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Mining bill raises alarms

Elkhunter

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Mining bill raises alarms

Critics say budget provision would result in federal land "giveaway."

By Rebecca Huntington

Wyoming's political leaders are getting an earful from sportsmen angered by a provision to lift a ban on selling land tied to mining claims ­ a move hunters say could erode access to public lands.

The outcry has Wyoming's two Republican senators vowing to keep tabs on the provision and possibly seek its removal from a budget bill now before Congress.

"Sportsmen are really concerned about it," said Sen. Craig Thomas' spokesman Cameron Hardy, who said hunters have been calling and stopping by the senator's Washington, D.C., office.

"We need to really shed some light on this," Hardy said Tuesday. The senator is considering holding public hearings and looking for ways to amend or strip the provision from the budget bill before it returns to the U.S. Senate for a final vote, he said.

U.S. Sen. Mike Enzi, R-Wyo., is also wary. Enzi wants to ensure that hunting and fishing access would be protected and the provision would not be "exploited" for purposes other than mining, according to his spokesman.

"He's going to be watching it," said spokesman Coy Knobel.

In contrast, U.S. Rep. Barbara Cubin, R-Wyo., who voted for the provision, defends it as a way to raise money for federal coffers and create mining jobs. In a statement Tuesday, Cubin said the provision would not threaten multiple uses on public lands and estimated it would affect only 15,000 acres of Bureau of Land Management land in Wyoming and 360,000 acres of public land nationwide.

"The amount of misinformation and outright lies put out on this by the environmental obstructionists is their typical modus operandi," Cubin said in an e-mail answer.

Cubin said the provision fixes the 1872 mining law by raising land sale prices and prohibiting sales in national parks and wilderness areas. Critics counter that the law would still allow sales of pre-existing claims, which include about 18,000 acres in national parks.

Rep. Richard Pombo, R-Calif., and Rep. Jim Gibbons, R-Nev., wrote the provision, which would overturn a 1994 ban on the sale of mining lands.

The purpose of the provision appears to be as much about rural economic development as it is about mining per se.

Based on committee hearing testimony prior to the provision being tacked onto a budget bill, witnesses testified that selling public lands to mining companies would encourage economic development in hardscrabble Western towns, particularly in Nevada. Under the provision, once mines are played out, the infrastructure and land could be sold to another industry or developers to sustain rural communities economically. Under current law, mining companies are required to fully restore sites on public land by ripping out infrastructure, such as roads, power lines and office buildings. Moreover, private ownership also would mean landowners, not taxpayers, would be responsible for environmental clean-up costs, supporters say.

National Mining Association spokesman Luke Popovich said his group did not request the lifting of the moratorium and the industry's first priority would be to speed up the federal permitting process on public lands instead. Even so, his group supports lifting the moratorium because it would encourage investments in mining and create jobs, he said.

But critics say lawmakers are ignoring the reasons why the ban went into effect in the first place. The ban was enacted following the publicity of a sale that gave a Canadian mining company title to public lands containing an estimated $10 billion worth of minerals for less than $10,000, according to John Leshy, solicitor general of the Interior Department under President Clinton and author of a book on the history of the mining law. Prior to the ban, mining lands sold for no more than $5 per acre, a price set in 1872 to encourage Western settlement.

Pombo and Gibbons have tried to deal with that concern by raising land prices to a minimum of $1,000 per acre or fair market value, whichever is greater. However, fair market value would be based only on the land surface and would not account for the value of minerals underground, critics say.

Sen. Thomas agrees with Pombo and Gibbons that the mining law is in need of reform. But he's not convinced that selling public land is necessary to encourage hard-rock mining, according to his spokesman. Thomas would rather see the provision considered as part of a larger package of mining law reforms rather than tacked onto a budget bill, Hardy said.

In a statement Tuesday, Thomas vowed: "I won't stand by and let a band-aid fix to the Mining Act become a chronic injury to land use in our state."

Critics say the provision could open up as many as 350 million acres of public land for sale and eliminate requirements that mining claim holders demonstrate valuable mineral deposits under the land. Wyoming currently has mining claims on 353,499 acres of public land. Nearly 31 million acres of public land in the state could be sold under the new, ambiguous legal standards, critics say.

Pombo calls such estimates ridiculous. Pombo countered that the provision's language restricts sales to claims that have "a plan of operation or pending plans of operation."

While 5.7 million acres have mining claims, only 360,000 acres meet the operation planning criteria, according to Pombo. Of those acres, the Congressional Budget Office has determined about 140,000 acres are likely to be purchased, resulting in $158 million in federal revenue over five years and $326 million over 10 years.

Pombo and other proponents argue that specific requirements are in place to prevent the privatization of millions of acres. The National Mining Association estimates that less than 1 percent of federally owned lands, which total more than 700 million acres, would be or have been affected by mining.

But Wyoming Gov. Dave Freudenthal and the Wyoming Wildlife Federation disagree, saying they had their own attorneys review the provision's language, which is overly broad. Freudenthal opposes the provision and is circulating a letter among Western governors to garner more signatures before sending his concerns to Congress, according to spokeswoman Lara Azar.

Freudenthal is concerned in particular about language in one section of the bill that allows the sale of land contiguous to mining claims or mill sites where "mineral development work" has been performed. With the broad definition for "mineral development work," nearly any mineral-related activity qualifies parcels for sale, according to the governor's office. The lands would not have to contain minerals to be sold, his office concluded.

According to the governor's interpretation, someone could stake a claim, survey the land, build a road or do something else related to mining, and then purchase the federal land and land adjacent to it. Such a move could create a wrinkle for the state's booming oil and gas development, according to Azar. Azar suggested the provision could allow someone to stake a claim in the middle of a natural gas field and then build a road to the claim, find no hard-rock minerals but still purchase the surface and subsurface minerals of the claim and lands around it.

Cubin's spokesman Joe Milczewski disagreed.

"I can tell you that's not right," he said, arguing that federal law would prohibit the purchase of a gas field under a hard-rock claim.

But Popovich of the National Mining Association agreed with critics that the language that opens the door to purchasing adjacent lands might be ambiguous.

"That's something that should be examined to be sure that it's not abused," Popovich said.

Sportsmen, meanwhile, fear that mining companies will purchase the lands, including adjacent properties, and erect no trespassing signs. Hunting access already is greatly restricted by private property ownership in eastern Wyoming, said Dave Gowdey, executive director of the Wyoming Wildlife Federation, which is opposing the provision. Other opponents include the National Wildlife Federation, Trout Unlimited, Taxpay-ers for Common Sense, the Colorado Wildlife Federation, conservation groups and Jewelers of America, a retail jewelry trade association.

"This is going to be the worst piece of environmental legislation in a hundred years," Gowdey said. "It's just a big giveaway."
 
I took this off the Theodore Roosevelt Conservation Partnership website. It seems to me the biggest problem is the potential for mining companies to have the ability to purchase public lands, in effect providing a huge federal subsidy to mining companies. Already sent a letter to Simpson, Crapo & Craig asking for their opposition.
What's At Stake?
Potentially Harmful Public Land Mining Provisions


Hunters and anglers need to make sure their Senators and Representatives know they want them to block a legislative maneuver that could open millions of acres of public land to development, destroying fish and wildlife habitat and closing off sportsmen's access.

A last-minute provision in the recently passed House budget reconciliation legislation, H.R. 4241, would amend the General Mining Law of 1872 to allow public land to be sold to mining companies. The House measure would end a decade-old moratorium on the patenting of mineral claims on public land, a moratorium enacted after widespread abuses of the process allowed wide swaths of public land to essentially be sold for between $2.50 and $5 per acre -- and never even be mined. The current House measure would update the sales price to about $1,000 per acre, but it would re-open the harmful loophole that allowed mining companies to claim mineral patents, buy the land and subsurface mineral rights, then subsequently abandon the mining claims and sell off the property to developers, often bringing large returns to the company and absolutely nothing to the American citizens to whom the land actually belonged.

The fate of the House measure, and potentially that of hundreds of thousands of acres of public lands, now rests in the House-Senate Conference Committee that is working out the differences between the House and Senate budget reconciliation bills. The Senate legislation contained no such provision allowing public lands to be privatized.

Recognizing that our public lands provide many of the country's finest hunting and fishing opportunities and that any revision of the legal framework that protects these lands must be handled with the utmost care and precision, the TRCP has joined with the conservation community in protesting the House provisions. The TRCP has signed a formal letter that calls the House provisions "complicated, complex, poorly understood and subject to widely divergent interpretation." The letter continues, "If the 1872 Mining Law requires revision, it should be done in a stand-alone bill as part of regular legislative order with opportunity for public hearings and input, thorough public exposure and scrutiny, and open debate on the details and merits of the proposed legislation."

It is absolutely crucial to the health of our public lands that the House language not be allowed into the final version of budget reconciliation language that will emerge from the Conference Committee. We need you to deliver this message to your Members of Congress.
 
Craig will fight change in 1872 mining law
Senator says proposal goes too far in letting public land be sold for other uses

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

The 1872 Mining Act allows U.S. citizens and companies to claim land for mining purposes as long as the miner or company spends at least $100 a year on the land, demonstrating active use of the claim.
The 133-year-old law also permits U.S. citizens to convert their claim to ownership of the land through a patent process for $2.50 an acre where they prove their mineral deposits are viable. The law was passed in an era when Congress was encouraging western settlement with the Homestead Act, the Timber Culture Act and other laws that rewarded people who worked the land with eventual ownership.
Many western communities — including Ketchum and Idaho City — were first developed as mining claims. The other laws eventually were rescinded. The mining law has survived in part because Congress has recognized the high costs and risks involved in metal mining.
In 1994, Congress passed a moratorium on patenting that allowed claims already in the pipeline to be converted to private ownership That includes mines in Idaho like Hecla Mines' now-defunct Grouse Creek near Sunbeam.
Other laws also allow the Interior secretary to temporarily withdraw land from mining or to go to Congress to permanently withdraw land from availability to mining. But the political power of the mining industry and environmental groups, and their inability to find a compromise, has prevented passage of a permanent series of reforms, such as charging miners royalties for the minerals they mine on public lands.
— Rocky Barker
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Rocky Barker

The Idaho Statesman | Edition Date: 12-07-2005
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Idaho Republican Sen. Larry Craig said he would be "surprised" if a controversial mining reform provision is part of a federal budget bill when it comes before both houses of Congress for a vote later this year.

The legislation would end a decadelong moratorium on converting mining claims on public land to private ownership. The bill also would increase the minimum fee for transferring mining claims to private ownership from $2.50 an acre to $1,000, or the market value of the land.

The rider attached to the budget bill would allow a mining company to develop the land or sell it to developers once the ore deposit is proven and the miners have taken ownership. Craig, who for more than a decade has led an effort to update the 1872 Mining Act, opposes allowing uses other than mining on the transferred land.

"Mining law and its reform should be used for producing the metals and minerals for our industrial base and that alone," Craig told The Idaho Statesman in a telephone interview Tuesday.

The expanded transfer of public land was included in a provision by lawmakers, including the powerful House Resources Committee Chairman Richard Pombo, R-Calif., to promote rural development after mining.

Environmental groups say the provision could lead to privatization of more than 5 million acres of land with mining claims in the West for ski resorts, subdivisions and hunting lodges.

"This is the largest land grab in the West since the opening of Indian Territory in Oklahoma in 1902," said Jon Marvel, executive director of the Hailey-based Western Watersheds Project, which opposes the bill.

Rider could benefit several Idaho companies

But Idaho mining lobbyist Jack Lyman said that he doubted whether more than 200,000 acres nationwide would change hands as a result of the rider.

Still, the rider could help Atlanta Gold Corp., which is planning to spend $41 million to mine as much as 100,000 ounces of gold on U.S. Forest Service land in the Boise River watershed near Atlanta. Its claim came after Congress imposed the moratorium, so Atlanta Gold can't take ownership of the land unless the ban is lifted.

The bill also authorizes two public land transfers, one in Idaho and the second in Nevada that would go to an Idaho company.

The provision was co-sponsored by Pombo and Rep. Jim Gibbons, R-Nevada. The spending bill to which it was attached passed the House Nov. 18 by just 217-215. Both Idaho Republican Reps. Mike Simpson and C.L. "Butch" Otter voted for the spending bill. It's now before a committee charged with resolving the differences between House and Senate versions.

Idaho Republican Sen. Mike Crapo supports inclusion of the Idaho parcel in the bill. But the larger transfer of public lands "is something he's not comfortable with," said Lindsey Nothern, his press secretary.

The provision is based on the 1872 Mining Act, a law that encouraged mining in the West and created communities like Ketchum and Idaho City. It allowed people to make claims on public land. Once they discovered minerals, they could get the land transferred to private ownership.

In Idaho, 2,463 people and companies hold mining claims for 260,185 acres of public land, paying pennies per acre in rent and fees, according the Environmental Working Group, a national environmental group seeking reform of the 133-year-old law.

Currently, 32 million acres of national forest and range land are available for mineral development in Idaho.

Opponents' 'rhetoric ... is more than 10 years old'

Craig said he supports much of the Pombo and Gibbons provision, and dismisses comments from Marvel and other environmentalists as "rhetoric that is more than 10 years old."

"Most of the opposition is opposed to mining, period," Craig said. "They fail to recognize the critical role mining plays in our society and our need to manage it right."

Marvel has a particular interest in the rider. A 520-acre stone quarry adjacent to his group's "Green Fire" reserve on the East Fork of the Salmon River, 20 miles west of Challis, would be transferred from the federal government to California-based L&W Stone Corp. for $1,000 an acre. The Western Watersheds Project had sued the Bureau of Land Management in recent years for allowing L&W to mine stone without an environmental impact statement.

U.S. District Judge Lynn Winmill ruled in favor of Marvel, and L&W is paying a consultant to write a EIS. If the transfer goes through, the EIS would no longer be required.

"Ask if every property owner with lands adjacent to BLM lands would like to see that land sold," Marvel said.

The other specific parcel in the bill is a 7,000-acre claim in Nevada owned by Coeur Rochester Inc., a subsidiary to Coeur d'Alene Mines. The bill would transfer ownership from the federal government to Rochester, which produced 69,456 ounces of gold and 5.7 million ounces of silver from the mine in 2004.

Coeur d'Alene Mines did not respond to a telephone inquiry.

The process of transferring mining claims into private ownership, known as "patent," has been one of the major battlegrounds over mining reform in the past. The Idaho Mining Association's position now and in the past is that the moratorium on patenting should be lifted and that land should revert to federal ownership when miners are done, said Lyman, executive director of the statewide industry group.

Companies need to own their mineral resources for security and financing, Lyman said. Since Congress imposed the moratorium in 1994, there has been little new exploration or investment in Idaho mining. Once land is transferred, oversight shifts from the federal government to states, which have fewer regulatory hurdles.

"Finding gold, silver and even copper in marketable quantities is tough and expensive," Lyman said. "You have to provide some kind of incentive to look for it."

Access, big transfers worry environmentalists

But the process of patenting public lands threatens to cut off access for hunters, anglers and campers in Idaho, said John Robison, who handles mining issues for the Idaho Conservation League, a statewide environmental group. The rider is especially worrisome, in the environmentalists' reading, because they say a mining company would have to prove up only a small part of its claim and could gain ownership to unlimited acres of adjacent lands. That was not permitted before the moratorium.

"This bill threatens our access to these public lands by turning them over to mining companies and owners who will lock them up," Robison said.

Both Marvel and Robison said they do not oppose all mining. Robison said he is pleased with Craig's position on the bill.

"We're happy to hear Sen. Craig is taking steps to protect Idaho public lands," Robison said.

Past reform measures by Craig and others proposed royalties — payments to the government for the value of the minerals extracted, determined by various formulas. Royalties are collected from oil, gas and coal producers on public lands. But Pombo and Gibbons' provision does not include a royalty on minerals.

Lyman said Idaho mining companies can support a royalty.

Hecla Mining Co., another Idaho company from Coeur d'Alene, supports the rider, said Vicki Veltkamp, senior vice president for communication.

"There's been a chilling effect on investment in the United States, and we think this could help reverse that," Veltkamp said.
 
I read a article in the paper a while back where some enviros used this law to make a claim in the Cabinet Mountains. They called their claim "Mine, all mine". Clever! For some reason a smile came to my face and I thought of Jose.
 
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