IC 6675 Safety Practices at Mine 1, Spring Canyon Coal Co., Utah

- Organization:
- The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
- Pages:
- 22
- File Size:
- 823 KB
- Publication Date:
- Dec 1, 1932
Abstract
The oft-repeated expression that the taproot of safety lies in the attitude of the
management toward accident-prevention work is indisputable and has become almost an axiom.
Trite and somewhat timeworn though the statement may be, it is nevertheless true that the
supervisory force must earnestly support a policy of safety and maintain at all times a con¬
siderate regard for the welfare of the employee if that high degree of cooperation of the
employee, so vital to the successful prosecution of any safety program, is to be expected.
The responsibility for preventing accidents rests upon the management, and in the case
of the Spring Canyon Coal Co. such responsibility is recognized and accepted with little or
no reservation. This company, aside from the humanitarian aspects involved, believes that
safety is good business and not a matter to be treated passively or in a perfunctory manner.
The problems with respect to safety that have been met and wholly or partly solved can
best be appreciated when some of the natural conditions, adverse and otherwise, existing at
this operation are taken into consideration.
Mine 1 is about 1 mile north of the town of Spring Canyon, Carbon County, Utah, and is
served by both the Denver & Rio Grande Western and Utah Coal Route railways. During the year
1931 the mine produced 312,397 tons, approximately 10 per cent being derived from pillar
workings. The normal daily output during the summer months is about 2,000 tons, and during
the peak of production in the winter season the daily production varies from 2,500 to 3,000
tons.
The number of miners varies from 87 in summer to 220 in winter, and the day men vary in
number from 66 in the winter to 45 in the summer; 12 company men are employed the year around.
The officers of the company are J. B. Smith, president, San Francisco, California; T. R.
Stockett, general manager, Salt Lake City; and G. A. Murphy, superintendent, David Brown,
assistant superintendent, and John Sullivan, mine foreman, all of Spring Canyon, Utah.
Citation
APA:
(1932) IC 6675 Safety Practices at Mine 1, Spring Canyon Coal Co., UtahMLA: IC 6675 Safety Practices at Mine 1, Spring Canyon Coal Co., Utah. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1932.