Despite its reputation, the 1872 Mining Law may no
longer be a friend of the mining industry. On March 26, the
Department of Interior and the Department of Agriculture denied the
plan of operations for a proposed open-pit gold mine in
north-central Washington (HCN, 8/31/98), saying it failed to meet
the requirements of the century-old mining
law.
“This is the opening salvo of something that
will have repercussions around the West,” says Roger Flynn, an
attorney with the Western Mining Action Project in Boulder, Colo.
The law was designed for the small-scale mines of the late 1800s,
and Flynn argued that it does not allow for the huge waste sites
required by modern mining techniques. The agencies
agreed.
“This definitely pulled out the kingpin
that’s holding up their whole castle,” says David Kleigman of the
Okanogan Highlands Alliance, a local group opposing the mine. “But
I know the power of this industry, and I know they’re going to try
something.”
Company representatives say they’ll
persevere. “We’re going to use every recourse available to try and
get this back on track,” says Battle Mountain Gold spokesman Les
Van Dyke. “After eight years of permitting, this came as quite a
surprise.”
Meanwhile, Flynn is planning to apply
his argument to other open-pit mine proposals around the West, and
he says he is looking forward to the fight. “Now they’re saying
that the law is old and archaic,” he says of the mining industry.
“They’re singing a different tune now that it’s being used against
them. This is going to be fun.”
* Michelle
Nijhuis
This article appeared in the print edition of the magazine with the headline No go for a gold mine.