Title 30 › Chapter 22— MINE SAFETY AND HEALTH › Subchapter I— GENERAL › § 811
The Secretary must make and update required health and safety rules for coal and other mines. The Secretary can act on information from many sources and may ask an advisory committee to make recommendations. That committee must report in 60 days unless the Secretary sets a different time, but never more than 180 days. When the Secretary gets a recommendation from the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health, the Secretary has 60 days to send it to a committee, publish it as a proposed rule, or explain why not. The Secretary must publish proposed rules in the Federal Register, allow 30 days for written comments (longer if needed), and allow people to file objections and ask for a public hearing by the end of that comment period. The Secretary must announce hearings within 60 days after the comment deadline and start hearings within 60 days of that notice. After the hearing record is certified, the Secretary has 90 days to issue the final rule (or 90 days after the comment period ends if no hearing was requested). Final rules take effect when published unless a later date is given. In emergencies, the Secretary can issue a temporary rule that takes effect immediately if miners face grave danger; that temporary rule stays until replaced and must be finalized within 9 months. Rules about toxic materials must aim to prevent lasting harm over a miner’s working life. The Secretary of Health and Human Services had to identify potentially toxic mine substances as soon as possible after November 9, 1977, and no later than 18 months after that date, and then send criteria to the Secretary; the Secretary then has 60 days to act on those criteria. Final standards must include warnings, protective equipment, monitoring, and medical exams paid by the operator when appropriate, and must provide for removing and reassigning exposed miners without pay loss. Separate surface construction rules should be made when practical. New rules cannot reduce existing protections. Operators or miners can ask the Secretary to allow an alternative method that gives equal protection; the Secretary will investigate and may hold a public hearing and must publish findings. Anyone harmed by a final rule can go to the Court of Appeals within 60 days to challenge it; filing the case does not automatically stop the rule. The Secretary must send proposed rules to each mine operator and miners’ representative when published, and operators must post them on the mine bulletin board, but not getting the notice does not excuse compliance.
Full Legal Text
Mineral Lands and Mining — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
30 U.S.C. § 811
Title 30 — Mineral Lands and Mining
Last Updated
Apr 5, 2026
Release point: 119-73not60