X link didn't work for me.Westmoreland County Medical Examiner Tim Carson tells me crews found Elizabeth Pollard at the site of the mine in Unity Township. He’s on his way to the scene now
I believe this was the initial link:
X link didn't work for me.Westmoreland County Medical Examiner Tim Carson tells me crews found Elizabeth Pollard at the site of the mine in Unity Township. He’s on his way to the scene now
The tweet was deleted, I’m guessing because it makes it sound like they found her alive. I feel sad for her family, especially her little granddaughter. But I’m so glad the granddaughter is okay.X link didn't work for me.
I believe this was the initial link:
Yep. And try suing a company that has been out of business for decades. It is the Golden Rule: Them what gots the gold makes the rules. You generally can’t make railroads or mining companies compensate for damages in more than a limited way.I still cannot wrap my brain around this. So she was walking on what looked like grass and the earth gave way and she was just sucked into a 30 foot deep hole?
What appears to have happened to Elizabeth Pollard, the 64-year-old woman whose body was recovered from a sinkhole 30 feet deep, is unusual.
But sinkholes aren’t. They’re just typically much shallower than that.
So much of Pennsylvania has been undermined, and those mines were left abandoned and destabilized. The state sells mine subsidence insurance and hosts a website where people can check if the coal under their homes has been hollowed out.
In much of southwestern Pennsylvania, the answer will likely be yes.
[…] PA Folks:
If you see a hole in your backyard, call Roger Rummel, environmental program manager for the DEP, at 814-472-1800 or email [email protected].
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The sinkhole where a Westmoreland County woman died is unusual. But sinkholes themselves are not.
In a brief history of sinkholes and troughs, features that form when a part of an abandoned coal mine collapses, Pittsburgh-based engineer Richard Gray...www.post-gazette.com