LIMELIGHT

If you don’t think corporate greed kills, read Rob’s story and you’ll understand where the little guys fit into this world.

Guest Post by Rob in Nova Scotia

I never chose the Limelight. A long time ago it chose me. I wish sometimes that I could have lived out my life by the river in anonymity. But that wasn’t the choice for me.

Kind of interesting experiment I have conducted these past 5 years. How time flies eh! I now realize I was stuck on repeat somewhere between the beginning and the end of the 5 stages of grief. But somehow I have made it to other side. Anyways I have said this before. Your writing inspired me to find my own voice! So to you especially but to everyone else as well. Even bb!

I wasn’t planning on doing this just got a phone call out of the blue. It seems to happen that way. Likely why I refuse to have a cell phone. I always feel like I am carrying a grenade in my pocket with the pin pulled. Like I said in article these days it is all good.

Via Ngnews

Westray was a loaded gun primed to go off

webrobert-thompson.jpg

Robert Thompson looks over a newspaper from the week the Westray Mine exploded.

NEW GLASGOW, N.S. – Dates matter.


-----------------------------------------------------
It is my sincere desire to provide readers of this site with the best unbiased information available, and a forum where it can be discussed openly, as our Founders intended. But it is not easy nor inexpensive to do so, especially when those who wish to prevent us from making the truth known, attack us without mercy on all fronts on a daily basis. So each time you visit the site, I would ask that you consider the value that you receive and have received from The Burning Platform and the community of which you are a vital part. I can't do it all alone, and I need your help and support to keep it alive. Please consider contributing an amount commensurate to the value that you receive from this site and community, or even by becoming a sustaining supporter through periodic contributions. [Burning Platform LLC - PO Box 1520 Kulpsville, PA 19443] or Paypal

-----------------------------------------------------
To donate via Stripe, click here.
-----------------------------------------------------
Use promo code ILMF2, and save up to 66% on all MyPillow purchases. (The Burning Platform benefits when you use this promo code.)

With the anniversary of the Westray Mine Explosion approaching on May 9, many dates are running through Robert Thompson’s mind. May 9, May 22 and the day in September when a black suburban pulled in his driveway. But most importantly, May 6.

That’s the day in 1992 when he tested samples that showed high levels of coal dust in the mine. The miners were effectively working in the chamber of a gun ready to explode.

On May 6, Thompson believes management at some level knew about the problem. He had phoned the results in to the appropriate person as was his standard procedure. That day provincial mine inspector Albert McLean was on site and, if he had seen the results, would likely have shut down the operation. On April 29, McLean had already given orders for the company to start spreading stone dust to help reduce the risk of an explosion and ordered tests to make sure the level of coal dust in the mine never exceeded the 35 per cent allowed by law.

The tests on May 6 were far above it.

But on May 6, 1992,  no one did anything to address the safety concern brewing below ground. The biggest concern on people’s minds was keeping up with the supply of coal to meet Westray’s contract obligations with Nova Scotia Power.

May 9 was the explosion.

Westray was a loaded gun primed to go off

 

May 22, Thompson said he and his coworkers were called back to work at the lab at Westray. While the county was still reeling from the tragic deaths of 26 miners on May 9, the need for coal-generated power was still there. The plan was for open pit mining to start in Stellarton later that month.

“In the middle of the day I got a call while I was in the lab and Roger Parry and Trevor Eagles and Gerald Phillips showed up in the lab to demand to see the person who did the test.”

Parry and Phillips were managers of the mine and Eagles was the on-site engineer. Thompson knew the tests they were talking about were the ones he had done on May 6.

“The argument was whether the tests were done right or not. They were trying to make it my fault. I’m like 26 years old and green as the grass. I have a guy yelling in my face, wondering why I did it the way I did it, which was kind of shocking and unnerving.”

While Thompson said he knows he followed the correct procedure, those in charge insisted that he had done it wrong because he hadn’t accounted for moisture. To him the point was moot. They were arguing over the calibre of the bullet, he said. The facts backed his results.: the mine had blown up.

When Thompson walked into work May 28, his supervisor Robert O’Donnell told him to dispose of the coal dust splits that were left on the bench downstairs. The splits included a portion of coal dust he had set aside from the batch he tested on May 6, and, if he was correct, would show that the levels were unsafe as his previous tests had shown.

“The fact that he told me to destroy evidence, that was the final straw for me. I went to the police the next day and told them everything I knew, which is probably not a whole lot, but enough that they were able to get a warrant and shut the mine down, because by the time I got back to work that evening, the place was seized by police.”

I’m sure nobody wanted people to get killed. I don’t think there was a memo sent out one day, ‘Let’s blow up the mine.’ I don’t believe that happened. People are not that evil. But in the aftermath, I think people should have told the truth. I don’t think that happened.

Robert Thompson

He said he knew from then on he was a dead man walking with the company. In June he was “let go” because of what he was told was a lack of work.

When he was unemployed and home caring for two kids while his wife was away working to keep food on their table, a black suburban pulled into Thompson’s driveway in September.

Ches MacDonald, an investigator with the Nova Scotia Department of Labour came in to question him.

For an hour, Thompson told him everything he knew.

As he got up to leave, Thompson said MacDonald looked at him and offered some advice.

“I respect you for your honesty, but keep this to yourself,” he said. “I don’t trust the people I’m working for.”

Thompson declined to be part of CBC’s Fifth Estate investigation about Westray in June of 1992 – something  he regrets to this day.

“I should have done that interview,” he said. “In the first iteration done in 1992 the report included a segment stating test results were done on the sixth. A few years ago I watched it again and that bit was removed. That bothers me. It really does.”

He understands why CBC did it –  because the only evidence to that effect they had was a phone interview with Thompson – but he believes it’s a crucial detail.

He hoped he would be able to share his story during the inquiry that followed. However, while he was on the Crown’s list of witnesses, he was never called.

Eagles, an on-site engineer at Westray, testified  he hadn’t received the test results until the end of the day on May 7 in the form of a memo. Thompson is sure he followed standard operating procedure and phoned the results in on May 6, but never had the chance to dispute Eagles’ testimony.

“It all seems kind of trivial, but it’s not, because the decisions had to be made on the sixth,” Thompson said.

“It’ll never be closed for me because I was never given a chance to speak at the inquiry.”

Looking back, he said he doesn’t blame anyone in particular.

“I’m sure nobody wanted people to get killed. I don’t think there was a memo sent out one day, ‘Let’s blow up the mine.’ I don’t believe that happened. People are not that evil. But in the aftermath, I think people should have told the truth. I don’t think that happened.”

Thompson doesn’t want to be portrayed as a victim. He’s moved on in many ways, but on those days, especially May 6 and 9, questions sometimes haunt him.

He wonders if he had told his friend Larry Bell about the results before he left work on May 6, if it would have made a difference and saved Bell’s life.

“I think they knew how bad it was. I don’t think even if I had told them how bad it was, they would have probably still went underground. They knew. They must have known.”

Thompson says he’s also sure that on May 6 here were people who knew and could have done something about it. Instead, they continued to produce coal.

 

Subscribe
Notify of
guest
34 Comments
Ed
Ed
May 9, 2017 9:29 am

That’s a heavy load to carry around, Rob. Don’t blame yourself. Maybe it wouldn’t have mattered in the end if you had gone on the CBC interview. It’s on CBC that your statement about the tests being reported on the 6th was removed. Knowing how the news media performs here in the US, I’d conclude that there was pressure from somewhere to have your statement removed.

It doesn’t look to me as though you were at fault at all.

Francis Marion
Francis Marion
  Ed
May 9, 2017 9:58 am

The problem with talking to any MSM these days in anything other than a live interview is that you have no control over the outcome. Interviews can be edited and context fucked with. I think, for your own sake, you probably did the right thing. I wouldn’t trust the CBC any further than I could throw Stucky. Wherever he may be….

RiNS
RiNS
  Francis Marion
May 9, 2017 10:05 am

A Stucky throwing contest. Now that would be funny! As for the CBC you are probably right.

RiNS
RiNS
  Ed
May 9, 2017 12:29 pm

Ed

Is there a link from CBC about my statement being removed.

Ed
Ed
  RiNS
May 10, 2017 6:52 am

Rob, I don’t know. I may have misread what you wrote, because I thought that’s what you said happened. I apologize if I got it wrong. I didn’t intend to mislead.

edit: I looked at my comment and it was unclear. I said that “it’s on CBC”, meaning that it’s their responsibility or their doing, not that there’s a statement on their site admitting it. Sorry for my poor choice of words.

Iska Waran
Iska Waran
May 9, 2017 9:30 am

I’ll read it, but there’s not enough money in the world to make me listen to Rush.

Maggie
Maggie
May 9, 2017 9:39 am

I am so glad you are able to share your story here, Rob. It is a powerful example of how inconvenient truths are eliminated by those in power.

Thanks for sharing.

norman franklin
norman franklin
  Maggie
May 9, 2017 9:53 am

Rob, that is a heart wrenching story, I am sure it is tuff this time of year to think of your friend. I am sure he knew how tremendously dangerous it was, so nothing you would have said or done would have changed it.

These coal miners that go underground everyday and breath air that is unfit to breath, do it for their families and because it is what they have known for generations now.

We owe them our gratitude as in many ways they provide the power that moves the world.

RiNS
RiNS
May 9, 2017 9:47 am

Not lot to add. People might wonder why it took me so long to talk about all of it. Didn’t help all those years ago to be told by Ches MacDonald that he didn’t trust the people he worked for. “The People” being the department of labour and the government of Nova Scotia. Our dot elected by in part by me. I suppose best answer is the unwritten code of silence that seeps from the ground in coal mining towns.

There is still a lot I could talk about. The years fighting with Government of Nova Scotia to get answers. Them ignoring then setting aside Freedom of Information Requests. Not being allowed to speak at Inquiry. To the RCMP who after some delay finally sent to me my statement given 29th May 1992. It confirmed much of what I had said previous. Corrected the date of confrontation with Phillips, Parry and Eagles. But most disappointing for me it was heavily redacted. The reason given I was told was because my statement contained facts to me that implied criminality by others.

Tonight I will go to my memorial service at Westray Monument for first time.

I was originally drawn to TBP because it gave voice to how I felt. It took some time and practice but eventually I threw my hat in ring. First here, then further afield.

So to this I will add people might sometimes wonder if blogs like this make a difference.

I say they do.

Maggie
Maggie
  RiNS
May 9, 2017 10:23 am

Robert, I wish more people reading the blogs were genuinely interested in trying to find solutions rather than just arguing the facts. I know this time of year is hard for you.

We could have an annual Stucky Toss.

RiNS
RiNS
  Maggie
May 9, 2017 10:30 am

Can’t see anyone throwing those Size 13’s more than a couple of feet. Still it would be fun for all to get together and try.

Unstoppable
Unstoppable
May 9, 2017 9:55 am

Hindsight is 20/20. It appears you did the best you could do at the time. Although regrets are a part of life, we can only learn from them to affect an uncertain future. When we have no answers, only choices remain. Godspeed Rob. Peace.

RiNS
RiNS
  Unstoppable
May 9, 2017 10:01 am

Thanks Stop. There is a season for everything. So for now it’s time to move on.

Vic
Vic
  RiNS
May 10, 2017 3:20 am

RiNS, it’s hard to fight the system. You did your best, and that’s all you can hope to do.

BB
BB
May 9, 2017 10:15 am

Tinker Bell ,there is nothing wrong with BB. I’m OK .My Guilt has been removed and through propitiation God’s wrath has removed .I’m set up for all eternity.However you do have some problems.You feel guilty because you are guilty but not because of the mining accident.From what I can tell you had nothing to do with what happened but yet you Feel responsible.Miss placed guilt is a bitch and worldly sorrows only wear you down.You got Both Tinker Bell.

RiNS
RiNS
  BB
May 9, 2017 10:18 am

You are wrong Hernia Boy! I’m cured and with much thanks to you!

Props!

kokoda - the most deplorable
kokoda - the most deplorable
May 9, 2017 10:44 am

You were a young guy (26) at the time, without much experience/knowledge. I think this was a very important factor.
Else, if you knew the explosive danger the miners faced, you surely would have told them (and your friend).

Edit: A criminal case should have been brought against the responsible party that received your lab results. I would bet that if that person was offered immunity, he would have given-up officers of the company.

RiNS
RiNS
  kokoda - the most deplorable
May 9, 2017 11:00 am

There was a case brought. Problem was the government did have the stomach to prosecute. It just withered on the vine after a couple of years. Ended up stayed by the Supreme Court of Canada in 1998, I think. As for the other bits you talk about you are pretty much right. I was way too young to be heard or listened to. I am no fool even now. The continued silence of government is deafening. Obviously they have invested too much time crafting their narrative to be bothered with a schmuck like me. If time was taken now to incorporate what I have to say into what they have written the whole can of worms gets opened again. In the meantime life goes on and I have decided it is best to be enjoyed.

You can’t fight city hall forever.

Vic
Vic
  RiNS
May 10, 2017 3:24 am

RiNS, I think you have the right attitude now. We all have regrets, though most of ours aren’t as intense as yours. But the past can’t be changed, so work on tomorrow.

Deathcabfordollar
Deathcabfordollar
May 9, 2017 11:30 am

RiNs,
Life is to be enjoyed, but for how long if no one fights city hall?

Fiatman60
Fiatman60
May 9, 2017 11:34 am

With this disaster, and the one unfolding in Quebec, – the one thing that really stands out is the fact that the government knows what’s going on, and does absolutely nothing to help out, and even when it does, it falls very short of doing any good. Case in point is the people who asked for sandbags over a week ago, before the floods, and it fell on deaf ears.

Yes, – the one thing government is really good at – is confiscating your hard earned wealth, and doing nothing when you really need them.

nkit
nkit
May 9, 2017 1:43 pm

RiNS, I know that this is a difficult time of year for you. I understand some of your feelings and emotions as you have written about this disaster on other occasions. You did your job. The results are not on you. You undoubtedly, will never see the justice that you seek, but I’d bet you anything that Robbie Doyle and Larry Bell would want you to move on and live your life to its fullest for your sake, your family’s sake, and especially their’s. Carry the truth with you in honor of their memory. May you find peace and someday celebrate this day for all twenty-six that perished, but especially your two close friends.

RiNS
RiNS
  nkit
May 9, 2017 2:18 pm

bb might laugh at me but I talk to them all the time. Larry has told me to move on. I gets tiring to fight the system when few seem to care. I have gotten on with things. Well mostly. Folks might wonder why I persist but simple fact is my statement to police on 29th was put down an Orwellian Memory Hole because the facts that I presented were inconvenient. Somehow even the much vaunted CBC, the absolute pillar of media virtue, has elements that have decided that I am not to be believed.

I have always known that I did my job. I don’t really have any guilt. I used to but not anymore What I do have is a anger that the truth has never told about that event. I gave up a career and for what. According to Inquiry, the Government and the Mine I was never a part of this story.

Fucken ridiculous!

I know this sounds a bit paranoid but here is a screen shot of my comment to doc done by CBC way back first in 1992. Who knows it might get deleted.

[imgcomment image[/img]

I have no reason to lie. None whatsoever. I lost my career trying to do the right thing about what happened yet somebody at the CBC has decided that someone else is more believable than I. I am not going to mention his name but most can put two and two together. Yeah I should just let it go. And in another week or so I will. Same thing happens every year.

All this talk around here about conspiracies and I have been living thru one for 25 fucken years.

The only thing I have learned so far for sure is the pay is a whole lot better if you don’t tell the truth. It makes me mad when those people who shall be unnamed now get to hide behind the skirts of the state. Poke me from afar.

Maybe I need to write a book will to sort things out. Maybe.

Maggie
Maggie
  RiNS
May 10, 2017 12:05 am

It can be therapeutic to write it all out, especially if you choose third-person and write as if you are watching yourself live through the events. However, as you know, with your own “story” it can be traumatic as well.

One of my favored college professors quoted an author about emotional involvement with one’s story. I think it was Truman Capote but not am positive. The saying was that writing about personal pain involves putting clean paper into the typewriter, sitting down to type, then slashing one’s wrists and bleeding onto the page.

Vic
Vic
  Maggie
May 10, 2017 3:28 am

Wow!

BB
BB
May 9, 2017 4:25 pm

Tinker Bell , talking to the dead is no laughing matter.In Deuteronomy 18:9 -14 God strictly prohibited ” talking to the dead or one who calls on the dead ” God calls this an Abomination in his sight.Read chapter 18 . You’ll see.

RiNS
RiNS
  BB
May 9, 2017 9:55 pm

Using Bill as my inspiration I’ll say I dont talk to the dead they talk to me.

[imgcomment image[/img]

You know what bb I’m thinking of finding God because it is starting to look like these people, that shall go unnamed, aren’t going to see justice in this life.

You got any fire and brimstone to cheer up this heathen.

Chubby Bubbles
Chubby Bubbles
  BB
May 9, 2017 10:58 pm

BB, STFU.

Vic
Vic
  BB
May 10, 2017 3:28 am

Better to pray to God. Start by reading the Bible. You can also read the books written by Gary North. Tremendous. Educational about what the Bible is telling you.

Chubby Bubbles
Chubby Bubbles
May 9, 2017 11:03 pm

RiNS, thank you very much for sharing this tale. This is the kind of diamond that makes TBP worthwhile to me. I’m sorry you had be a direct witness to this in order to recount it for us.

If you want help proofreading a book or designing a cover, let me know via admin.

hardscrabble farmer
hardscrabble farmer
May 10, 2017 6:07 am

I’m very sorry for the burden you must carry and if makes any difference at all everything your writing radiates redemption.

You’d make Diogenes proud.

IndenturedServant
IndenturedServant
May 10, 2017 7:16 am

Rob, seems to me you posted this here on TBP a few years back if I’m not mistaken.

Anywho, it seems to me that you were dealt a shitty hand and handled it quite well all things considered. We can never change the past no matter how hard we try. The best you can do is to remember your friends and honor their memory.

Knowing what we now know about the media I’m sure you made the right decision not to do the CBC interview. The media is owned and controlled by our owners and our owners don’t give a shit about you, your family, your friends, co-workers or anyone else on the planet besides themselves. There’s no telling how a bunch of self-serving assholes might have edited and twisted your words for their own gain and if it had ruined you they’d care not one bit.

If you haven’t seen it, I encourage you to watch that long ass “Rich Mans Trick” video here:

JFK to 911 Everything Is A Rich Man’s Trick

It’s 3.5 hours and you are no doubt aware of most of what it contains but watch the whole thing. Even if you differ with the finer points of the JFK assassination or 9/11 as portrayed in the video, the overall picture of how big business, the bankers, governments, intelligence agencies, the city states of Vatican, London and DC is arrayed against you is clearly laid out. It’s all about the money and the lives of dirt people………up to and including President’s and skyscrapers full of people, will not stand in their way.

Maggie
Maggie
  IndenturedServant
May 10, 2017 7:45 am

I agree it provides some insight about how very callously the truly rich view us “dirt people.” I think Rob in Nova Scotia has grasped that idea very well, if not the details that make the video worth watching in my opinion. I sense that Rob, like most Don Quixote types who waken while sleepwalking in the madness of destruction the diabolical narcissists leave behind, is simply at a point where re-examining the path to ensure that one windmill which might have made a difference was not skipped over.

Rob knows “they” manage to cling to power no matter how many people they kill or how many classified emails they send or how many lab reports they ignore for one more week or day or even ONE HOUR of profitable operation and he knows that he probably is not going to get a straight answer from anyone who refuses to acknowledge that if someone had just done what they were SUPPOSED TO DO when he did what he was supposed to do, lives could have been saved that were otherwise wasted.

I applaud Rob for telling his story again after a few years of reflection and I applaud those TBPers who grasp that the humanity of interaction here is a precious remnant of what Admin managed to create in his pack of STMs.

The main point of the longwinded video you recommend, IS, is that in the minds of the powerful, the lives of all those killed were not WASTED at all The catastrophes that result from disregard for the value of life is just the cost of doing business. In this brave new world, all the risk has migrated downhill to the dirt people.

mangledman
mangledman
May 11, 2017 4:46 pm

I wondered where that bleeding all over the page thought came from. I was just talking to my daughter about something, and it applies here quite well. I was telling her this how life works. Yesterday was perfect, everything said and done, cannot be changed. It is what is. Could more have been said or done, yes, but that was not meant to be. Everything said and done has served its purpose. We may find out the truth of why, we may not, before this life is over. To me this is where faith comes, all will be fulfilled.
You told the truth, doing right by your friends. Some of us have not done as well in all things. If you were supposed to do better or worse you would have. It is all part of a plan none of us can comprehend. We can look back, and some things now make sense.
Realizing we are peasants, sheep, or peons, we start to see conspiracy all around.
Knowing you did the right thing at the time is it’s own reward.
Great story, well done