August 12, 2009
Court rejects Obama efforts to reverse Bush mining changes
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"This administration has said it is determined to improve mining practices and we will do so within the context of the court's ruling, which we are reviewing," Barkoff said.

Generally, the 1983 version of the buffer zone rule prohibited mining activities within 100 feet of perennial and intermittent streams. Coal operators could obtain waivers, but only if they could show their operations would not damage water quality or quantity.

OSM and various state regulators never applied the buffer zone rule to valley fill waste piles. After a federal court ruled in 1999 that it did apply there, government regulators and coal lobbyists have been trying to eliminate the rule.

In December, OSM issued a final rule change that exempted valley fills and similar waste dumps, such as slurry impoundments, from the 100-foot stream buffer. A companion rule required coal operators to minimize these fills and consider alternatives for waste disposal.

OSM officials said the rule "places new restrictions" on coal companies. But the agency's own studies showed coal operators would still bury another 724 miles of Appalachian streams by 2018.

Separate environmental groups filed two different federal court lawsuits challenging the Bush rule changes.

Then in late April, Salazar announced he was filing a legal motion in one of those cases asking to reinstitute the 1983 version of the buffer zone rule, saying the Bush version "doesn't pass the smell test."

At the same time, Salazar did not say if Interior planned to apply the buffer zone protections to the footprint of valley fills -- the key issue in deciding if the rule limits mountaintop removal.

"Restoring the previous stream buffer zone regulation remains one component in the complex effort to end mountaintop removal coal mining," Hopkins said. "But with the administration current considering more than 80 permit applications for new mountaintop removal coal mining, it will take policy changes at the Army Corps of Engineers, Department of Interior and Environmental Protection Agency, along with tough enforcement, to end the destruction completely and protect Appalachian communities."

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

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In West Virginia, mining companies are literally moving mountains to uncover valuable, low sulfur coal reserves. Mountaintop removal has become the dominant form of surface mining in the state. Coal operators are blasting off hilltops, and dumping leftover rock and dirt into nearby valleys. An untold amount of the state has been flattened, and hundreds of miles of streams have been buried. Find out more in this Special Report.
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