Canyon Fuel Company v. Secretary of Labor

894 F.3d 1279
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit
DecidedJuly 10, 2018
Docket17-9541
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 894 F.3d 1279 (Canyon Fuel Company v. Secretary of Labor) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Canyon Fuel Company v. Secretary of Labor, 894 F.3d 1279 (10th Cir. 2018).

Opinion

McHUGH, Circuit Judge.

Canyon Fuel operates the Sufco Mine, a coal mine located in Sevier County, Utah. Under federal law, the mine must have two escapeways in the event of an emergency: a primary escapeway and an alternate escapeway. An inspector for the Mine Safety and Health Administration ("MSHA") cited Canyon Fuel for a violation of this mine safety requirement. Canyon Fuel unsuccessfully contested the citation before the federal agency and now petitions for judicial review of that decision. We affirm the Secretary of Labor's interpretation of the regulation as requiring consideration of both above- and below-ground factors, but we vacate the citation because it is not supported by substantial evidence.

I. BACKGROUND

A. Factual History

Canyon Fuel's Sufco Mine employs between eighty and ninety miners per shift. Canyon Fuel Co. v. Sec'y of Labor, Mine Safety & Health Admin. , 38 FMSHRC 2205 , 2206 (2016) (" Canyon Fuel I "). Approximately twenty of those miners are deployed to the two working sections of the mine relevant to this appeal. Id. The primary escapeway from the mine exits *1282 through the West Lease Portal, which is the main entrance to the mine and is accessible by road. Id. at 2207 . Canyon Fuel installed the 4 East Fan Portal in 1991 and designated it as the primary escapeway in 1992. Id. at 2210 . Later, Canyon Fuel designated the 4 East Fan Portal as the alternate escapeway. Id. at 2210 . The 4 East Fan Portal, unlike the West Lease Portal, opens onto a canyon ledge that is not accessible by road. Id. at 2207 . For over twenty years, the 4 East Fan Portal remained as Canyon Fuel's designated alternate escapeway, without objection from MSHA. Id. at 2214 .

In June 2014, Russell Riley, MSHA's District Manager for Coal District 9, which includes the Sufco Mine, visited the mine to conduct an inspection. Id. at 2206 . Mr. Riley examined the escapeway map and noted that the primary escapeway exited through the West Lease Portal, while the alternate escapeway exited through the 4 East Fan Portal. Id. at 2207 . Mr. Riley asked why other portals close to the working sections were not used for escapeways and was told there were no roads to those portals. Id. Upon further inquiry, Mr. Riley learned that the 4 East Fan Portal also lacked road access. Id. Mr. Riley expressed his concerns about use of the 4 East Fan Portal as the alternate escapeway and, after considering several potential alternatives, suggested that Canyon Fuel instead designate as the alternate escapeway another route that paralleled the primary escapeway and also exited from the West Lease Portal (the "West Lease Portal escapeway"). Id. at 2208 . The 4 East Fan Portal escapeway and the West Lease Portal escapeway travel along the same path for the first part of the route. The two escapeways then diverge and have significant differences which are relevant to this dispute. We now describe those differences in some detail.

1. The 4 East Fan Portal Escapeway

The current alternate escapeway for the Sufco Mine is the 4 East Fan Portal route. Id. at 2207 . The distance from the 4 East Fan Portal to the deepest point of penetration in the working sections of the mine is 2.34 miles. Id. at 2212 . The escapeway from that deepest point to the 4 East Fan Portal has five overcasts, which are "ventilation control[s] that permit[ ] two air currents to cross without mixing." Appellant's Br. at 8. The existence of an overcast is important for assessment of the feasibility of an escapeway because the overcast creates "an overpass over an entry and must be climbed up and over to continue" along the escapeway. Id. Miners typically use either a ramp or a staircase to cross overcasts and, therefore, escaping miners usually cannot drive over an overcast in a vehicle. As a result, the more overcasts in an escapeway, the more difficult the path out of the mine. Such travel is further complicated if the miners are carrying an injured colleague.

The escapeway to the 4 East Fan Portal also requires two Self Contained Self Rescuer ("SCSR") change-out stations.

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Bluebook (online)
894 F.3d 1279, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/canyon-fuel-company-v-secretary-of-labor-ca10-2018.