From: webmaster@osmre.gov (by way of Robert Dorman <redorman@theofficenet.com>)
OSM NEWS
U. S. Department of the Interior
Office of Surface Mining
Embargoed For Release until December 17, 1999 Jerry
Childress
(202) 208-2719
jchildre@osmre.gov
OSM PUBLISHES FINAL SURFACE COAL MINE RULES ON "VALID
EXISTING
RIGHTS" AND PROHIBITIONS OF SECTION 522(E)
Establishing "valid existing rights" (VER) for
surface coal mining
operations where
mining is otherwise prohibited by the federal surface mining law
requires
applicants to show that,
before the mining prohibition went into effect, they had made
a good faith
effort to obtain all
required permits, according to final rules issued today by the
Interior
Department's Office of
Surface Mining Reclamation and Enforcement (OSM).
The final VER rule was published in the Federal Register
of December
17, 1999.
The Surface Mining Control and Reclamation Act (SMCRA) prohibits
surface coal
mining operations in National Parks and other specially protected
areas,
but the prohibition does
not apply to people who have VER. OSM is defining VER in this
rule because
SMCRA does not
include a definition of that term. The rule also establishes
procedures
for determining VER.
The "good faith/all permits" standard for VER was
selected because, of
all the
alternatives considered, it is the one that is most environmentally
protective, least disruptive of
existing regulatory programs, and most consistent with the primary
purpose
of Section 522(e) of
SMCRA. Congress enacted that section of the law with the intent
of
prohibiting new surface
coal mining operations on lands designated for special protection.
At the
same time, the "good
faith/all permits" VER standard protects the interests of
land and mineral
owners who had taken
concrete steps to obtain approval of surface coal mining operations
before
the lands came under
the protection of SMCRA.
"Good faith/all permits" is the VER standard already
in use in 15 of
the 24 states that
operate their own Interior-approved programs for regulating surface
coal
mining operations.
The closely related "all permits" standard is in use
in five other states.
Two states use a
"takings" standard to determine VER. One determines
VER based on whether
the land in
question is needed for and adjacent to an existing coal mine,
and one does
not have any VER
standard.
Beside lands in the National Park System, the new VER definition
applies to lands in the
National Wildlife Refuge System, the National Trails System, the
National
Wilderness
Preservation System, the National Wild and & Scenic Rivers
System, and
National Recreation
Areas. It also applies to federal lands in national forests and
to surface
coal mining operations
that would adversely affect historic sites and public parks.
In addition,
it applies to buffer areas
around public roads, occupied dwellings, public parks, public
buildings,
and cemeteries.
The rule does not require VER to conduct coal exploration
on the
categories of land
where surface coal mining operations are subject to VER. However,
it adds a
requirement that
coal exploration operations be designed to minimize interference
with the
values for which
Congress designated the land as unsuitable for surface coal mining
operations.
OSM also published in the Federal Register of December 17,
1999,
a related rule clarifying OSM's existing regulatory position that
subsidence due to underground
coal mining is not a surface coal mining operation, and therefore,
not
prohibited in areas
protected under the Act. Consequently, neither subsurface activities
that
may result in
subsidence, nor actual subsidence, are prohibited on lands protected
by
section 522(e).
By this interpretative rule OSM is maintaining the status
quo. States
will continue to
regulate the effects of subsidence through state regulations.
Most states
with active underground
coal mining, with the exception of Colorado, Illinois, Indiana,
and
Montana, do not apply the
prohibitions of section 522(e) to subsidence.
This position best balances the competing environmental and
economic
considerations
within the legal constraints of SMCRA. When the coal is mined,
the coal
operators must meet
existing subsidence regulations to protect the homes of the nation's
coalfield residents from
damage caused by underground mining, repair or compensate for
damage that
does occur to
homes, and assure adequate domestic water supplies in a timely
manner.
Subsidence is virtually
inevitable from longwall mining operations, an important and expanding
type
of mining. The
key to this low-cost mining method is access to large blocks of
uninterrupted coal. If the
prohibitions were to apply to subsidence, this competitive advantage
is
likely to be lost and
longwall mining operations would no longer be economically viable.
If
longwall mining is not
precluded, it will continue to provide greater safety and faster,
more
controlled, and more quickly
mitigated subsidence damage.
Requests for further information, should be directed to Dennis
Rice
(202-208-2829;
drice@osmre.gov) for the VER rule, and to Nancy Broderick (202-208-2700;
nbroderi@osmre.gov) for the rule concerning the application
of the
prohibition to subsidence
from underground mining.
-DOI-
OSM news releases may be downloaded from OSM's Homepage at:
http://www.osmre.gov.
Frequently requested information about OSM is available 24 hours
a day by
Fax-on-Demand at:
(202) 219-1703.
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