As Residents Fight Back, Sulfide Mining Strikes Again: Copperwood Project

Submitted by Michigan LCV on Wed, 05/09/2012 – 9:18am

by Alicia Prygoski, Special Projects Associate
Although countless Michigan residents have made it clear that they don’t want their pristine natural areas decimated by sulfide mines, the Department of Environmental Quality (DEQ) doesn’t seem to want to listen.

In the same week that the Huron Mountain Club has made headway in opposing the ever-controversial Kennecott Eagle Mine, the DEQ has gone ahead and unleashed another sulfide mine on the Upper Peninsula, giving mining companies the right-of-way instead of considering the voices of the citizens who live there. Continue reading

Eagle Project: Petitioners Appeal Court Decision

Groups Appeal Decision Allowing Dangerous Mine to Move Forward

http://www.yellowdogwatershed.org/blog/2011/12/12/petitioners-appeal-court-decision/

 MARQUETTE, MICH. (December 12, 2011) – A coalition of groups is appealing a court decision that has allowed a dangerous mine to proceed in Michigan’s Upper Peninsula—despite the threat the mine poses to water quality, the Great Lakes and one of the region’s last spawning grounds for the coaster brook trout.

The Huron Mountain Club, Keweenaw Bay Indian Community, National Wildlife Federation and Yellow Dog Watershed Preserve filed the motion with the Michigan Court of Appeals over the weekend. The groups are opposing the mine on the grounds that it poses unacceptable risks to water and air quality—and that it could collapse, endangering workers and the river it is underneath.

“This mine is the first to be permitted under Michigan’s new mining law, and we must ensure that the law’s protections of human health and the environment are honored and applied,” said Michelle Halley, attorney for the National Wildlife Federation. “So far, they have not been and that is why we are seeking leave to appeal. Many more mines are in the queue and this is a precedent-setting case.”

The groups are appealing a decision by the Ingham County Circuit Court that allowed international mining company Rio Tinto to start mining activities on Eagle Rock—a site considered sacred to Native Americans.

“It is very important to the Keweenaw Bay Indian Community to protect Eagle Rock as a sacred place,” said Chris Swartz, President, Keweenaw Bay Indian Community, “and we are hopeful that this appeal will result in the Court of Appeals reversing the decisions of the circuit court.”

The type of mine being proposed—in which nickel and copper deposits are extracted from sulfide ores—poses severe risks to the environment. One byproduct of so-called “hard rock” or “sulfide ore” mining is sulfuric acid, which has proven deadly to rivers, streams and wildlife in other parts of the country. Rio Tinto, the company overseeing the project, has broken Clean Water Act laws dozens of times in mines they have controlled in other states.

Now, the Michigan Court of Appeals will decide whether to take the case. There is no date by which the court must make its decision.

“We will continue to put forth our concentrated efforts to ensure that this area remains unharmed and protected for everyone’s enjoyment, not just for special interests,” said Emily Whittaker, executive director of Yellow Dog Watershed Preserve.

Groups Ask Judge to Halt Mine Blasting

Huron Mountain Club – Keweenaw Bay Indian Community –
National Wildlife Federation – Yellow Dog Watershed Preserve
For Immediate Release: September 1, 2011
Contact: Michelle Halley, National Wildlife Federation, (906) 361-0520

Groups Ask Judge to Halt Mine Blasting
MARQUETTE, MICH. (September 1, 2011) – A coalition of groups yesterday asked a judge to halt imminent mining activity that would desecrate a sacred Native American site and jeopardize water quality for the Great Lakes and one of the region’s last spawning grounds for the coaster brook trout.

Continue reading

Lawsuit Withdrawn After Minnesota Legislature Exempts Iron Range Resources From Environmental Review

For Immediate Release, March 22, 2011

Contact: Marc Fink, Center for Biological Diversity, (218) 525-3884
Contact: Betsy Daub, Friends of the Boundary Waters Wilderness, (612) 332-9630

DULUTH, Minn.— A change in state law exempting Iron Range Resources from Minnesota’s environmental review requirements prompted conservationists today to dismiss their lawsuit against the agency. The lawsuit had been filed to challenge a premature and illegal loan by Iron Range Resources to PolyMet Mining Company, which is pursuing the state’s first open-pit sulfide mine but has not obtained the required environmental approvals. Instead of addressing the problems identified in the lawsuit, the state simply changed the longstanding rules to benefit the mining proposal.

“Passing new legislation that weakens environmental requirements in response to a lawsuit is public policy at its worst,” said Marc Fink, an attorney with the Center for Biological Diversity.

Continue reading

MI-DNRE Lack of Oversight Leads to Citizen Contested Case

Big Bay citizens seek common ground with state over Kennecott contested case issue

March 7, 2011 – By JOHN PEPIN Mining Journal Staff Writer

MARQUETTE – A Big Bay citizens group challenging state permit decisions made in extending electric lines to the Kennecott Eagle Minerals Co. mine have decided to try to settle its grievances with the state.

Administrative Law Judge Richard Patterson recently gave Concerned Citizens of Big Bay leader Gene Champagne until next Friday to file an initial status report indicating whether the group plans to pursue settlement negotiations with the state’s Office of Geological Survey or move forward with a contested case hearing on the issue.

Champagne said Sunday the group will mail its official response to Lansing today.

“Concerned Citizens of Big Bay has decided to pursue a negotiated settlement with the Department of Environmental Quality/Department of Natural Resources and Environment at this time. As long as good faith negotiations take place, we see it as an opportunity to save the court and the state some time and money,” Champagne said. “We have asked that negotiations either take place in Marquette County or are conducted via conference call or some Internet means, such as Skype. We are working citizens who can ill afford to take time off of work to travel to Lansing. We have no attorney to speak for us.”

Last month, Champagne’s grassroots citizens group petitioned the state Office of Administrative Hearings for a contested case hearing, alleging regulatory failure of due process and enforcement by the DNRE in its oversight and enforcement of the state’s Part 632 law, governing non-ferrous mining projects.

The group contends the DNRE erred in action or inaction in granting a permit amendment to Kennecott in December, which governed Kennecott changing its electric source for the mine from diesel generators to electric power.

Champagne said the DNRE should have also required a permit amendment from Kennecott when the company contracted with the Alger Delta Cooperative Electric Association to run a combination of buried and overhead lines roughly 32 miles from Marquette to the mine. Kennecott funded the $8 million line upgrade undertaken by Alger Delta.

The group claims there were no environmental assessments, reclamation plans, contingency plans, review of financial insurances, nor provision or opportunity for public comment.

In a contested case hearing proceeding, a recommendation based on sworn testimony, stipulations and hearing exhibits presented would be made by Patterson to Michigan DEQ Director Dan Wyant. Wyant would review Patterson’s recommendation and make a final decision. That ruling could be appealed to circuit court by either of the parties.

Hal Fitch, chief of the state Office of Geological Survey, said previously the state believes it acted properly and the agency is confident in its position.

The negotiations will be conducted with Fitch’s office. But Champagne’s group wants Fitch excluded from the talks because Fitch “used his authority to approve the amendment for electrical power and extensions that are in dispute.”

Fitch said today the agency is open to negotiations, including his exclusion.

“I guess when it comes to negotiations, certainly everything is on the table,” Fitch said. “When we get their response we’ll take a look at it and see what our response is.”

Champagne’s group has a series of remedies it is seeking from the state.

“The reliefs sought in our petition are our starting point in negotiations. We hope that the DNRE show integrity and are judicious in what they are willing to negotiate,” Champagne said.

Officials with Kennecott and Alger Delta have been monitoring the progress of the case. Unlike in a previous contested case hearing on a surface use lease, Kennecott is not precluded from continuing work on the mine while the matter is being settled, Fitch said.

John Pepin can be reached at 906-228-2500, ext. 206. His e-mail address is jpepin@miningjournal.net.

Also 2011 0225 Power struggle

2011 0224 Group wants power hearing

DC Bureau: Midwest Mining Rush Threatens Water: Parts I – VI

Thursday, 16  November 2010
Written by Tiffany Danitz Pache, DC Bureau,   http://dcbureau.org/index.php

Some of this nation’s most pristine ancient forests, glacial wetlands and fresh water lakes are under threat from large, multinational mining companies that plan to extract billions of dollars in copper and nickel using methods untested in a water-rich environment. The Great Lakes Basin – America’s largest supply of surface fresh water – faces the duel dangers of increasing prices for industrial metals and a failing economy in desperate need of good paying jobs. These economic realities have weakened efforts to protect the region.  For entire article, click here  http://www.dcbureau.org/201011021253/Natural-Resources-News-Service/midwest-mining-rush-threatens-water-part-i-foreign-owned-mining-companies-vs-us-regulators.html

2010 1111Midwest Mining Rush Part 1

2010 1111 Midwest Mining Rush Part 2

2010 1111 Midwest Mining Rush Part 3

2010 1116 Midwest Mining Rush Threatens Water Part 4

2010 1116 Midwest Mining Rush Threatens Water Part V

2010 1126 Midwest Mining RushPart 6

The Facts in the Case: How Kennecott and the MDEQ are Overriding Michigan’s Mining Laws

by Lillian Marks Heldreth

If anyone is wondering why people continue to protest Kennecott’s Eagle Mine Project, or why litigation is ongoing despite the fact that we are repeatedly told it’s a “done deal,” the reason is simple: the Michigan Department of Environmental Quality (MDEQ) and Kennecott have together managed to circumvent and ignore Michigan’s mining and environmental protection laws as well as applicable federal statutes.

Both Kennecott and the state claim that we are protected by these laws, but because they have chosen not to obey them, the miners, the environment, and our citizens are without any protection whatsoever from what promises to be a disaster, the scope of which ranges from “very bad” to “the BP of the Great Lakes.”

Because to our knowledge the full scope of these violations has never been published in one place in any of the public media, we consider it our civic duty to reveal them here, as clearly and as simply as we can.

OUR SOURCE

Most of our information is drawn from a 100-page brief filed on July 23, 2010 in Washtenaw County Circuit Court.  It appeals the Final Determination Order of the MDEQ, which upholds the permit granted to Kennecott Eagle Minerals Company under the provisions of Part 632 of Michigan’s Natural Resources and Environmental Protection Act.

This brief summarizes testimony from all previous litigation in the case, and clearly demonstrates that essential provisions of the law were bypassed while compelling scientific evidence was ignored.

This brief does NOT call for an end to sulfide mining efforts in Michigan. It calls for fair, honest enforcement of Part 632 of our State’s duly instituted mining code and federal codes. It asks that Kennecott’s operation be required to meet the stipulations of Michigan’s laws.

“Kennecott’s proposed Eagle Mine,” the brief charges, “stands poised to combine, here in the Great Lakes System, elements of recent West Virginia and Utah mine disasters with the catastrophe of the Gulf oil spill. As oil is to the waters of the gulf of Mexico, sulfuric acid and heavy metals like nickel, copper and arsenic could be to Lake Superior if, as predicted, the proposed mine or treatment systems fail.”

The brief details how Part 632 of Michigan’s law is expressly designed to minimize the known damaging effects of nonferrous (anything but iron) metallic sulfide mining, which, if not properly controlled, according to the law, “can cause significant damage to the environment, impact human health, and degrade the quality of life of the impacted community.”

NO LEGAL ENVIRONMENTAL ASSESSMENT

Part 632 requires an applying company to provide in advance an Environmental Impact Assessment, with detailed natural resource information for the entire potentially affected area outside the mining area. It must include data on land surface, surface water, ground water, air resources, resident plants, animals, insects, and birds, and must provide benchmarks for evaluating a later dates the mine’s impact in the environment.

Kennecott did not do this study. Instead, during previous litigation, Kennecott persuaded the Administrative Law Judge and the agency effectively to read the word “potential” out of the statute, and to declare that the mining operation would have “no adverse environmental effects outside the fence line.”

Thus, any effects downstream, downwind, or in the surrounding water table or to wildlife outside the fence are effectively eliminated from any need for consideration. –Or, we assume, from cleanup responsibility as well.

If so, that neat bit of finagling must be saving Kennecott millions or billions in potential liability and cleanup costs. But the rest of us can’t drink money.

A FATALLY FLAWED DESIGN

By ignoring 300 safety warnings, officials of Massey Coal, another English Multinational, saved themselves the cost of adequate ventilation systems, effectively killing 28 miners by suffocation and/or methane gas explosion in April, 2010. We’d call that murder, for they were repeatedly warned.

Unfortunately, Kennecott, too, has been warned, and advised by experts whom its agents chose to ignore, to change the design of this mine.

“Kennecott and the agency [MDEQ] have also steadfastly refused to take into account the overwhelming concerns from experts on all sides of the contested case that the proposed mine, as designed, would be unstable and likely to collapse.”

Five experts essentially agreed, even though the data they were given were supplied by Kennecott, and were presumably the most favorable Kennecott had to offer. But the experts knew their subject well, pointing out that Kennecott’s designers had used an outmoded method of calculation, and had not taken into consideration any of the local geologic characteristics, including a great deal of shale in the “crown pillar” (roof of the main shaft), a fault line, an intrusive dike, or any horizontal stress. (We note that shale tends to slide sideways).

Nor had Kennecott’s team accounted for the fact that the crown pillar would be under the Salmon Trout River and would be wet, greatly increasing the chance for slippage and failure.

Part 632 of Michigan’s law specifically requires a contingency plan for the potential of a collapse. Kennecott hasn’t shown one.

DISASTROUS CONSEQUENCES OF COLLAPSE

The consequences of such a collapse are horrific. Jack Parker, a recognized mining engineer and industry consultant, has also testified that the mine is likely to collapse, and that if the crown pillar collapses entirely, the Salmon Trout River would be sucked all the way down into the cavity itself. In another report, Mr. Parker also maintains that because of factors inherent in the faulty design, no workers could escape from the mine alive in the event of collapse or mine fire. Mr. Parker expects that collapse would also likely result in fire.

We can see only one reason for insisting on a plan that mining experts consider to be highly dangerous. It’s quicker and therefore cheaper, which means higher profits, but arguable at a potential cost in human life.

We also note that the recent Chilean mine collapse, which trapped 33 miners underground for several months and cost a tremendous amount in rescue efforts, has been attributed to flaws in the mine’s design, also due to cost-cutting efforts.

ENVIRONMENTAL CONSEQUENCES OF THE MINE’S OPERATION

Here we think it best to quote directly from the brief’s summary. As Kennecott has done no environmental studies, the plaintiffs called reputable scientists to testify in previous hearings. We have deleted specificreferences for readability, but they may be found on our website:

1. Dr. John Ejnik testified that the entire Salmon Trout River will be polluted from the mine at levels that will destroy aquatic life.

2. Dr. David Flaspohler detailed respects in which operations on the immediate physical facility will produce impacts far beyond the property lines or the facility boundary lines:

a. Truck traffic will have an effect on wildlife along the roads.

b. Road dust generated by heavy traffic on an unpaved road will settle into snow, and affect area wildlife after snow melt.

c. The deposition of heavy metals will be spread over tens of kilometers and enter both land and water.

d. Water running off the roads and off the facility itself will introduce heavy metals and sulfuric acid into surrounding habitats.

e. Pulses of copper, nickel and sulfur in the spring snow melt will enter the Salmon Trout River and be carried all the way “out into Lake Superior.” (Emphasis added)

f. Not only will the operation of the mine have negative effects extending “for miles from the mine footprint,” it is “likely to impair or destroy wildlife in the area of the mine and extending well beyond the property boundaries.”

3.Dr. Paul Adamus testified that at the minimum three-foot drawdown predicted by Kennecott’s consultant, Geomatrix, wetlands-dependent plants and animals would totally disappear for an entire one-mile radius.

4.Dr. Kerry Woods testified that the wildlife of the Huron Mountain Club, including its birds and large mammals, would all be disrupted by the development of the Eagle mine.

5.Dr. Mac Strand testified that a substantial drawdown of groundwater in the upper Salmon Trout River would impair or destroy the River’s entire ecosystem.

6.Based on published literature showing serious contamination of rivers as much as 40 miles downstream from polluting mine sites, Dr. Strand concluded that the metal contamination of the headwaters will have negative impacts all the way to the river’s mouth.

7.Expert ornithologist Alec Lindsay testified that the proposed mine would almost certainly adversely affect bird populations in both the Yellow Dog Plains and the Huron Mountain Club.

8. Kennecott’s expert, William Taylor, a leading expert in landscape ecology, was insistent that the entire Salmon Trout River needed to be studied in order to understand any part of the Salmon Trout River. He believes that the entire region must be studied, rather than stopping at boundary lines, in order to understand the potential effect of human disturbance. In particular, fish populations and communities must be viewed in the context of the entire watershed.”

The brief examines at length such obvious oversights as lack of any consideration for the Kirtland’s warblers, spruce grouse, or any insects, fungi, reptiles, salamanders, or plants.

GROUNDWATER DRAWDOWN=ENVIRONMENTAL DEGRADATION

“Every expert who testified on the subject, including Kennecott’s wetlands expert, agreed that damage to area wetlands would implicate the health of the entire Salmon Trout River.” Aquatic ecologist Dr. Mac Strand stated “that a substantial drawdown of groundwater in the upper Salmon Trout River would impair or destroy the River’s entire ecosystem.”

We conclude that this dooms the only Coaster Brook Trout population in the contiguous United States. Sulfuric acid, the ultimate by-product of acid mine drainage, simply sterilizes streams.

There is more: the brief details a violated treaty and specific violations of environmental law, which lack of space prohibits our reporting in one article. We encourage readers to remember: “It’s not over ‘til it’s over.”

The full text of this brief may be found at K_TBrief_on_Appeal_-_FINAL

We encourage ALL interested citizens to inform themselves, be proud of our lawmakers, and call for full enforcement of our laws.

Note: the petitioners in this case are as follows:

NATIONAL WILDLIFE FEDERATION, KEWEENAW BAY INDIAN COMMUNITY, YELLOW DOG WATERSHED PRESERVE, INC. and HURON MOUNTAIN CLUB.