The Safety Movement in the Lake Superior Iron Region (6d36b365-8d62-4fcd-b6a4-a495cc17bf42)

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Edwin Higgins
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Pages:
16
File Size:
766 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 10, 1914

Abstract

INTRODUCTION IT is the purpose of this paper to set forth the relation and functions of the various organizations and institutions engaged in the promotion of safety iii the iron mines of the Lake Superior region; also to indicate the value of this work. Ten to 15 years ago there was practically no organized safety work; the accident rate was high, excessively so in some districts, and dangerous practices and conditions existed in many of the mines. During recent years, however, a gradual change for the better has been made. The chief causes of this change have been (a) public opinion, which has set the stamp of disapproval on the disregard for human life; (b) certain State laws which have made the operators responsible in dollars and cents for injuries to workmen; and (c) the humanitarian attitude of many of the operators, who have always decried the great loss of life in the mines. Today the Lake Superior region as a whole stands second to no other metal-mining district in the United States in its efforts to promote the welfare and safety of the miner. Dangerous practices in and about the mines are fast disappearing. The operators are ready and eager to adopt any expedient, rule, or device that holds forth a reasonable promise of reducing the hazards of the miner. Today the value of a mine captain or shift boss is reckoned, not alone on his ability to "get the ore," but also on his capacity for reducing accidents. While the progress made has been remarkable, there still remains much to be done, for the accident records of the Lake Superior iron mines, while lower than those of the chief metal-mining regions of the United States, still compare unfavorably with those of the metal mines of practically all foreign countries.
Citation

APA: Edwin Higgins  (1914)  The Safety Movement in the Lake Superior Iron Region (6d36b365-8d62-4fcd-b6a4-a495cc17bf42)

MLA: Edwin Higgins The Safety Movement in the Lake Superior Iron Region (6d36b365-8d62-4fcd-b6a4-a495cc17bf42). The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1914.

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