January 5, 2010
Hobet deal cuts stream impacts, preserves jobs
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The Hobet permit allows Patriot to continue mining, and use of its huge dragline machine, at the Hobet 21 mountaintop-removal complex along the Boone-Lincoln county border. The complex is among the few mountaintop-removal operations where workers are represented by the UMW.

The 600-acre permit, dubbed Hobet 45 by the company, has been a major concern for the UMW and was one of more than 20 West Virginia mining permits targeted by EPA for additional scrutiny as part of a more detailed review of mountaintop removal.

Without the new permit, production at Hobet 21 was expected to wind down over the next two to three years. With its original permit, Patriot Coal hoped to mine an average of about 2.1 million tons of coal annually for about six years.

In a letter to the corps, EPA regional administrator Shawn Garvin said the deal with Patriot includes "avoidance and minimization measures" that cut in half -- from more than six miles to just more than three miles -- the length of streams to be buried by mining waste.

"These avoidance and minimization measures have been incorporated in a manner that still allows for extraction of 91 percent of the coal reserves originally proposed to be mined," Garvin said in the letter.

Garvin said the company has also agreed to mine design changes "that are expected to be protective of water quality impacts." Garvin said there is expected to be little base discharge from the mine into Berry Branch, one of two streams downstream from the operation. At the other stream, Stonecoal Branch, "coal will be mined below the level of the stream and, therefore, any water infiltrating the backfilled area will have a low probability of discharging," Garvin said in the letter.

"We are encouraged that, through a constructive process of engagement and discussion, we have reached agreement with EPA on a mine plan that minimizes impact to the environment," said Patriot Chief Executive Officer Richard M. Whiting. "In light of the importance of the Hobet 45 permit to our operations and our employees, we are hopeful that we can begin work in the permit area in the very near future."

UMW President Cecil Roberts said the permit deal "is good news for everyone -- our members, their families, their communities, their company and the state of West Virginia."

In its Tuesday news release, EPA also announced that U.S. District Judge Robert C. Chambers had granted the Obama administration's request for 60 more days to negotiate with Arch Coal Inc. over a permit for its non-union Spruce Mine, the largest mountaintop-removal permit in West Virginia history.

"These are important examples of EPA's work to bring clarity to this process," said EPA Administrator Lisa Jackson. "Our role, along with the Army Corps of Engineers, is to ensure that mining companies avoid environmental degradation and protect water quality so that Appalachian communities don't have to choose between jobs and their health.

"Working closely with mining companies, our federal and state partners, and the public, our goal is to ensure Americans living in coal country are protected from environmental, health and economic damage," Jackson said.

In a related development, Byrd announced that federal and state agencies would next week begin hosting "regular meetings with any interested coal companies ... to clarify the technical details and requirements associated with the processing of permit applications."

Byrd's office said the meetings "will help companies to conform their proposed mining plans to federal and state laws."

Reach Ken Ward Jr. at kw...@wvgazette.com or 304-348-1702.

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Posted By: pipedreams57 (3:14am 01-06-2010)
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I wonder what lap dog in Byrds corner "prepared" that statement? What a joke! The real shame here is that the Corp. of Engineers got totally thrown out of the picture when it came to the mining permit issue. I say go ahead and throw out the EPA now too, and let anyone anywhere apply for a permit to pollute anything they want, so long as the last 350 mining jobs in WV can be preserved. Byrd probably shouted "this is for Teddy" when the deal was done,...just like he did when he voted to shove "Obamacare" down Americas throat! If you conect the dots in this area of mountain top removal, you go from Danville to Sharples, Blair Mountain, Buffalo Creek, Man, Rich Creek, Logan, Whitman, Holden, and dozens more areas. When and where will it ever stop? And where is the so called "development" that coal operators and politicians alike say is possible on such sites? I grew up at Blair and Logan and have saw every one of these sites. I didn't see any factories the last time I drove through Blair.

Posted By: Rational (5:33pm 01-05-2010)
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Yay! The environment is less of a priority when union jobs hang in the balance.

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