The Unraveling of a Lifeline: Black Lung Protections Under Threat
Josh Cochran was just 43 when he received the diagnosis every coal miner dreads: black lung disease. Decades spent deep underground had gifted him not a gold watch, but a chronic illness—one whose only reliable weapon was federally-mandated safety nets. For generations, programs like the Mine Safety and Health Administration’s Part 90 have enabled miners who are sick to transfer to safer roles without losing a paycheck. More crucially, the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health’s (NIOSH) surveillance arms relentlessly tracked lung damage among miners, intervening before tragedy could strike.
Those hard-won protections are slipping away as a result of mass layoffs and office closures sweeping through key federal agencies. Last year alone, the Department of Health and Human Services eliminated nearly 900 jobs across miner health programs, gutting the Coal Workers’ Health Surveillance Program (CWHSP) and forcing the shutdown of x-ray and testing initiatives at mine sites. The National Personal Protective Technologies Laboratory in Pittsburgh—uniquely positioned worldwide to both certify respirators and test mining safety equipment—now faces closure. For miners with black lung, this represents existential danger.
Union leaders and public health officials are sounding the alarm. Brendan Demich, chief steward for the American Federation of Government Employees Pittsburgh Local 1916, put it plainly: “If these cuts go through, years of progress on miner safety—research, respiratory protection, accident prevention—will simply vanish. Lives are at stake.”
Policy by Neglect: Unraveling Protections in the Name of Revival
As the Trump administration doubled down on its promises to revive the coal industry, a paradox emerged: politicians touted “jobs, jobs, jobs,” yet simultaneously choked off the very safeguards that keep miners alive to do those jobs. The rhetoric of “restoring coal” came hand-in-glove with drastic reductions at both the Mine Safety and Health Administration (MSHA) and NIOSH, as revealed in reporting by Reuters and internal agency documentation. Nearly half of MSHA offices are under review for lease termination, raising concerns about the practical enforcement of critical regulations such as silica dust exposure limits—rules that are, quite literally, the difference between life and death for miners.
These changes hit hardest in communities like Central Appalachia, where researchers at NIOSH estimate rates of black lung disease have climbed steadily, with recent studies showing a spike in diagnoses among younger miners. That trend runs counter to decades of success, a reminder that progress must be guarded, not assumed. Dr. Laura Green, a Harvard School of Public Health specialist in occupational disease, warns: “We defeated black lung before by rigorous oversight, not by luck. Without robust screening, monitoring, and clear accountability, we’ll see these illnesses surge again.”
Is there any good reason to let these life-saving programs falter when black lung still haunts America’s mines? Cost-cutting, say administration officials. But, as history proves, rolling back workplace protections rarely saves money in the long run. The costs—in long-term disability, lost productivity, and shattered families—come due eventually, often landing squarely on the shoulders of local communities least equipped to handle them.
“If these cuts go through, years of progress on miner safety—research, respiratory protection, accident prevention—will simply vanish. Lives are at stake.”
Quieter voices within the industry have acknowledged the irony: in pushing for a coal “renaissance” while gutting federal oversight, we risk recreating the very conditions that first drove America to regulate mining.
The Cost of Cutting Corners: America’s Moral and Economic Dilemma
From a distance, some might shrug off these bureaucratic reshufflings at distant federal agencies. Yet, to the families in Pennsylvania, Kentucky, and West Virginia, where coal dust still hangs heavy in the air, the threat is clear and present. The announcement by Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. to move NIOSH out of the CDC—effectively shutting down its specialized research and certification functions—was the tipping point for many. Without NIOSH, there is no federally-certified respirator testing, no authoritative research on miners’ health, and no reliable way to monitor the resurgence of workplace illnesses once nearly vanquished.
A closer look reveals that these are not just “coal country” issues, but American ones. The National Personal Protective Technologies Laboratory does far more than serve miners: its expertise underpins the safety standards for healthcare workers, firefighters, and construction crews nationwide. Cutting its funding doesn’t just threaten miners; it makes every American workplace a little less safe.
The progressive ethos isn’t about clinging to nostalgia for lost industries, but about ensuring dignity and health for all workers, regardless of geography or job title. We are called to invest in scientific expertise and regulatory vigilance, not for bureaucracy’s sake, but for the basic decency of protecting people who do dangerous work so others can safely turn on a light or fuel an economy.
It’s no secret that coal is fading as an energy source. Yet, as the industry shrinks, so too do the resources available to those it leaves behind—precisely when they’re needed most, as communities seek to diversify and heal. The challenge now is not just how to end the era of coal, but how to do so responsibly, without sacrificing the health and future of those who fueled America’s rise. As the Nature Conservancy points out, abandoned mine lands could become sites for immense clean-energy development—if we commit the resources. Letting programs like CWHSP wither is not just a budget choice, but a moral one. Who will step up for coal miners when the safety net unravels?
