Other than paying a small fine, that's it.
Massey (and Blankenship) have determined it's cheaper just to pay the fines (after a long period of contesting them) than to enact the safety fixes required.
What's needed is a huge, severe fine, for each miner that is killed. For example, a $4 million fine for each miner killed. The family would receive $3 million of that, tax-free, and the other $1 million used to make fixes to the mine involved. This fine would not be able to be contested like the others.
If that was in place, Massey would have faced a $116 million fine for those 29 dead miners.
By comparison, Massey has only paid several million in fines over the last 8 years, and is contesting another several million or so.
![](http://img256.imageshack.us/img256/4443/4gopfoxwits20100414.jpg)