Ensuring Responsibility at Small Mines
The Lodestar Mine: Greycliff, Montana
In the 2005 session, CRC worked to pass HB
606, a bill which significantly shrunk the small miner loophole in
state law and addresses the immediate risks posed by the Lodestar Gold
Mine, and the Lodestar Mill site, near Greycliff, Sweet Grass
County.
The Lodestar mill site qualifies for the small miner exemption, and
therefore does not currently have an operating permit, or a reclamation
bond with the Montana Department of Environmental Quality. The mine
waste at the Lodestar mill site could potentially threaten water
quality and neighboring landowners if it continues to go
unregulated.
Holding small miners accountable by requiring reclamation bonding helps balance economic gain with social and environmental responsibility, and strives to protect Montana's water, land, air, and unique quality of life in order to pass them on, unimpaired, to future generations by reducing and preventing the potential negative effects of small miners' hard rock mining waste and its waste products.
HB 606 gives the DEQ to have more oversight over these small miner
tailings impoundments, and requiring mining companies that operate
small mines them to construct and manage them in a way that reduces or
eliminates their threat to the environment. One of the new requirements
is that small mines obtain a bond to cover their impoundment (in case
they go bankrupt and taxpayers are left liable) and that they reclaim
the impoundment after they are done mining.
In May, CRC wrote a letter
to the DEQ asking them to begin enforcing the law, which went into
effect immediately and gave existing companies that operate small mines
with impoundments six months to comply.We have yet to receive a
response.
If you are concerned about the Lodestar Mill Site, contact Warren
McCulloch at Montana DEQ at 406.444.2544 and ask him what the DEQ's
plan for Lodestar is.