(a) For purposes of this part, the term ``operator'' shall include:
(1) Any owner, lessee, or other person who operates, controls, or
supervises a coal mine, or any independent contractor performing
services or construction at such mine; or
(2) Any other person who:
(i) Employs an individual in the transportation of coal or in coal
mine construction in or around a coal mine, to the extent such
individual was exposed to coal mine dust as a result of such employment
(see Sec. 725.202);
(ii) In accordance with the provisions of Sec. 725.492, may be
considered a successor operator; or
(iii) Paid wages or a salary, or provided other benefits, to an
individual in exchange for work as a miner (see Sec. 725.202).
(b) The terms ``owner,'' ``lessee,'' and ``person'' shall include
any individual, partnership, association, corporation, firm, subsidiary
of a corporation, or other organization, as appropriate, except that an
officer of a corporation shall not be considered an ``operator'' for
purposes of this part. Following the issuance of an order awarding
benefits against a corporation that has not secured its liability for
benefits in accordance with section 423 of the Act and Sec. 726.4, such
order may be enforced against the president, secretary, or treasurer of
the corporation in accordance with subpart I of this part.
(c) The term ``independent contractor'' shall include any person
who contracts to perform services. Such contractor's status as an
operator shall not be contingent upon the amount or percentage of its
work or business related to activities in or around a mine, nor upon
the number or percentage of its employees engaged in such activities.
(d) For the purposes of determining whether a person is or was an
operator that may be found liable for the payment of benefits under
this part, there shall be a rebuttable presumption that during the
course of an individual's employment with such employer, such
individual was regularly and continuously exposed to coal mine dust
during the course of employment. The presumption may be rebutted by a
showing that the employee was not exposed to coal mine dust for
significant periods during such employment.
(e) The operation, control, or supervision referred to in paragraph
(a)(1) of this section may be exercised directly or indirectly. Thus,
for example, where a coal mine is leased, and the lease empowers the
lessor to make decisions with respect to the terms and conditions under
which coal is to be extracted or prepared, such as, but not limited to,
the manner of extraction or preparation or the amount of coal to be
produced, the lessor may be considered an operator. Similarly, any
parent entity or other controlling business entity may be considered an
operator for purposes of this part, regardless of the nature of its
business activities.
(f) Neither the United States, nor any State, nor any
instrumentality or agency of the United States or any State, shall be
considered an operator.