=18le2na6r4eeh.victoria

Recent studies on the antecedents of industrial crises have tended to focus on disasters in high-risk systems involving complex technologies and tightly-knit processes. This paper examines events leading up to mining disasters which past research has characterized as being typically more foreseeable and avoidable. We discuss how many mining disasters are likely to be the result of 'mock bureaucracies' or situations characterized by overt violation of safety rules at the workplace. Using the Westray mine explosion as an illustrative case, the paper traces the development and institutionalization of a mock bureaucracy in an organization. Implications for further research and understanding of industrial crises are drawn.






Why Your High-Risk Industry Needs a Communications Plan
by by Omar Ha-Redeye, postgraduate student at Centennial College, Toronto
March 2007

Communication issues in high-risk industries can be summarized as due to:
• internal resistance to safety and reputation feedback
• failing to properly participate in public debate
The case of the 1992 Westray mines accident, one of the worst industrial disasters in Canadian history, illustrates these failures.  The result of the Westray disaster was that the company and its owners became bankrupt.  Much of this can be attributed to the poor internal and external communication strategies the company employed...





The Westray Mine Disaster Case
...Coal mining is dangerous and underground mining in Pictou County has always been very dangerous. From 1838 to 1950, when it ceased due to the advent of fuel oil, aging facilities and deep seams too expensive to mine at the time, 246 miners had been killed in a series of explosions. From 1866 to 1972, another 330 were killed in other kinds of accidents (i.e. stone falls, crushing by coal cars, mangled in machinery). The Foord coal seam, of which the Westray mine was a part, while particularly dangerous, was singularly attractive. Unusually thick, with low sulfur content and high BTU rating, its reserves were estimated at 45 million tons. The location is known to exude large quantities of methane, is geologically faulted so that mine roofs will collapse, and has a problem of spontaneous combustion (even in the absence of sparking machinery.) Indeed, almost a year before the disaster, one provincial opposition politician argued, "[b]ecause of the fault structure and gas contained in the formation of coal seams in Pictou County, Westray mine is potentially one of the most dangerous mines in the world"...

The Wayback Machine has archived copies of this document:
The Westray Mine Disaster Case

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Corporate Criminal Responsibility and the Westray Mine Disaster
    http://www.uswa.ca/eng/hse/bkg468_2.htm

Westray was an underground coal mine in Stellarton, near New Glasgow, Pictou County, Nova Scotia that blew up on May 9, 1992 killing all 26 people working in the mine instantaneously.  Westray was a corporation wholly owned by Curragh Resources, a company controlled by Clifford Frame and based in Ontario. The development of the mine in Stellarton received considerable political support from the provincial and federal government despite the opposition of technical experts and despite the history of mining fatalities in the area.  Local historian James Cameron estimates that 576 deaths occurred between 1866 and 1972 in mining in Pictou County and that 625-650 died "from colliery misadventures in Pictou County" since the industry's debut in the early 1800s.  The Federal MP for Pictou County was Brian Mulroney, later Prime Minister of Canada and the Provincial MLA was Donald Cameron, then Minister of Industry and subsequently Premier of the province...

What has been done about the recommendations of the Westray Inquiry?  The Nova Scotia government hired a consultant, Ian Plummer, a former Inspector of Mines of Ontario, to review the activities of the Ministry of Labour.  Plummer's report was released with no substantive recommendations to improve health and safety of workers in the province.  Instead, he hides behind bureaucratic reorganization of the department without any consideration of the lack of effectiveness in protecting workers' lives.

Ian Plummer, as a mines inspector, sat on the panel of industry experts which awarded Westray the mining industry's J.T. Ryan Award for Safety as the safest coal mine in Canada in 1991, eleven days prior to the explosion that killed 26 men...

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...A result of the Westray inquiry, the study was commissioned in January (1998) by Justice Peter Richard of the Nova Scotia Supreme Court.  It was conducted by Ian Plummer, retired provincial co-ordinator of mining for the province of Ontario.  Mr. Plummer reviewed the division's internal responsibility system, staff competency, training programs, internal and external communications, performance management systems and organizational structure.  Over the course of his study, Mr. Plummer interviewed division managers, staff members and officials of similar organizations in other jurisdictions...
Source: [ Government press release 16 April 1998
    http://www.gov.ns.ca/news/details.asp?id=19980416002





Mine Safety Award Rescinded

Company Officials Fudged Accident Statistics

The Gazette
Montreal, 5 May 1998

Westray Coal Inc. has been stripped of a prestigious mine-safety award bestowed [eleven days] before its Nova Scotia mine exploded, killing 26 men.

The Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum rescinded the John T. Ryan Trophy last month, based on an inquiry's finding that company officials fudged accident statistics.

It is the first time the 57-year-old award, given annually to the Canadian coal mine with the fewest accidents, has been rescinded. The Westray inquiry reported in December that mine management was derelict in its duty to train miners and run a safe mine.

The Ryan award, administered by the Montreal-based institute, is based on the ratio of hours worked to the number of reportable injuries.

Westray reported 15 injuries in 1991, but inquiry evidence showed at least three other injuries were not disclosed.

The company won the award on April 9, 1992, one month before the massive explosion of gas and dust.

Westray manager Gerald Phillips and underground manager Roger Parry are to stand trial next year on charges of manslaughter and criminal negligence causing the miners' deaths.





John T. Ryan Trophy

Mine Safety Appliances Company of Canada Limited was founded in Montreal in 1937.  In 1942 the head office was relocated to Toronto.  The name was officially shortened to MSA Canada Inc. in the 1980s.  In 1941, MSA Canada began sponsoring the John T. Ryan safety trophies to promote safety in coal and metal mines.  Named the John T. Ryan Trophy in honor of the co-founder of Mine Safety Appliances Company (in the United States), the trophies have since become the most prestigious safety awards in the Canadian mining industry.  They are still sponsored by MSA Canada and are now presented nationally and regionally in three mining categories: metal, coal, and select other mines such as potash, salt, gypsum, etc...
— Source: Canadian Enterprises Gallery





Safety Incentives and Recognition Creating an Achievement-Based Safety Culture
by Wayne Pardy, Vice President of Safety Management Services, PPM International Safety Technologies
31st Annual CSSE Professional Development Conference, 18-20 November 2001, Vancouver

Westray — 1992 John T. Ryan Trophy winner
    • Based on "injury" statistics only (frequency or recordable injuries)
    • Frequency not a good indicator of "risk"
    • Tells you nothing about risk management
    • Too easy to "cook the books"
    • Only about "records"...





Hazmat Clinic: Do Incentive Programs Work? Perhaps, But Only if Used Carefully
by Wayne Pardy and Ralph Stuart, 27 July 1998
...The John T. Ryan Trophy was first introduced in 1941 by the Mine Safety Appliances Company of Canada (now MSA Canada Inc.) to promote mine safety achievements. Eligibility for the award is based on calculating the frequency of reportable injuries. While Westray management was notorious for its ignorance of safety, it apparently was interested in the outward trappings of safety. Westray applied for the John T. Ryan Trophy, and won. In an April 9, 1992 memo to employees, the Vice President and General Manager of the Westray mine congratulated the workers on their achievement. The problem with the award, as evidenced by so many "safety" awards of this type is that it tells you nothing about safety or risk management. It simply tells you that for a given period, usually the artificial period of1 year, lost time and injury frequency or severity was low, but it doesn't tell you why. On the other hand, a key finding of the Westray report examined the issue of the production bonus system. Depending on the work being done, workers could earn a bonus for average monthly production in excess of 500 tons per machine shift. Workers had a percentage of their bonus deducted if they missed work: a one day absence meant a 25% reduction; a two day absence meant a 50% reduction. These competing incentive schemes gave a clear indication of management's priorities. The report concluded that based on the evidence of the miners and an outside expert's analysis of that evidence, the bonus scheme based solely on productivity was clearly not conducive to safety at Westray...
— Source:
    http://list.uvm.edu/cgi-bin/wa?A2=ind9807D&L=SAFETY&D=0&T=0&P=10639

(Note: You can access this online article by using your browser's Copy and Paste feature to paste this URL into your browser's URL window.)






United Steelworkers Union's Westray Campaign
    http://www.uswa.ca/eng/westray/westray.htm

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National Director's Update: Westray Edition September 2003
    http://www.uswa.ca/eng/news_letter5/letter5.htm

The Wayback Machine has archived copies of this document:
National Director's Update: Westray Edition, Sep. 2003

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Westray Bill Gets Royal Assent
    http://www.uswa.ca/eng/news_releases/westray_royal_assent.htm

2003 November 7 — Legislation that the United Steelworkers has promoted for nearly 12 years became law today when Bill C-45, the 'Westray' Bill, was given Royal Assent in the Senate.  The legislation amends the Criminal Code of Canada to hold corporations, their directors and executives accountable for criminally negligent acts in the workplace...

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Westray Bill Gets Royal Assent

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Bill C-45 – Amendments to the Criminal Code Affecting the Criminal Liability of Organizations
Department of Justice, Ottawa




Queensland Mining Industry Health & Safety Conference 2005 Australia
This report contains many informative nuggets about mining hazards and effective means to improve working conditions for miners.

[page 22]
Westray was a room and pillar mine in Nova Scotia in Canada, which exploded in 1992 killing 26 miners.  The district had a long history of gassy mines and explosions which had resulted in the closure of all mines by the 1950s.  Westray was opened in 1989 by a small entrepreneurial company convinced they would bring new thinking to reinvigorate coal mining in an economically depressed area.  They received considerable government support.  Unfortunately gas did accumulate and exploded.  The source of ignition was never determined...

[page 22]
The Williams Station Mine belonging to Pyro Mining Company is a long wall coal mine in Kentucky.  An explosion in September 1989 resulted in the deaths of ten miners.  The explosion took place during a long wall move... The ignition source for the explosion could not be determined but there were plenty of candidates, including a cutting torch, explosive caps, and a defective scooptram.  Subsequent charges resulted in prison terms for three of the mine executives including 18 months for the General Superintendent.  The charges were lying to MSHA inspectors and failing to follow safety procedures...
          (boldface emphasis added)


[page 22]
Southmountain Number 3 was a privately owned coal mine in Virginia.  An explosion in December 1992 killed eight miners.  The cause of the explosion was ascribed to an accumulation of methane due to poor ventilation practices, ignited by a cigarette lighter.  MSHA prosecuted the mine and five individuals, exacting $2,100,000 in fines.  The mine owner pleaded guilty to concealing his identity and received a six month jail sentence.  The Superintendent pleaded guilty to allowing smoking in the mine and other safety violations and received a twelve month jail sentence...
          (boldface emphasis added)


[page 31]
Digging into the earth to provide raw materials for the community's fundamental needs is an honourable and rewarding occupation.  It is also one which exposes participants to considerable risks.  Managing those risks is the business of mining professionals.  There is no reason that mining cannot be safely conducted with a goal of zero fatalities.  Achieving that goal requires an understanding of the mistakes made by others in the past and taking actions to prevent those mistakes occurring again...

[page 89]
"Everyone, and that includes you and me, is sometimes careless, complacent, overconfident and stubborn.  At times each of us becomes distracted, inattentive, bored and fatigued.  We occasionally take chances, we misinterpret and we misread.  These are completely human characteristics." ...I think we can at this stage of our evolution be reasonably confident in saying that people will continue to make mistakes and human error is here for the foreseeable future...

[page 14]
The Bottom End: Regulating Incompetents and Recalcitrants
The mining industry itself has recognised that while "some will be content to comply with whatever is seen to be the minimum requirements, others will have little motivation even to achieve that".  While not confined to small and medium sized operators, this group is likely to include a disproportionate number of small, unsophisticated operators.  How should this group best be regulated?  Unsurprisingly, the recalcitrant and the incompetent are likely to respond to different regulatory strategies...






The Westray Mine Explosion: Aftermath
Did we learn anything from it?

— Mr. Justice K. Peter Richard, Supreme Court of Nova Scotia

...A safe workplace demands a responsible and conscientious commitment from management — from the Chief Executive Officer down. Such a commitment was sadly lacking at the Westray mine. Since there was no discernible safety ethic, including a training program and a management safety mentality there could be no continuum of responsible safety practice within that workplace. Complacency seemed to be the prevailing attitude at Westray — which at times regressed to a heedless disregard for the most fundamental safety imperatives. As I stated in the report, compliance with safety regulations was the clear duty of Westray management. To Insure that this duty was undertaken and fulfilled by management was the legislated duty of the inspectorate. Management failed, the inspectorate failed, and the mine blew up.

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Did we learn anything from it?
Mr. Justice K. Peter Richard

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Liars, Cowards and Tricksters Westray Coal Mine Disaster
    http://www.shirleycollingridge.com/westray02.htm






Written Submission 8 August 1996, on behalf of the United Steelworkers of America, with Appendix A Joint Recommendations on behalf of The Westray Families Group, the Nova Scotia Federation of Labour, the United Steelworkers of America, the Canadian Union of Public Employees, and the United Mineworkers.
    http://alts.net/ns1625/wrpi99a.html





United Steelworkers of America Oral Submission by David J. Roberts
to the Westray Mine Public Inquiry Commission, Day 77, 22 July 1996
on behalf of the United Steelworkers of America
    http://alts.net/ns1625/wrpid77usw.html

...Nothing better illustrates the incompetence with which the inspectors dealt with the dust problems at Westray than their actions after the coal dust orders were issued on April 29th, 1992 (ten days before the mine exploded). The order had four parts: The coal dust was to be removed immediately and stone dusting was to be done immediately. Within fifteen days, a stone dusting plan was to be developed and filed and within fifteen days a dust sampling program was to be developed and filed. The company was to notify the Department, in writing, when it had complied with each part of the order. As we know from the evidence, nothing was done ... What is worse, nothing was done by the Department to monitor compliance ... One reason for the paralysis of the inspectors may lie with the dominant philosophy in the health and safety division of the Department. It was, and apparently still is, a philosophy of non-engagement that in this case encouraged blind deference to the decisions of the mine operator ... There was a sinister side to the management of the mine beyond the incompetence and the neglect ... However, it would be wrong to suggest that Westray or Curragh were rogue companies that can be set aside as anomalies. They were part of the Canadian mining industry. Their executives were leading lights in that industry. In a sense, the industry as a whole must bear some responsibility for what happened here. We regret the fact that both the Coal Association of Canada and the Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum refused your invitation to participate in these hearings. The Institute was the body which awarded Westray the John T. Ryan Trophy for mine safety a few weeks before the mine blew up ...






Nova Scotia Government Oral Submission by Reinhold Endres Q.C.
to the Westray Mine Public Inquiry Commission, Day 77, 22 July 1996
on behalf of the Nova Scotia Government
    http://alts.net/ns1625/wrpid77gov.html

...The lack of training and education of miners and company officials in safety matters played a prominent role in the failure to develop a culture that rejects acceptance, condonation, and participation in activities which present unmanageable safety risks. We agree that we could have done more to detect that deficiency, we agree we could have done more by way of education. Policies, procedures, and safety practices should have been scrutinized more systematically for their adequacy, and more effort should have been made to determine their impact on day to day activities. We now know that the reality at Westray often did not match company records, or what the inspectors were led to believe by management, or the things they saw at the mine ...






Do Canadian Corporations Now Have a Licence to Kill?
by Allen Martin
    http://north.nsis.com/~amartin/unjud.html

...On the eve of our national holiday, Canada Day, July 1, 1998, government prosecutors have announced that the Westray managers, Phillips and Parry, will no longer have to face criminal prosecution for their role in the death of 26 men on May 9, 1992.  Despite the public testimony, and the two volumes of documentation of mismanagement, violations of safety regulations and practices, and failure to protect the safety of the workers from the Public Inquiry into the Westray Explosion, this is not enough to prove a crime by a corporate manager, according to the Crown Attorney in charge.  Mr. Justice Richards was very careful in his report to describe the behaviour of the Westray managers as "willful blindness" towards what was happening and the tragic consequences that could and did result.  "Willful blindness" is a standard of proof sufficient to convict you or I of any crime, but not, so it seems, managers and CEO's.  The behaviour of the office of the Crown Attorney from the beginning has been nothing more than a cover-up and a screw up.  The Supreme Court of Canada had to order them back to trial!  Judges at all levels have commented on the bad behaviour of the prosecution.  Now we are expected to accept their judgement to give up. ...

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Do Canadian Corporations Now Have a Licence to Kill?
by Allen Martin

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These links were accessed and found to be valid on 1 January 2008.





Are accidents inevitable or can they be managed?

There are two conflicting theories about man-made disasters, which modern academics cannot reconcile. The first which has existed since the mid-1980s is known as Normal Accident Theory NAT. This holds that no matter what organisations do, in complex, tightly-coupled systems accidents are inevitable.

Examples of complex, tightly-coupled systems would be a nuclear power station, a railway network, an offshore platform or a ship. The theory is that unexpected interactions in the complexity of the system will sooner or later occur, which the organisation fails to comprehend in time, causing a sequential breakdown occurring along an unpredictable path which leads to ultimate disaster.

Tight-coupling describes systems with multiple functions, involving components closely linked together, with many control parameters and inferential information. Safety devices are built in and improvisation is hardly possible.

During design, Failure Modes and Effects and Consequences Analysis FMECA or other techniques will have determined and dealt with all the hazards revealed — but as we shall see no amount of study will find all possible failure paths and the cost benefit analysis, even if thorough, will inevitably involve errors of judgement.

A good example is the modern aircraft glass cockpit or flying by wire where increasingly the pilot has limited powers to override built-in safety devices.

The alternative theory is Highly Reliable Organisations HRO.

This is more recent and more optimistic. It asserts that organisations can have a significant effect on accident prevention. HROs depend on redundancy, back-ups and warnings to arrest runaway chain-reactions. Secondly HRO de-centralises the authority to make decisions and depends on teamwork e.g. HAZOP to remove or mitigate hazards or develop protection measures. No organisation however has complete knowledge of its technology and HRO requires a long trial and error learning process and constant training.

I suspect we could divide any group into pessimists and optimists, but I hope professional safety managers would count themselves with the latter and agree that HRO which is the theoretical basis of risk assessment, is at the very least doing something positive and is most likely to be worthwhile...

What, if anything, can be learned from history?

The loss of life was severe in the case of the troopship HMS Birkenhead which struck a rock in shark-invested waters off South Africa in 1852 and the heroism of the soldiers who remained mustered on the deck allowing all the women and children to reach the lifeboats was what caught the public's admiration. To the Admiralty however, the hard lesson was that the ship's ability to survive damage had been disastrously reduced by the practice of cutting openings in the main water-tight bulkheads to better accommodate the cavalry. Modification without reassessment of the original design criteria always has the potential to compromise safety...

There is usually an obligation to respond to public pressure whenever there is a serious accident, and the usual knee-jerk reaction is to tighten the law. This was how the railway companies compiled their rule books. After every accident inquiry a new chapter of rules was added — but as technology advanced, speeds rose and the network became more and more complex, the rules where always dealing with yesterday's problems and accidents still happened despite them...

Source: Effective Safety Management Without Regulation 19 February 1998
by R.K. Pudduck, Head, Ship Safety Management Office, Ministry of Defence, United Kingdom
    http://www.ams.mod.uk/ams/content/docs/stgweb/pages/ssmo/lecture/Without_regulation.htm

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The following remarks made by Mr. R. Smith, before a Select Committee of the House of Commons, in 1835, describe the continual escape of high-pressure flammable gas from a coal seam located near the surface in Pictou County:

The ebullition of fire damp (methane) at the East River was similar to that of a steam boiler, with the same kind of rapidity, so that putting flame to it on a calm day it would spread over the river, like what is commonly termed 'setting the Thames on fire'; it often reminded me of that saying.  It is very common for the women to go to the river with the washing they have to perform for their families and dig a hole about ten inches deep by the river side.  This they then fill with pebbles, and put a candle to it; by this means they have plenty of boiling water.  I mention this to show how highly charged the coal was with gas.  When we first reached the seam at a depth of 180 feet [60m], the gas roared as the miner struck the coal with his pick; it would often go off like the report of a pistol.  The noise which the gas and water made in issuing from the coal was like a hundred thousand snakes hissing at each other.
    — page 44 The Coal-Fields and Coal Industry of Eastern Canada, A General Survey and Description
by Francis W. Gray, Canada Department of Mines, 1917





...documents have been withheld
through negligence, inadvertence
or design...

Statement of Justice K. Peter Richard
Commissioner

Halifax, Nova Scotia
Monday, 12 June 1995
For Immediate Release

The decision of Mr. Justice Anderson granting a stay in the criminal proceedings against Gerald Phillips and Roger Parry has opened the door for the Westray Mine Public Inquiry to proceed with hearings.  Although I have not had the opportunity to read the full decision, the media reports indicate that Justice Anderson's decision was based on a very thorough and reasoned review of the law and its application to the facts of the case.

Over three years have been wasted at great expense to the people of Nova Scotia.  To the throw-away costs of the criminal investigation and aborted trial must be added the costs of maintaining the Inquiry "on hold" as well as the costs of defending the court challenges which eventually concluded with the decision of the Supreme Court of Canada allowing the appeal of the Inquiry and the United Steel Workers' (sic) of America.

In a statement issued at the time of the decision of the Supreme Court of Canada, I indicated that I was hopeful the Inquiry could commence public hearings as early as the fall of 1995.  In May of 1992 I issued an order (having the same force and effect of an order of the Supreme Court of Nova Scotia) requiring that all documents relating to Westray be given up to the Inquiry.  With the assurances given by Curragh, the several departments of the provincial government and the federal Department of Justice we at the Inquiry felt reasonably confident that all relevant documents had been secured in the Inquiry offices.  Inquiry staff spent four months during the summer of 1992 cataloguing and indexing those documents for use at the hearings.

Now it appears that a substantial portion of the relevant documents have been withheld through negligence, inadvertence or design.  According to the evidence before Justice Anderson there are documents at the offices of the Department of Labour both in Halifax and Stellarton.  In a recent letter to Inquiry counsel, the Minister of Justice undertook to respond to our concerns respecting missing documents.

There is a significant number of documents in storage in Toronto which we had been told were duplicates of material presently in the possession of the Inquiry.  It now appears that some of these documents have not been deposited with the Inquiry – either in original or copy format.  It is essential to the proper preparation for the Inquiry that all relevant documents be reposed with the Inquiry and that Inquiry staff be the sole determiners of the relevance of such documents.

I have instructed counsel to advise me as to the appropriate action required to positively identify and acquire all documents which have been withheld from the Inquiry.  I will be meeting with counsel within the week to fully canvass the implications of the evidence which came out before Justice Anderson at the "stay" hearing.  After that meeting, and depending on the advice of counsel we may be able to more closely estimate a startup time for the Inquiry as well as the action necessary to secure possession of those documents which had been retained in non-compliance with the May 1992 Inquiry order.
E-mail header:
Date: Fri, 16 Jun 1995 13:06:26 -0300
Sender: ns.general@swamp.alt.ns.ca
To: Multiple recipients of list <ns.general@swamp.alt.ns.ca>

The above was found 26 August 2002,
on a hard drive in a long-unused 486 computer.
According to Google, no other copy now exists on the Internet.
On 16 June 1995, this media release was posted on Internet discussion groups
ns.general 3657   can.legal 8200   can.general 52087




Westray Mine Public Inquiry
Preliminary Hearing

Halifax, Nova Scotia
Friday, 30 June 1995
For Immediate Release

The Westray Mine Public Inquiry will hold a preliminary hearing into the sufficiency of document publication and disclosure.  The hearing is to obtain assurances that all relevant documents have been or will be provided to the Inquiry.

"What I simply want is public assurance that all documents necessary for adequate preparation and conduct of the Westray Mine Public Inquiry are now in the possession of the Inquiry," said Inquiry commissioner Justice K. Peter Richard.

He noted that recent revelations at the criminal trial in Pictou did little to instill a feeling of public confidence in the manner in which documents were handled, and that this hearing is intended to reassure everyone there are no impediments to the fulfillment of the Inquiry's mandate.

The Inquiry will give notice to a number of persons to appear at the hearing and address the Westray document issue.

"The hearing is strictly a procedural step to help us in our preparations for the Inquiry," added Inquiry counsel, John Merrick.

The hearings are scheduled to take place July 12 and 13, 1995, at the Citizenship Court at 5281 Duke Street in Halifax.
E-mail header:
Date: Wed, 5 Jul 1995 13:04:00 -0300
Sender: ns.general@swamp.alt.ns.ca
To: Multiple recipients of list <ns.general@swamp.alt.ns.ca>




Westray Mine Public Inquiry Commission
Stellarton, Nova Scotia

3 days Preliminary, 12 & 13 July 1995 and 4 October 1995.
77 days In Session, from 6 November 1995 to 22 July 1996.

Westray Public Inquiry Commission,1996-97

Mr. Justice K. Peter Richard, Commissioner
John P. Merrick, Q.C., Commission Counsel
Jocelyn M. Campbell, Associate Commission Counsel
Deirdre Williams-Cooper, Chief Administrator


Westray Public Inquiry Report, 1997

Westray Coal Mine Public Inquiry Report
issued 1 December 1997

Westray Coal Mine Public Inquiry Report, Contents
Westray Coal Mine Public Inquiry Report, Executive Summary
Prelude to the Tragedy: History, Development, and Operation
The Explosion: An Analysis of Underground Conditions
The Regulators: Departmental and Ministerial Responsibility
The Aftermath: Rescue Efforts and the Inquiry
Westray Coal Mine Public Inquiry Report, In Conclusion
Westray Coal Mine Public Inquiry Report, Consolidated Findings
Westray Coal Mine Public Inquiry Report, Consolidated Recommendations
A Westray Coal Mine Public Inquiry Chronology
was available in 1998 at
http://www.gov.ns.ca/legi/inquiry/westray/about.htm
but for some reason was removed in 1999
from the Government website.

The Wayback Machine has archived copies of this document:
Westray Coal Mine Public Inquiry Chronology

Archived: 1998 June 26
http://web.archive.org/web/19980626055633/http://www.gov.ns.ca/legi/inquiry/westray/about.htm

Archived: 1998 December 05
http://web.archive.org/web/19981205195603/http://www.gov.ns.ca/legi/inquiry/westray/about.htm

Archived: 1999 April 27
http://web.archive.org/web/19990427065611/http://www.gov.ns.ca/legi/inquiry/westray/about.htm


These links were accessed and found to be valid on 28 March 2008.







The Wayback Machine has archived copies of this document:
Westray Mine Public Inquiry

Archived: 1998 January 28
http://web.archive.org/web/19980128013202/www.gov.ns.ca/legi/inquiry/westray/

Archived: 1998 June 26
http://web.archive.org/web/19980626045353/http://www.gov.ns.ca/legi/inquiry/westray/

Archived: 1998 December 3
http://web.archive.org/web/19981203101446/http://www.gov.ns.ca/legi/inquiry/westray/


These links were accessed and found to be valid on 28 March 2008.

The Wayback Machine has archived copies of this document:
Westray Coal Mine Public Inquiry Report
Chronology

Archived: 1998 January 28
http://web.archive.org/web/19980128021808/www.gov.ns.ca/legi/inquiry/westray/about.htm

Archived: 1998 June 26
http://web.archive.org/web/19980626055633/http://www.gov.ns.ca/legi/inquiry/westray/about.htm

Archived: 1998 December 5
http://web.archive.org/web/19981205195603/http://www.gov.ns.ca/legi/inquiry/westray/about.htm

Archived: 1999 April 22
http://web.archive.org/web/19990422172431/http://www.gov.ns.ca/legi/inquiry/westray/about.htm

Archived: 1999 April 27
http://web.archive.org/web/19990427065611/http://www.gov.ns.ca/legi/inquiry/westray/about.htm


These links were accessed and found to be valid on 28 March 2008.

The Wayback Machine has archived copies of this document:
Westray Coal Mine Public Inquiry Report
Contents

Archived: 1998 January 28
http://web.archive.org/web/19980128035223/http://www.gov.ns.ca/legi/inquiry/westray/contents.htm

Archived: 1998 June 26
http://web.archive.org/web/19980626071634/http://www.gov.ns.ca/legi/inquiry/westray/contents.htm

Archived: 1999 January 17
http://web.archive.org/web/19990117001233/http://www.gov.ns.ca/legi/inquiry/westray/contents.htm

Archived: 1999 April 22
http://web.archive.org/web/19990422175534/http://www.gov.ns.ca/legi/inquiry/westray/contents.htm

Archived: 1999 April 27
http://web.archive.org/web/19990427071458/http://www.gov.ns.ca/legi/inquiry/westray/contents.htm

Archived: 2000 January 21
http://web.archive.org/web/20000121234504/http://www.gov.ns.ca/labr/westray/contents.htm

Archived: 2000 June 21
http://web.archive.org/web/20000621181659/http://www.gov.ns.ca/labr/westray/contents.htm

Archived: 2000 October 13
http://web.archive.org/web/20001013031403/http://www.gov.ns.ca/labr/westray/contents.htm

Archived: 2001 February 10
http://web.archive.org/web/20010210005529/http://www.gov.ns.ca/labr/westray/contents.htm

Archived: 2001 August 3
http://web.archive.org/web/20010803212742/http://www.gov.ns.ca/labr/westray/contents.htm

Archived: 2001 November 21
http://web.archive.org/web/20011121155520/http://www.gov.ns.ca/labr/westray/contents.htm

Archived: 2002 February 2
http://web.archive.org/web/20020202085209/http://www.gov.ns.ca/labr/westray/contents.htm

Archived: 2002 June 12
http://web.archive.org/web/20020612082414/http://www.gov.ns.ca/labr/westray/contents.htm
The Wayback Machine has archived copies of this document:
Westray Coal Mine Public Inquiry Report
Executive Summary

Archived: 1998 January 28
http://web.archive.org/web/19980128014425/http://www.gov.ns.ca/legi/inquiry/westray/execsumm.htm

Archived: 1998 June 26
http://web.archive.org/web/19980626050413/http://www.gov.ns.ca/legi/inquiry/westray/execsumm.htm

Archived: 1998 December 3
http://web.archive.org/web/19981203043732/http://www.gov.ns.ca/legi/inquiry/westray/execsumm.htm

Archived: 1999 April 27
http://web.archive.org/web/19990427075202/http://www.gov.ns.ca/legi/inquiry/westray/execsumm.htm

Archived: 2000 January 15
http://web.archive.org/web/20000115220702/http://www.gov.ns.ca/labr/westray/execsumm.htm

Archived: 2000 June 21
http://web.archive.org/web/20000621204448/http://www.gov.ns.ca/labr/westray/execsumm.htm

Archived: 2000 October 13
http://web.archive.org/web/20001013101459/http://www.gov.ns.ca/labr/westray/execsumm.htm

Archived: 2001 February 4
http://web.archive.org/web/20010204011400/http://www.gov.ns.ca/labr/westray/execsumm.htm

Archived: 2001 April 13
http://web.archive.org/web/20010413154054/http://www.gov.ns.ca/labr/westray/execsumm.htm

Archived: 2001 August 3
http://web.archive.org/web/20010803213203/http://www.gov.ns.ca/labr/westray/execsumm.htm

Archived: 2002 February 8
http://web.archive.org/web/20020208231143/http://www.gov.ns.ca/labr/westray/execsumm.htm

Archived: 2002 June 11
http://web.archive.org/web/20020611093744/http://www.gov.ns.ca/labr/westray/execsumm.htm
The Wayback Machine has archived copies of this document:
Westray Coal Mine Public Inquiry Report
Parties With Status

Archived: 1998 January 28
http://web.archive.org/web/19980128021816/http://www.gov.ns.ca/legi/inquiry/westray/parties.htm

Archived: 1998 June 26
http://web.archive.org/web/19980626055639/www.gov.ns.ca/legi/inquiry/westray/parties.htm
The Wayback Machine has archived copies of this document:
Westray Coal Mine Public Inquiry Report
Order in Council

Archived: 1998 January 28
http://web.archive.org/web/19980128021755/http://www.gov.ns.ca/legi/inquiry/westray/terms.htm

Archived: 1998 June 26
http://web.archive.org/web/19980626055627/http://www.gov.ns.ca/legi/inquiry/westray/terms.htm

Archived: 1998 December 3
http://web.archive.org/web/19981203131204/www.gov.ns.ca/legi/inquiry/westray/terms.htm
The Wayback Machine has archived copies of this document:
Westray Coal Mine Public Inquiry Report
Witnesses at Public Hearings

Archived: 1998 January 28
http://web.archive.org/web/19980128021823/http://www.gov.ns.ca/legi/inquiry/westray/hearings.htm

Archived: 1998 June 26
http://web.archive.org/web/19980626055646/www.gov.ns.ca/legi/inquiry/westray/hearings.htm
The Wayback Machine has archived copies of this document:
Westray Coal Mine Public Inquiry Report
Inquiry Staff and Support Services

Archived: 1998 January 28
http://web.archive.org/web/19980128021830/http://www.gov.ns.ca/legi/inquiry/westray/staff.htm

Archived: 1998 June 26
http://web.archive.org/web/19980626055653/www.gov.ns.ca/legi/inquiry/westray/staff.htm




The Report of the Westray Public Inquiry Commission

Statements in the Legislature
as reported in Hansard, 1 December 1997

Hon. Don Downe,
Minister of Transportation and Public Works

    http://www.gov.ns.ca/legislature/hansard/han56-6/h97dec01.htm#[Page%20478]


Dr. John Hamm,
Leader of the Opposition

    http://www.gov.ns.ca/legislature/hansard/han56-6/h97dec01.htm#[Page%20479]


Mr. Robert Chisholm,
Leader of the New Democratic Party

    http://www.gov.ns.ca/legislature/hansard/han56-6/h97dec01.htm#[Page%20479]





Premier's Office
Westray Response Committee
List of Committee Members

The province is committed to a timely evaluation and response on the Westray inquiry report released in Stellarton today, Dec. 1, by Justice Peter Richard.  Premier Russell MacLellan today announced the establishment of a cabinet committee to respond to the report and recommendations of the Westray mine public inquiry.  "The Westray report is a priority with this government," said the premier. "We are committed to a thorough and thoughtful review and response."

The committee is chaired by Don Downe, Minister of Transportation and Public Works, and includes Housing and Municipal Affairs Minister Guy Brown, Justice Minister Alan Mitchell, Labour Minister Gerald O'Malley and Natural Resources Minister Ken MacAskill.

Mr. Downe was in Stellarton to receive the report on behalf of government. "We owe it to the families, the miners and all Nova Scotians to provide answers and take action very quickly," said Mr. Downe. "We will give the issues serious attention and serious review." He indicated that a preliminary plan for dealing with the report's recommendations will be announced before Christmas.  In May 1992, 26 miners were killed in an explosion at the Westray coal mine, operated by Curragh Resources Inc. of Toronto. The government of then-premier Donald Cameron commissioned the Westray inquiry to examine the cause of the disaster and make recommendations.

Contacts:
Peter MacLellan, Office of the Premier
902-424-3750, e-mail: macleldp@gov.ns.ca
Jennifer MacIsaac, 902-424-3219, e-mail: macisaja@gov.ns.ca

Source: [ Government press release #120102, 1 December 1997, 11:10 am]
    http://www.gov.ns.ca/cmns/msrv/nr-1997/nr97-12/97120102.htm





Department of Transportation & Public Works
Westray Response Committee

Note to Editors: The following are remarks made tonight by Don Downe, chair of the Westray Response Committee, in the House of Assembly.

Mr. Speaker: Tonight I'd like to speak to this House and to all Nova Scotians as minister responsible for government's response to the Westray report.  At 5:20 on the morning of May 9, 1992, this province was rocked by one of the worst tragedies in its history — the Westray mine disaster.  That morning this province lost 26 coal miners. Twenty-six families were left without loved ones. And thousands of Nova Scotians shared in their pain and sadness.  Five years later, the memory and sadness of that day remain with us all, most especially with the families.

But today also marks one of the first steps toward understanding this senseless tragedy. Today, at 11 a.m. in Stellarton, Justice Peter Richard released his report into the Westray mine disaster.  The Commissioner's report is extensive, with more than 700 pages and four volumes of information. While we are just beginning to work our way through it, the overwhelming impression is that the report is thoughtful and thorough.  I would like to thank Justice Richard and his staff for their hard work and dedication in the face of great challenge and complexity. This report will make a real difference in the lives of working men and women in this province. This government will see that it does.

I would also like to thank the families. They have been the ones fighting to be heard, fighting to keep the memory of Westray alive, fighting to make a difference. The families have been through hell and back. And while I can never fully understand their pain, I do understand their conviction. I have sat in the same room and seen it face to face.

Earlier today, the premier established a cabinet committee consisting of the ministers of Labour, Natural Resources, Justice and Housing and Municipal Affairs. Westray will be given high priority.  This is not a report we will put on the shelf. This is a report we will carry with us until all the issues are addressed. We owe it the families. We owe it to the memory of the 26 miners.  This government will respond with an initial plan of action prior to Christmas. We have a lot of ground to cover and many decisions to make, but we are committed to a timely response. The Westray families have waited long enough.  This government will do the right thing. We will make this province a safer place for people to earn a living and raise their families.  This morning, I took a few minutes to visit the Westray memorial in Stellarton, and I read the names of the 26 men once more.  We can never allow another Westray. People do not go to work to die.  Unfortunately, this government cannot change the past. I wish we could. But we can make a difference in the future.

In closing, I make this pledge to the families: Westray will not be some vague memory of a tragic accident. It will be a living active presence in workplaces across Nova Scotia. Your husbands, your fathers, your sons, your brothers, your friends will never be forgotten. Every time someone wants to cut corners or bend the rules, we will remind them. There can never be another Westray. This government will not allow it.  Thank you, Mr Speaker.

Contact: Jennifer MacIsaac, 902-424-3219, e-mail: macisaja@gov.ns.ca

Source: [ Government press release # 120107, 1 December 1997, 8:25 pm]
    http://www.gov.ns.ca/cmns/msrv/nr-1997/nr97-12/97120107.htm


Note to Editors: The executive summary of the Westray inquiry report can be found on the Internet at http://www.gov.ns.ca/legi/inquiry/westray/findings.htm.




Prosecute Westray 'cowards, tricksters,'
Hotline callers say

Daily News Hotline — by Stephen Bornais
The Halifax Daily News
Saturday, December 6, 1997

The Crown should pursue charges against those directly responsible for the Westray mine disaster, say respondents to The Daily News Hotline.  But that opinion won by the narrowest of margins, backed by only 11 of the 21 callers and e-mailers.  The Hotline asked if the criminal justice system should be pushed to continue with charges against mine managers, a process that could take years — and many millions of dollars.

Regular e-mailer Edward Watt said the process must continue, but he acknowledged the difficulties it will face.  "Even if criminal charges are brought against these liars, cowards and tricksters, it will unfortunately take years to even come to trial where this will be tantamount to winning a lottery 6/49 for lawyers," he wrote.

"So what if it takes years?" said Lilly Snow from Beaver Bank, while Judith Mason in Bedford said someone must speak for those who can no longer.  "Don't you think it's time someone was accountable for this?" she said.

Old union man Donald Waye of Dartmouth said the people directly responsible for the mine are still at large. "The Crown should stand its ground and bring those people back for questioning," he said.

To do otherwise, a woman said, would be a "a waste of those men's lives and waste of the efforts of the inquiry."

But to Lloyd Zwicker, of Windsor, the waste would be in the continuation of a lost cause.  "We've wasted enough taxpayers dollars, millions and millions of dollars wasted on something a 10-year-old kid could have told us," he said.  The money would be better spent on keeping hospital beds open, he added.

Another caller said Westray was a tragic event, but it was time to put it to rest.  One woman doubted the strength of the case that could be prepared against the mine managers.  "If there was any concrete evidence those men were to blame they would have been charged a long time ago, believe me," she said.

A Hotline regular said there plenty of blame for everyone involved with Westray.  "Unless you're going to charge everyone responsible you can't charge anyone, otherwise you're just picking your defendants," he said.

The miners themselves should have been aware of the risks they were running, a man said. "Any man that goes underground in Nova Scotia and anywhere in the world knows he's taking his life in his hands."

The Daily News Hotline allows readers to speak out on current issues. It does not purport to be a scientific sample of public opinion. Questions appear Wednesday and Sunday. Results appear Saturday and Wednesday.





Public Inquiries Act
    http://www.gov.ns.ca/legislature/legc/statutes/pubinqur.htm