DEPARTMENT OF LABOR MINE SAFETY AND HEALTH ADMINISTRATION Southeastern District Metal and Nonmetal Mine Safety and Health Accident Investigation Report Surface Nonmetal Mine Fatal Fall of Face/Highwall Accident I.D. 31-02002 Altapass Quarry B & W Stone Company Micaville, Yancey County, North Carolina May 28, 1996 By M. E. Slaton Supervisory Mine Inspector and E. L. Killian Mine Safety and Health Inspector Originating Office Mine Safety and Health Administration 135 Gemini Circle, Suite 212 Birmingham, Alabama 35209 Martin Rosta District Manager GENERAL INFORMATION James S. Boone, vice president, age 25, was fatally injured on May 28, 1996, at approximately 1:30 p.m. when he was struck by loose material that fell from a highwall. The victim had a total of 7 years mining experience, all at this mine. The MSHA Knoxville, Tennessee, field office was notified of the accident by a telephone call from James Woody, vice president of B & W stone Company, at 3:55 p.m., May 28, 1996. An investigation was started the next day. The Altapass Quarry was a surface open pit mining operation, owned and operated by B & W Stone Company and located adjacent to Highway 19 at Micaville, Yancey County, North Carolina. The senior operating official was Timothy Boone, president. The mine normally operated one, 8-hour shift a day, 5 days a week on an intermittent basis. A total of 10 people was employed. The company mined building stone which was obtained through lease agreements or royalty and extracted from various locations throughout the area. The stone was drilled, blasted, and placed by hand in the bucket of a front-end loader then taken to a truck to be transported to the main yard where it was cut, sized and stored for customer sales. The finished product was sold for use in landscaping and veneer building stone. The victim had not received training in accordance with 30 CFR Part 48. The last regular inspection of this operation was conducted February 13-15, 1996. PHYSICAL FACTORS INVOLVED The accident occurred in what was called the Orchid Quarry which was about 47 miles north of the company main yard. The quarry was 25 feet wide at the base with vertical highwalls of 20 to 25 feet on each side. The material was drilled with an Atlas Copco jackhammer drill powered by a 150 CFM Ingersoll-Rand air compressor. One and one-half inch diameter holes were drilled on a 5 foot center to a depth of 6 feet and blasted with Anfo jell and electric caps, leaving benches which measured 6 feet wide and 6 feet high and went the length of the quarry. As mining continued, these benches were blasted, leaving 20 to 25 foot vertical walls. An 8-foot long by 1-1/2 inch diameter drill steel was used for scaling loose material. A 1968, HD6-G Allis-Chalmers track front-end loader equipped with a 1-1/4 yard bucket was used to mine the material. The size or amount of rock fall could not be determined due to the fact no one actually saw the material fall. The size of rocks on the quarry floor following the accident ranged from small stone size up to boulders 3 feet long by 1 foot wide by 1 foot thick. DESCRIPTION of ACCIDENT On the day of the accident, James S. Boone, victim, reported to work at 7:00 a.m., his regular starting time. He along with his brother, Timothy Boone, president, and his father, Homer Boone, loader operator, went to the Orchid Quarry to mine boulders which would be transported to the company main yard to be sold for landscaping. They drilled a round of 5 or 6 holes at the top of the quarry which were loaded and shot. Timothy and Homer Boone both stated that they scaled down the loose before going to the quarry floor to hand-load stone into the loader bucket. At about 1:30 p.m., while the front-end loader was removing some waste material, James (victim) and Timothy Boone were standing near the quarry wall, when loose material fell, hitting both men. Timothy Boone was struck on the head and turned to see James Boone on the ground with a severe head injury. The victim was still breathing and they carried him to a pick up truck parked nearby and transported him to the Charles A. Connon Memorial Hospital in Banner Elk, North Carolina, where he was pronounced dead on arrival as a result of massive head trauma. CONCLUSION The primary cause of the accident was the failure to properly scale loose material from the highwall. Contributing to the possible severity of the injury was the failure to use hard hats where there was a danger of falling material. VIOLATIONS Citation No. 3880201 Issued on June 10, 1996, under the provisions of Section 104(a) for a violation of Standard 56.3200: Citation No. 3880202 Issued on June 10, 1996, under the provisions of Section 104(a) for a violation of Standard 56.15002: /s/ M. E. Slaton M. E. Slaton Supervisory Mine Inspector /s/ E. L. Killian E. L. Killian Mine Safety and Health Inspector Approved by: Martin Rosta, District Manager Related Fatal Alert Bulletin: |