
HOUSE RESOLUTION 7
(By Mr. Speaker, Mr. Kiss, and Delegates Caputo, Amores, Anderson,
Angotti, Ashley, Azinger, Beane, Boggs, Border, Butcher, Calvert,
Campbell, Cann, Capito, Coleman, Collins, Compton, Dalton, Davis,
Dempsey, Douglas, Doyle, Ennis, Evans, Facemyer, Faircloth,
Ferrell, Flanigan, Fleischauer, Fletcher, Frederick, Givens, Hall,
Hatfield, Hines, Houston, Hubbard, Hunt, Hutchins, Jenkins,
Johnson, Kelley, Kominar, Kuhn, Laird, Leach, Leggett, Linch,
Louisos, Mahan, Manchin, Manuel, Marshall, Martin, Mattaliano,
McGraw, Mezzatesta, Michael, Modesitt, Overington, Paxton, Perdue,
Pethtel, Pettit, Pino, Proudfoot, Prunty, Riggs, Romine, Ross,
Rowe, Schadler, Shelton, Smirl, J. Smith, L. Smith, Sparks,
Spencer, Stalnaker, Staton, Stemple, Susman, Thompson, Trump,
Tucker, Varner, Warner, Webb, C. White, H. White, L. White,
Williams, Willis, Willison, Wills, Wright, Yeager)
Urging the President and Congress to recognize and honor their
commitment to retired coal miners by continuing their health
care benefits as promised when they signed a contract in 1946.

Whereas, West Virginia is a coal-producing and coal-mining
State that has benefitted tremendously from the hard, dangerous
work of retired coal miners; and

Whereas, The United States government entered into a contract with the coal miners in 1946 that created the United Mine Workers
of America Health and Retirement Funds; and

Whereas, This contract was signed in the White House in a
ceremony with President Harry Truman; and

Whereas, A federal commission established by U.S. Secretary of
Labor Elizabeth Dole concluded in 1990:

"Retired coal miners have legitimate expectations of health
care benefits for life; that was the promise they received during
their working lives and that is how they planned their retirement
years. That commitment should be honored;" and

Whereas, This promise became law in 1992 when Congress passed,
and President George Bush signed, the Coal Industry Retiree Health
Benefit Act (the Coal Act); and

Whereas, The Coal Act reiterated the promise of lifetime health
benefits for retired coal miners and their dependents; and

Whereas, Congress intended the Coal Act to:

"(1) Remedy problems with the provision and funding of health
care benefits with respect to the beneficiaries of multi employer
benefit plans that provide health care benefits to retirees in the
coal industry;

(2) Allow for sufficient operating assets for such plans; and

(3) Provide for the continuation of a privately financed self-
sufficient program for the delivery of health care benefits to the
beneficiaries of such plans;" and

Whereas, Certain court decisions have eroded the financial
structure that Congress put in place under the Coal Act; and

Whereas, These court decisions have placed the continued
provision of health benefits to retired coal miners in jeopardy;
therefore, be it

Resolved by the House of Delegates:

That the House of Delegates of the State of West Virginia urge
Congress and the Executive Branch of the United States to work
together to reform the financial structure of the Coal Act to
ensure that retired coal miners continue to receive the health care
benefits they were promised and so rightly deserve; and, be it

Further Resolved, That the Clerk of the House of Delegates be
hereby directed to forward a copy of this resolution to the
President of the United States and to each member of the
congressional delegation representing the people of the State of
West Virginia.