The coal company employed their own man to weigh the coal cars and the miners had no choice but to take his word that the weight was correct. The irony of this is that the mine cars the miners used were built to hold 2200 to 2500 pounds or more of coal. But the person employed by Keystone Coal Company made damn sure that regardless how much coal was in those mine cars, they would never weigh over 1100 to 1200 pounds. The first day the union weighman weighted the coal cars with the company man, these same cars that were loaded with the same amount of coal as the day before weighting 1100 to 1200 pounds now weighted 2200 to 2500 pounds. The miners were paid $.22 a ton.
These predatory practices were not unique to DiVincenzo’s situation. Actions such as lying about cart weights and overcharging for goods are what led the miners to constantly strike. Underpaid in work, not paid on strike, coal miners of the early twentieth century lived in near starvation in either case.