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Hardrock Mining in Colorado

In 2007, Congress will be considering changes to the antiquated Mining Law of 1872 that governs how gold, silver and other 'hardrock' minerals are developed on our National Forests and national resource lands administered by the Bureau of Land Management.  Here are some nuggets on mining in Colorado.

Mining Activities
As of 2006 mining interests have staked more than 5,000 active mining claims in Colorado, covering an estimated 123,457 acres.

The six Colorado counties with the most acres claimed on the public lands are:

1. Gunnison County 22,524 acres 4. Montrose County 6,757 acres
2. Park County 9,406 acres 5. San Miguel County 6,533 acres
3. Ouray County 8,512 acres 6. Moffat County 6,533 acres

In 2006, there were 9 active or intermittent hardrock mining operations in Colorado, employing 942 people on site, according to the Mine Safety and Health Administration, representing 0.04 percent of the total employment in the state of Colorado.

Operator

Mine

Commodity

Employment

AngloGold Ashanti

Cresson/Cripple Creek

Gold

325

Climax

Climax

Molybdenum

17

Climax

Henderson

Molybdenum

565

Dennison Mines

St. Jude

Uranium

0

Dennison Mines

Sunday Mine

Uranium

11

Mt. Royale Ventures

Cash Mine

Gold

13

Farleys Machine Shop

Alma Placer

Gold

6

Rhino Mining

Little Hope

Gold

5

Mt. Elbert Mining

Willow Creek Mine

Gold

0

Current mining operations have disturbed nearly 11,000 acres of land in Colorado.

Area of Specific Concern - Mt. Emmons
In April of 2004, the BLM gave 155 acres of federal land worth millions of dollars on top of Red Lady Mountain to Phelps Dodge, a giant US mining company, for the sum of $790.  The 1872 Mining Law allows someone to 'patent' (covert public land to private ownership) a mining claim for either $2.50 or $5.00 per acre.  While the patenting provision of the law has been under moratorium for the past ten years, this patent was grandfathered into the moratorium.

The patent was granted to Phelps Dodge with no warning to area citizens and the BLM has denied all protests over the transfer.  Local citizens, the Town of Crested Butte, and Gunnison County sued in federal court to overturn the sale.  The Interior Department/BLM and Phelps Dodge successfully argued in court that citizens and local governments have no rights to challenge such mining patents.  The land is now private and the owner of the claims, now US Energy Corp., has announced their intention to submit a proposal to construct and operate a large-scale molybdenum mine on Mt. Emmons.

The Summitville Project (above) lies abandoned near the San Luis Valley. The summitville project (above) lies abandoned near San Luis Valley.

Abandoned Mines and the Most Polluted Mine Sites
The Colorado Department of Natural Resources estimates that there are more than 23,000 abandoned mines (including coal mines) in Colorado.   The counties with the most abandoned mines or the largest population centers near them are: Boulder, Clear Creek, Montrose, and San Juan Counties.

The estimated cost of repairing safety hazards alone is nearly $50 million, according to the State.  The state does not know how many abandoned mines are causing water pollution or other environmental problems.  State funding coupled with funding from the federal the Surface Mining Reclamation Control Act generates about $1.0 million annually for cleanup projects.

Of the 79 mines sites identified by the Federal Environmental Protection Agency as the most polluted sites in the country or "Superfund Sites," eight are located in Colorado:

1. California Gulch, Leadville   5. Lincoln Park, Canon City 
2. Central City/Clear Creek, Idaho Springs 6. Summitville Mine, Rio Grande County
3. Denver Radium, Denver 7. Uravan Uranium Project, Uravan
4. Eagle Mine, Minturn/Redcliff 8. Captain Jack, Boulder

Community Health and Environmental Impacts
According to the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, metal or hardrock mining in Colorado released over 8 million pounds of toxins in 2005, the most recent year for which information is available.  The mines that reported the most pollutants released into the environment are the Climax Molybdenum- Henderson mine and miIl and the Cripple Creek and Victor mine.  Colorado ranks 10th among the 17 states that reported chemical releases from metal mines in 2005.

Loss of Colorado's Public Lands to Mining Interests
As of 2004 an estimated 800,000 acres of public land in Colorado, an area three times the size of Rocky Mountain National Park, have already been sold to private interests for either $2.50 or $5.00 per acre.  This subsidized sale of public lands is allowed under the federal 1872 Mining Law.

Colorado in 1872
In 1872 when the Mining Law was passed, Colorado was still a territory and wouldn't join the Union until 1876. Edward Moody McCook was the territorial governor.  According to the 1870 census, Colorado only had a population of 39,864 and Denver's population was under 5,000.

Times have changed.  It is time to change the Mining Law.

Community Voices

Sansu, Ghana

"AGC has the power to destroy my livelihood and also shoot me without any provocation."

News

Unchanged (for the Worse) Since 1872

A New York Times editorial making the case for reforming the 1872 Mining Law.