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2007 Press ReleasesHouse Natural Resources Committee Overhauls Outdated 1872 Mining LawBill Would Impose New Royalty, Protect Clean Water, Give Locals Greater Role October 23, Washington, D.C. -- The U.S. House Natural Resources Committee today approved a major rewrite of the badly outdated 1872 Mining Law, setting the stage for a House floor vote later this year. The House is expected to pass the reform bill, H.R. 2262. A dinosaur among the nation's public lands statutes, the 19th century mining law is one of the most destructive still on the books. It applies to hundreds of millions of acres of federal public lands. Although it has left a legacy of poisoned streams and abandoned mines across the West, HR 2262 would be the Mining Law's first substantial overhaul in 135 years. The 1872 Mining Law, originally intended to spur the nation's westward expansion, makes mining the "highest and best use" of public lands, allows the sale of claimed lands for $5 an acre, imposes zero federal royalties, and contains no environmental standards. "The bill approved today would bring the 19th century mining law into the 21st century," said Stephen D'Esposito, president of the Washington, D.C.-based conservation group Earthworks. "If the full House passes the bill as expected, we'll be halfway towards achieving badly needed reforms that work for western communities, taxpayers, the environment and responsible mining companies." Local elected officials from around the West, jewelry retailers, including Tiffany & Co., conservationists, and sportsmen applauded the vote as a step towards protecting clean water and restoring balance to land management decisions involving hardrock (metal) mining. (See list of western state contacts at the end of this release.) Introduced by Natural Resources Committee Chairman Nick Rahall (D-WV) and Energy and Minerals Subcommittee Chairman Jim Costa (D-CA), H.R. 2262 the Hardrock Mining and Reclamation Act of 2007 would:
In addition, the committee approved three strengthening amendments:
### For More InformationArizona Colorado Idaho Montana Nevada New Mexico South Dakota Washington For more information about the 1872 Mining Law and the effort to reform it, please contact Lauren Pagel, Policy Director, EARTHWORKS at 202-887-1872x207. Or visit www.miningreform.org |
Community VoicesCuster National Forest, MT"Rancher Not Informed about Mineral Leasing" is Jeanie Alderson's story about what it means when the federal government owns the minerals below private land - mainly, that surface owners have little or no input into the leasing process or decisions that will greatly affect their lives and livelihoods. |