“Last Hole” Drilled in Miner Search
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HUNTINGTON, Utah – Relatives of six miners trapped deep inside a Utah coal mine are holding out hope that a final hole being drilled today to try locate the men will bring a miracle.
Searchers have lowered cameras and listening devices into five other narrow holes but found no signs of the miners and no evidence of life.
The sixth hole will head toward an area where the miners were last believed to have been working.
“This is the last hole,” mine co-owner Bob Murray said last night night. Drilling it, he said, will “bring closure to me that I could never get them out alive.”
Jackie Taylor, whose daughter Lacee dates one of the miners missing since an Aug. 6 cave-in, said relatives and friends are insisting more be done.
Attempts to tunnel through the collapsed mine shaft to reach the men were halted after a second cave-in killed two miners and a federal safety officer and injured six others. Even though three rescuers died, area mine workers are willing to continue the work, Taylor said.
“They’re here, they’ll help the mine rescuers, they’re waiting to help if they’ll let them,” Ms. Taylor said. “And we are so grateful for the rescuers and everyone that has helped us. We are so grateful, don’t get us wrong.”
Families are also angry at Mr. Murray over the suspended tunneling and the decision against digging a hole big enough for a rescue capsule to be lowered.
Ms. Taylor, who said she had a shouting match with Mr. Murray during a Monday night meeting with families, said the mine owner is reneging on his promise to return the men to their families dead or alive.
The fifth drilled hole, only a few inches wide, punched through yesterday but revealed only a 6-inch void in the mine 1,500 feet down, federal officials said.
No noise was heard from the hole after a microphone was lowered and workers banged on the drill steel, said Jack Kuzar, a district manager for the Mine Safety and Health Administration.
The collapse that trapped the miners is believed to have been caused by settling layers of earth bearing down on the walls of a coal mine. The force can cause mine pillars to fail, turning chunks of coal into missiles. The unpredictable and dangerous phenomenon is known by miners as a “bump.”
Critics and mine experts have questioned whether mining should have been conducted at Crandall Canyon at all because of the potential for collapses.
Mr. Murray said he would not resume mining at the Crandall Canyon mine.
“I can tell you right now, we are not going back into that mountain,” he said.
He has insisted the collapse was caused by a natural earthquake, but government seismologists say the collapse itself is what caused the ground to shake, registering a magnitude of 3.9. Since then there have been several other bumps.
“Had I known that this evil mountain, this alive mountain, would do what it did, I would never have sent the miners in here,” Mr. Murray said earlier. “I’ll never go near that mountain again.”
Most of the surviving Crandall Canyon workers have been given jobs at two other mines in central Utah’s coal belt, although a small crew remains at Crandall Canyon, Murray said.
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Associated Press writers Chelsea J. Carter, Michael Rubinkam and Jessica Gresko contributed to this report from Huntington.