An Act To Amend the Maine Metallic Mineral Mining Act To Protect Water Quality
Sec. 1. 38 MRSA §490-OO, sub-§3-A is enacted to read:
(1) "Sulfide ore body" means a mineral deposit in which metals are mixed with sulfide minerals.
(2) "Surface or open pit mining" means removing the overburden lying above a deposit of a metallic mineral and mining directly from the exposed deposit or mining directly from a deposit lying exposed in the mineral's natural state.
(1) In a geographic location that has climatic and geological features similar to the proposed mining area;
(2) In the United States or Canada;
(3) That has not violated any environmental law as determined in an administrative proceeding, civil action, criminal action or other legal proceeding. For the purposes of this paragraph, issuance of an order or acceptance of an agreement requiring corrective action or a stipulated fine, forfeiture or other penalty is considered a determination of a violation, regardless of whether there was a finding or admission of liability; and
(4) That has not discharged pollutants to groundwater or surface water causing the water to fail to meet water quality standards.
Sec. 2. 38 MRSA §490-OO, sub-§4, ¶D, as enacted by PL 2011, c. 653, §23 and affected by §33, is amended to read:
Sec. 3. 38 MRSA §490-QQ, sub-§3, as enacted by PL 2011, c. 653, §23 and affected by §33, is amended to read:
Sec. 4. 38 MRSA §490-RR, sub-§3, as enacted by PL 2011, c. 653, §23 and affected by §33, is amended to read:
Sec. 5. Effective date. This Act takes effect June 1, 2014.
SUMMARY
This bill makes changes to the Maine Metallic Mineral Mining Act.
1. It prohibits the Department of Environmental Protection from issuing a permit for surface or open pit mining in a sulfide ore body unless the applicant has previously operated a mining operation that meets certain conditions. It also requires the department to submit a report to the joint standing committee of the Legislature having jurisdiction over metallic mineral mining matters recommending whether or not the prohibition should be repealed. The report must be submitted within 3 months after the department has issued a permit for surface or open pit mining of a sulfide ore body.
2. It amends the approval criteria related to water quality by requiring that discharges of pollutants from the mining operation will not violate applicable water quality standards and it prohibits the issuance of a permit if the mining operation will result in the contamination of groundwater or surface water requiring treatment beyond 10 years after cessation of mining operations.
3. It amends the standards for monitoring groundwater.
4. It requires financial assurance to be fulfilled through creation of a trust fund.