WAUSAU, Wis. — A decade after digging a huge open pit in northwest
Wisconsin to mine nearly 1.9 million tons of mostly copper ore, a
mining company says the land has been restored to its natural state
without environmental harm.
Flambeau
Mining Co. has asked state regulators to declare that its restoration
of the mine just south of Ladysmith was successfully completed, a
change that would allow the company to lower the amount of a required
reclamation bond by millions of dollars.
The Ladysmith mine on
about 150 acres was the first metallic mine to open in the state in
decades. The site attracted hundreds of protesters during various
demonstrations to oppose it.
“All indications are that they’ve
done substantially what they said they were going to do in the
reclamation plan,” said Philip Fauble, mining program coordinator for
the state Department of Natural Resources.
Tom Wilson, a
coordinator for Northern Thunder, a volunteer environmental and social
action group that opposed the mine before it opened, disagreed.
“It
is really too early to declare they have successfully reclaimed the
mine,” he said. “Nobody was saying that they couldn’t grow a little
prairie grass on top of that pile of rock.”
Flambeau Mining, a
subsidiary of Utah-based Kennecott Minerals Co. and British mining
giant Rio Tinto, opened the mine in 1993 and hauled away ore containing
copper, gold and silver until 1997, when reclamation began. The miners
recovered 181,000 tons of the metals valued at more than $500 million,
the company said. The state netted about $14 million from a mining tax.
Before
the state issued permits to open the mine, the project was targeted by
opponents and environmentalists who warned it would pollute the
Flambeau River. Supporters said the mine would create jobs and show
mining could be done without harming the environment.
Joel
Dutenhoefer, city finance officer in Ladysmith, a community of about
4,000 people about 125 miles northeast of Minneapolis, said Monday
barely a peep is spoken about the mine any more.
The city got nearly $1 million in taxes and direct payments from the mining company, he said.
“You
would never know by looking at it that there was a mine there,”
Dutenhoefer said. “They did everything they could to make sure this
mining operation would not have a negative stigma attached to it and
they pretty well did that, at least at this junction.”
Fauble said the DNR has issued no citations for violations of pollution standards at the mine.
But
as recently as a year ago, some “elevated metallic concentrations” were
discovered in runoff water and the soil in the area where the ore was
loaded onto railroad cars for shipment to Canada for processing, Fauble
said. The soil was dug up and replaced, he said.
Jana Murphy,
Flambeau Mining’s environmental manager, said the mine site, which
includes the 32-acre open pit that reached a depth of 225 feet in
places, is now a recreation and nature area for such things as hiking,
bird watching and horseback riding.
“We are proud of our $20
million reclamation effort,” she said. “The Flambeau mine project
promised to follow or surpass Wisconsin’s stringent metallic mine
regulations, and that promise was kept.”
If the DNR approves the
so-called “certificate of completion,” the security bond Flambeau
Mining posted to protect taxpayers from having to pay for the
reclamation work would be reduced from $11 million to $2 million, with
the lower amount required for care for another 20 years, Fauble said.
If
the certificate of completion is granted, the company must continue
monitoring ground and surface waters to check for pollution for 40
years, he said. That requires a separate $1 million bond to protect
state taxpayers from having to pay for the work.
Portions of the refilled open pit mine are still filling with water, Fauble said.
“We
still haven’t said that the groundwater is back exactly where it was
prior to mining,” Fauble said. “There is still some geo-chemical
activity going on inside the old pit area that hasn’t calmed down yet.
It will take a while.”
Northern Thunder will oppose issuing the
certificate of completion, Wilson said. There is still too much risk of
possible pollution to the Flambeau River and to ground water and some
“very, very serious questions” about the long-term success of the work
that’s been done, he said.
John Coleman, who handles mining and
environmental issues for the Great Lakes Indian Fish and Wildlife
Commission, an agency of 11 Chippewa tribes in Minnesota, Wisconsin,
and Michigan that has monitored the mine for years, said Monday the
jury was still out on whether the mine has caused no environmental harm.
There
was contamination and pollution found last summer at a parking lot for
trucks used in the mining operation because of mud those vehicles
transported from the open pit, he said.
“Pretty flowers are not what the purpose of reclamation is. Reclamation is generally to protect the environment,” he said.
In
some circles, the Flambeau Mine is being promoted as the future of
mining, the best mine in the country and an example of how sulfide
mining can be done without harming the environment, he said.
“It
is hard to be hypercritical because so many sulfide mine projects have
been an environmental disaster,” Coleman said. “This one wasn’t. They
are getting better.”
Fauble said Flambeau Mining is responsible for the site “in perpetuity.”



