Majority Leader McConnell Secures Miners Fix to Protect Coal Families’ Pension Benefits
Utilizing his role as Senate Majority Leader, Senator McConnell joined his colleagues in introducing a bipartisan bill to protect miners’ pensions. He personally raised the need to address this urgent crisis with President Trump, and he successfully secured the provision in the end of the year funding bills.
WASHINGTON, D.C. – U.S. Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-KY) announced today that he successfully secured in the Fiscal Year 2020 government-funding agreement the bipartisan legislation he introduced with Senators Shelley Moore Capito (R-WV) and Joe Manchin (D-WV), to protect pension benefits for Kentucky miners and their families – the Bipartisan American Miners Act of 2019. Before the end of the year, both the House of Representatives and Senate are expected to approve the government-funding bills, sending it to President Trump for his signature.
“I was proud to mobilize the federal government into action to safeguard coal miners’ pension and health care benefits from a looming threat. As Senate Majority Leader, I personally told President Trump and my Congressional colleagues that this was a top priority for me and for thousands of Kentuckians in need, and I was determined to deliver a positive result,” said Majority Leader McConnell. “To help these Kentucky miners and their families, Senators Capito, Manchin, and I proudly joined to introduce the Bipartisan American Miners Act, and at my request our legislation has been included in the government funding bill that will pass Congress and head to President Trump’s desk to become law. I’m proud to continue to be a strong voice for coal miners, retirees, and their families, and I look forward to voting to save their benefits.”
The United Mine Workers of America (UMWA) President Cecil E. Roberts, thanked Senator McConnell for his leadership, saying, “Once this legislation is passed and signed by the President, Congress will have saved the lives of thousands throughout America. And while words cannot truly express what retired miners and their families are feeling this day, I can say this: Majority Leader Mitch McConnell’s support was crucial to securing this legislation, and on behalf of America’s retired coal miners I thank him for his efforts to ensure this became a reality. We will never forget it.”
The Bipartisan American Miners Act of 2019 will secure funding for the 1974 miner Pension Plan to prevent its insolvency. The bipartisan bill also expands the existing health care benefits provided under Senator McConnell’s HELP for Coal Miners Health Care Act of 2017 to the orphaned coal miners whose benefits have been put in jeopardy due to recent coal company bankruptcies. These actions will secure the pensions of 92,000 coal miners and protect health care benefits for 13,000 miners.
“Throughout my entire Senate career, I’ve fought to advance policies that support miners and their families and protect them from anti-coal policies. The lasting devastation from President Obama’s War on Coal has contributed to a number of recent coal company bankruptcies, throwing many Kentucky coal communities into crisis, and they needed our help,” added Majority Leader McConnell. “As Senate Majority Leader, I was proud to use my position to deliver for these Kentucky miners and their families.”
- In 2017, Senator McConnell mobilized Congress to permanently secure health care benefits for thousands of retired miners. Had Congress not acted, approximately 3,000 Kentucky coal miner retirees – and tens of thousands more around the country – would have lost their health care benefits. The bill also included additional assistance for troubled coal-mining communities and dislocated coal workers.
- As senior appropriators, Senator McConnell and Congressman Hal Rogers (KY-05) have secured hundreds of millions of dollars for the Appalachian Regional Commission (ARC) and the Abandoned Mine Land Reclamation Economic Development Pilot Program (AML Pilot). ARC funding supports economic growth in Eastern Kentucky by helping create jobs, combat the spiking substance abuse epidemic, and provide employment training for former coal miners, among a number of other worthy initiatives. In 2015, Senator McConnell and Congressman Rogers established the AML Pilot, which promotes economic and community development on abandoned mine lands. Since then, they have helped secure more than $100 million for Kentucky through this program.
- Senator McConnell also helped secure $99 million through the U.S. Department of Labor (DOL) to provide career and training services to dislocated workers in rural areas, including dislocated coal workers in Kentucky who lost their jobs. This includes $3.7 million to help support the recently impacted Harlan County, Kentucky coal miners and their families with employment and training services.
What about all the nonunion miners that worked for years that have nothing to show for it because the company went broke? Seems to me they ought to get the same benifits if taxpayers are paying for it.
the scabs didn’t want a union