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Curb Uranium Enthusiasm

Exploratory uranium mine near Grand Canyon given go-ahead

Posted at 7:22 AM on 07 Feb 2008

The U.S. Forest Service has granted a permit to a British mining company to drill exploratory uranium mines just miles from Grand Canyon National Park in northern Arizona and just three miles from a popular lookout. Officials in the county voted unanimously to try to stop the exploration, but their opposition has had little effect since the mine is on national forest land. An antiquated mining law from 1872 allows mining companies to stake claim to public lands in the U.S. West for as little as $2.50 an acre, get away with scant environmental oversight, and eschew responsibility for post-mine cleanup. Forest Service officials said that due to the 1872 law, they had little choice but to approve the uranium-mining permit even though a full environmental assessment was never conducted. Activists and locals stressed the absurdity of the law. "If uranium mining operations are about to start on the edge of the Grand Canyon and federal officials say there's nothing we can do, the time is now to reform the 1872 mining law," said the Environmental Working Group's Dusty Horwitt. The House of Representatives passed mining law reform last year, but the bill stalled in the Senate due to opposition from key lawmakers.

sources:  The New York Times

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Comments: (2 comments)

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Nothing New

Twenty seven of us were arrested for blockading a uranium mine near the Grand Canyon in 1987, so this has been going on for decades.

Wasn't Barak Obama one of the main senators who obstructed passage of the mining reform?  He's a strong supporter of the coal and nuclear industries and so is Clinton, so we can't expect any help from either of them on this.

East Coast Uranium

In Southside Virginia we have been dealing with proposals to lift a 25 yr. moratorium on uranium mining.  The supposed largest uranium "concentration" in the country is located in Pittsylvania County, an area reeling from the collapses of textile, manufacturing, and tobacco farming.  With Britian's latest thrust of nuclear power being necessary to meet GHG reduction under Kyoto we may see the US Dept. of Energy start to enter into the discussion of uranium mining and land aquisition as well.

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