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Summer - Northern Plains Resource Council

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The owners of RX Gold and<br />

Silver Inc., which operates the<br />

underground gold and silver<br />

mine near Marysville, announced in<br />

mid-June its intention to merge with<br />

the second largest silver producer in<br />

the United States, U.S. Silver Corp.<br />

U.S. Silver operates a number of<br />

existing mines across central and<br />

northern Idaho. The move, although<br />

not unexpected, changes some aspects<br />

of the proposed Drumlummon Mine<br />

expansion at Marysville. With the<br />

merger, U.S. Silver now controls 70<br />

percent of the ownership of the mine,<br />

and RX would retain the remaining<br />

30 percent.<br />

The Drumlummon,<br />

once one of the richest<br />

gold mines in Montana,<br />

was purchased by RX in late 2008.<br />

The company acquired an exploration<br />

license from the state Department of<br />

Environmental Quality (DEQ), and has<br />

operated a producing mine under the<br />

state’s Small Miners Exclusion Statement.<br />

This winter, the company submitted<br />

an application for a full operating<br />

permit to the DEQ. The permitting<br />

process was held up by a lengthy<br />

deficiency response from the state<br />

in March, and the company is still<br />

in the process of responding to<br />

those technical deficiencies before<br />

resubmitting their application.<br />

Marysville residents organized under<br />

Sleeping Giant Citizens <strong>Council</strong> in<br />

2011 in an effort to hold the mine<br />

accountable to the community on<br />

issues related to water quality and<br />

quantity, dust, noise, and traffic.<br />

land and water<br />

Marysville mine merges with major silver company<br />

With the merger, it is uncertain<br />

whether the company will move<br />

forward with plans to build a<br />

processing mill near the mine. Recent<br />

communications with the mine<br />

appear to indicate that they will be<br />

hauling the ore to existing processing<br />

facilities at U.S. Silver’s Idaho mills.<br />

The merger also comes as the operators<br />

of the mine have been quietly expanding<br />

their ownership of mining claims in<br />

the Marysville area. The mine recently<br />

bought the old Belmont mine at the<br />

nearby Great Divide ski area. In a press<br />

release, U.S. Silver boasts tremendous<br />

growth potential from the expansion<br />

at Drumlummon and<br />

Belmont. Residents<br />

are concerned about<br />

sizeable impacts to the<br />

surrounding aquifer from further mine<br />

expansion.<br />

Marysville residents continue to<br />

push the DEQ for a thorough and<br />

transparent review of the operating<br />

permit application. In a recent letter to<br />

the DEQ’s hard-rock mining program,<br />

the group called for comprehensive<br />

monitoring of water quality and<br />

quantity by the state to commence<br />

immediately rather than relying on the<br />

company’s self-reported data until the<br />

issuance of an operating permit.<br />

– Clayton Elliott<br />

Senator Max Baucus<br />

511 Hart Senate Offi ce Building<br />

Washington, DC 20510<br />

Offi ce: (202) 224-2651<br />

Fax: (202) 224-0515<br />

Web mail: http://www.baucus.senate.gov/?p=contact<br />

Take action: Bill to ‘streamline’ hard-rock<br />

mine permits moving through U.S. House<br />

Oversight of mines like<br />

Drumlummon could be<br />

weakened if legislation in Congress<br />

advances.<br />

The mining industry and its allies in<br />

the U.S. House of Representatives<br />

have introduced a bill to “streamline”<br />

(that is, weaken) the permitting<br />

process for new hard-rock mines on<br />

federal lands. H.R. 4402, among<br />

other things, would seriously weaken<br />

protections for land, water, and<br />

wildlife, and it would create numerous<br />

loopholes for compliance with the<br />

National Environmental Policy Act.<br />

When you have a track record like<br />

Senator Jon Tester<br />

724 Hart Senate Offi ce Building<br />

Washington, DC 20510<br />

Offi ce: toll-free (866) 554-4403<br />

Fax: (202) 224-8594<br />

Web mail: http://tester.senate.gov/Contact<br />

the mining industry, we cannot afford<br />

to loosen the critical oversight that<br />

protects our communities and natural<br />

resources from the impacts of hardrock<br />

mining.<br />

The bill recently gained the support<br />

of the House. Before consideration in<br />

the Senate, call Senators Max Baucus<br />

and Jon Tester (D-Mont.) and urge<br />

them to oppose H.R. 4402. Montana<br />

just can't afford another Zortman-<br />

Landusky, in which taxpayers are left<br />

to clean up after the mining industry.<br />

See contact information below.<br />

– Clayton Elliott<br />

Montana Delegation Information<br />

Representative Denny Rehberg<br />

2448 Rayburn House Offi ce Building<br />

Washington, DC 20515<br />

Offi ce: toll-free (888) 232-2626<br />

Fax: (202) 225-5687<br />

Web mail: https://rehbergforms.house.gov/e-mail-denny<br />

Gridlocked Congress stalls bill to advance wind energy<br />

With the existing<br />

federal production tax<br />

credit (PTC) for the<br />

development of wind generation<br />

set to expire at the end of the year,<br />

congressional leaders are scrambling<br />

to find ways to extend the measure<br />

through 2013.<br />

According to the American Wind<br />

Energy Association (AWEA), the PTC<br />

has been a tremendously effective tool<br />

to encourage the new development of<br />

a proven homegrown and renewable<br />

energy source – American wind energy.<br />

AWEA goes on to argue that in the<br />

process, it has helped to cut the costs<br />

of wind energy to consumers by more<br />

than 90 percent and fostered economic<br />

development in all 50 states.<br />

Indeed, the production tax credit has<br />

increased the production of wind<br />

energy in Montana and surrounding<br />

states markedly. Nationwide, the<br />

average annual investment in wind<br />

energy projects has increased to<br />

more than $15 billion over the last<br />

five years. In Montana alone, wind<br />

energy production has grown from<br />

less than 2 megawatts in 2005 to<br />

627 megawatts by the end of 2012,<br />

driven by Montana’s renewable energy<br />

standard and the federal PTC.<br />

Unfortunately, the legislation has<br />

failed to gain much traction amidst a<br />

deeply divided and partisan Congress,<br />

despite bipartisan support for the<br />

PTC’s extension. Proposals in both<br />

the House and Senate have met<br />

stiff opposition from the fossil fuel<br />

industry and their allies in Congress.<br />

A Democratic proposal introduced<br />

recently in the House, H.R. 6031,<br />

proposes to offset the costs of<br />

extending the PTC by repealing a<br />

provision that allows oil companies<br />

to deduct foreign tax payments from<br />

their domestic tax bills.<br />

– Clayton Elliott<br />

Take action!<br />

Please call Representative<br />

Dennis Rehberg (R-Mont.), and<br />

ask him to co-sponsor H.R.<br />

6031, which would renew the<br />

federal production tax credit<br />

on wind energy. It would also<br />

help balance the budget by<br />

paying for the renewal through<br />

eliminating wasteful subsidies<br />

for multinational oil companies.<br />

Tell Rehberg that it is time to<br />

invest in energy production here<br />

in Montana, not overseas. See<br />

contact information above.<br />

Source: Miles Franklin Precious Metals Specialists (2012)<br />

The <strong>Plains</strong> Truth <strong>Summer</strong> 2012 Page 12

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