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Season 6, Episode 178

Labor 131: Trish Kahle on Coal Miners' Impact Shaping Workers' Rights

GENERIC LABOR 131 SIDEBAR

 

Guest Name:


Tina Kahle

Guest Website:


Georgetown University in Qatar 

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Today’s edition of Labor 131, presented by the National Labor Office of Blue Cross and Blue Shield Association, features Trish Kahle, Assistant Professor at Georgetown University in Qatar, who joined the America's Work Force Union Podcast to discuss her research on the influence of coal miners on U.S. energy policy and workers' rights. Kahle explored how miners shaped modern citizenship, their role in workplace safety activism and the evolving relationship between energy workers and politics.

Kahle’s book, "Energy Citizenship: Coal and Democracy in the American Century," traces how coal miners in Appalachia left an indelible mark on the U.S. energy system. She explained that miners understood early on how their work could be leveraged to improve living conditions, secure better social benefits and redefine citizenship rights. This activism extended beyond negotiations with coal operators to influencing federal policy on black lung laws and workers' rights legislation.

The 1970 wildcat safety strikes in western Pennsylvania exemplify miners' impact on workplace safety. Kahle detailed how these strikes, defying company injunctions, led to increased enforcement of the Federal Coal Mine Health and Safety Act. She said this activism resulted in federal inspectors being placed in the most dangerous mines and gave workers new tools to scrutinize and improve safety conditions. Kahle emphasized that this was part of a longer arc of miners' activism against workplace violence, dating back to the late 19th century.

Kahle also discussed the evolving relationship between energy workers and politics, particularly in light of the 1973 Arab Oil Embargo. She highlighted how coal miners in West Virginia protested gasoline shortages, claiming a right to energy access based on their role in energy production. This incident, Kahle argued, showcases how ordinary working people can deliberate and influence energy policy decisions, challenging the notion that such decisions are confined to halls of Congress.

Listen to the full episode to hear more insights from Kahle on the intersection of energy, labor and politics in American history.


America’s Work Force is the only daily labor podcast in the US and has been on the air since 1993, supplying listeners with useful, relevant input into their daily lives through fact-finding features, in-depth interviews, informative news segments and practical consumer reports. America’s Work Force is committed to providing an accessible venue in which America's workers and their families can hear discussion on important, relevant topics such as employment, healthcare, legislative action, labor-management relations, corporate practices, finances, local and national politics, consumer reports and labor issues.

America’s Work Force Union Podcast is brought to you in part by our sponsors: AFL-CIO, American Federation of Government Employees, American Federation of Musicians Local 4, Alliance for American Manufacturing, Anthem Blue Cross Blue Shield, Brotherhood of Maintenance of Way Employes-IBT, Boyd Watterson, Columbus/Central Ohio Building and Construction Trades Council, Communication Workers of America, Mechanical Insulators Labor Management Cooperative Trust, International Association of Heat and Frost Insulators and Allied Workers Local 50, International Federation of Professional and Technical Engineers, International Union of Bricklayers and Allied Crafts, International Union of Painters and Allied Trades District Council 6, Ironworkers Great Lakes District Council, Melwood, The Labor Citizen newspaper, Laborers International Union of North America, The National Labor Office of Blue Cross and Blue Shield, North Coast Area Labor Federation, Ohio Federation of Teachers, United Labor Agency, United Steelworkers.

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