Information about the vote from special interest groups and other information providers in our Report Cards:
Sierra Club
Protecting Public Water and Local Communities from Polluting Mining Activities.
The House of Representatives passed an amendment that kept in place critical protections against pollution from mines. Early in 2001, the Clinton Administration put in place new regulations for hardrock mining to replace antiquated rules that hadn't been revisited in decades. These reasonable new rules required mining companies to pay for the full cost of environmental clean-ups (instead of taxpayers, who are currently on the hook for about $1 billion in costs from currently operating mines). In addition, they established strong environmental standards to protect lakes, streams, rivers and ground water from toxic chemicals, and permitted the federal government to deny permits to mining companies whose proposals could cause "irreparable harm."
The Bush Administration has proposed to suspend these rules, even after it received more than 35,000 citizen comments in favor of the new rules (more comments than the BLM has ever received on a single issue). This victory will ensure that reasonable - and sorely needed - mining regulations are kept in place.
The Inslee-Horn amendment to the Department of Interior appropriations bill (H.R. 2217) passed.
League of Conservation Voters
Public Lands & Public Resources - Hardrock Mining.
Today's mines for “hardrock” minerals, such as gold, silver, platinum and copper, often cover thousands of acres and descend hundreds of feet into the ground, generating mountains of toxic waste. According to the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), almost half of the toxic pollution reported in the United States comes from hardrock mining, making the mining industry the nation's largest toxic polluter. The EPA also estimates that mining has polluted 40 percent of Western watersheds with substances such as arsenic and cyanide. Dozens of mining waste sites are on the Superfund list of the nation’s most toxic sites, and cleanup costs could ultimately run into the hundreds of millions of dollars.
In an effort to control this pollution, the Interior Department issued new regulations on hardrock mining. The product of four years of public comments and hearings, the new regulations represented a significant improvement over outdated 1980 regulations, which were drafted before the widespread use of enormous open-pit, chemical-process mining. Among other advantages, the new regulations:
- Established mining-specific environmental and cleanup standards to protect public lands, surface and ground water, wildlife habitat and surrounding communities;
- Required mining companies, rather than taxpayers, to foot the bill for cleanups;
- Gave the Bureau of Land Management (BLM) the right to deny permits for mines that would irreparably damage environmentally sensitive public lands.
Two months after the updated regulations were issued, Interior Secretary Gale Norton, citing industry concerns, proposed suspending the newly issued regulations and exploring alternatives including modification of the new regulations or a return to the 1980 regulations. During the 45-day public comment period on this proposal, the Interior Department received 49,000 comments—more than 45,000 in opposition to changing the new rules.
In response, Representatives Jay Inslee (D-WA) and Steve Horn (R-CA) offered an amendment to H.R. 2217, the Fiscal Year 2002 House Interior Appropriations bill, to block the Interior Department from rolling back the newly issued regulations. The House of Representatives approved the amendment.
The Senate, however, did not include a similar amendment, and the Inslee-Horn language was stripped from the final Interior appropriations bill in conference. The Interior Department released new mining regulations that removed the cleanup standards from the rule, eliminated the BLM's authority to block environmentally damaging mines, and gutted mining-specific environmental standards. While the regulations retained a provision requiring mining companies to pay the full costs of cleanup, that provision was significantly weakened by the removal of any standards to evaluate that cleanup.
U.S. Public Interest Research Group
Clean Water/Stop Rollback of Toxic Mining Pollution Rule.
In January 2001, after years of study and public comment, the Department of the Interior issued new regulations to limit the impacts of hardrock mining. Mining has polluted 40% of Western watersheds with toxins such as arsenic and cyanide and left a legacy of dozens of polluted Superfund sites. After the regulations were issued, Interior Secretary Gale Norton moved to suspend the regulations, citing industry concerns. Reps. Inslee (D-WA) and Horn (R-CA) offered an amendment to H.R. 2217, the Fiscal Year 2002 House Interior Appropriations bill, to block the Interior Department from rolling back the newly issued mining regulations. The House of Representatives approved the amendment.
League of Private Property Voters
Fiscal 2002 Interior Appropriations - Mining Regulations.
Inslee, D-Wash., amendment
that would prohibit spending funds to make
reasonable revisions to mining rules published
in the Nov. 21, 2000, Federal Register.
Adopted.