West Virginia Governor Appoints New Director of Mine Safety

Sept. 11, 2006
West Virginia Gov. Joe Manchin recently appointed Ronald Wooten to serve as director of the West Virginia Office of Miners' Health, Safety and Training (MHST).

Wooten replaces James Dean, director of extension and outreach and associate director of the mining extension program at West Virginia University, who in February agreed to serve as acting director of MHST on a strictly temporary basis until an appropriate search for permanent replacement could be conducted.

A 30-year veteran of the mining industry, Wooten served as vice president of safety for Consol Inc. from 1982 to 1998. Most recently, he served as safety director of Mt. State Bit Service Inc., an independent explosive contracting company located in Morgantown, W.Va.

In addition, Wooten has served as a mine safety consultant to companies in the industry and law firms. He previously served as director of federal government relations for Consolidation Coal Co., and as an assistant legislative counsel, assistant general counsel and senior counsel for the American Mining Congress.

He began his career in the industry with United States Steel Corp. in 1972.

"Ron Wooten is a recognized figure in the mine safety community and I appreciate his desire to be part of our continuing efforts to enhance mine safety in West Virginia, making our state a model for the rest of our nation," Manchin said. "I appreciate Jim Dean's service during the past 7 months during one of the most critical periods in the history of this agency and the state's oversight of the mining industry, especially his leadership in implementing many of the recommendations presented by the Mine Safety Technology Task Force report and Davitt McAteer's Sago Mine report. Furthermore, I look forward to Ron's building on the solid foundation that Jim and his staff have established for a safer mining industry."

Wooten has chair or served on numerous coal mine safety committees.

Wooten's transition into this position will start immediately, and will be complete no later than Oct.1. His salary is $82,000.

Sponsored Recommendations

June 16, 2025
This free guide will define complacency, explain individual and organizational complacency, provide insights into the contributing factors and give a high-level overview of what...
May 22, 2025
Heat stress is a serious challenge that poses immediate and long-term health effects for workers in high-temperature environments. To combat heat stress, it's critical to educate...
May 15, 2025
Foot safety is a serious concern. At your next safety meeting, give your crew eye-opening facts about feet and how proper footwear matters more than they may know. Show your team...
May 15, 2025
If reimbursing employees for safety footwear is how its always been done, maybe its time to learn about the advantages a managed footwear program can offer instead. See a ...

Voice your opinion!

To join the conversation, and become an exclusive member of EHS Today, create an account today!