O.K.
I have to say a few things here. My husband works in a coal mine. As a matter of fact, he works in a coal mine in SW Pennsylvania. It is much larger than Que Creek and is owned by a huge company. He isn't involved in the actual production of coal, but is all around it.
Most of the work, at least in the large mines, is highly automated. Coal is mined by machines that are computerized and sometimes even run by remote control. Computer problems are actually a big cause of lost time. This automation is the reason coal production is at record highs and employment is at record lows.
Also, I don't know where Geraldo got his less than $20,000 figure. That may be so at some tiny coal companies, but not at the major players and not at unionized mines. Many companies also now pay their non-union mines even more than the union mines in order to keep the union from being voted in. Most miners, and I heard some say it in interviews at Que Creek, do it because they make good money. My husband was half way to an accounting degree when he chucked it because he realized he would never make the kind of money he could in the mines. If you check my signature, you will see the number of Disney trips we have taken in the past few years. We have been a single income family during that entire time while I stay home with the kidsand work on my masters degreeeand I promise you we didn't make those trips on a $20,000 annual salary
Now that I've said all of that, it is a cold, wet, dangerous, and generally thankless job. My husband is counting the months until he is eligible for early retirement (and we can move closer to the Mouse). Is much, much safer than in the past and most days those thoughts just get pushed to the back of your mind. If he is late coming home from work, though, your mind starts to race.
Believe me, I spent the entire time those miners were trapped putting myself in their families places. I hope and pray my children never, ever have to go through something like that
My husband and I are in complete agreement, as are our children, that none of our four will ever go into a mine!
This is all just my experience, of course, and there are many other mines, miners, and situations out there.