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VOL. 43 | NO. 29 | Friday, July 19, 2019

Appeals court upholds Trump move to drop mine pollution rule

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BILLINGS, Mont. (AP) — A U.S. appeals court panel sided with the Trump administration Friday in a mining pollution dispute, ruling that state and federal programs already in place ensure that companies take financial responsibility for future cleanups.

The ruling came after the administration was sued by environmental groups for dropping an Obama-era proposal that would have forced companies to put up money to show they have resources to clean up pollution.

The mining industry has a legacy of bankrupt companies abandoning polluted sites and leaving taxpayers to cover cleanup costs.

But the three-judge panel with the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit said it was "unpersuaded" by the environmentalists' arguments that the Trump administration relied on a faulty economic analysis in making its decision.

"Existing federal and state programs impose significant financial responsibility requirements on the hardrock mining industry," Judge Karen LeCraft Henderson wrote. "States have changed their financial responsibility requirements to account for the risk of bankruptcy" by companies.

The case began after Environmental Protection Agency said in 2017 that stricter regulations and modern mining practices have reduced the risks of pollution going unaddressed.

Under former President Barack Obama, the agency determined the opposite, saying mining pollution remains an ongoing concern.

The mining industry and members of Congress from Western states had argued the rule was unnecessary because of existing cleanup requirements already enforced at the state and federal level.

The Associated Press has reported that every day, millions of gallons of water loaded with arsenic, lead and other toxic metals flow from some of the most contaminated mining sites in the U.S. and into surrounding streams and ponds without being treated.

State and federal laws in recent decades have held companies more accountable than in the past. Environmental groups contend huge loopholes all but ensure that some of today's mines will foul waterways or require perpetual cleanups.

National Mining Association President Hal Quinn said the court decision Friday recognizes that companies already provide sufficient bonds and other financial assurances to cover cleanup costs.

"EPA used common sense in its final determination, and we are pleased the court found the agency's reasoning compelling," Quinn said in a statement.

An attorney for Earthjustice, which brought the lawsuit on behalf of the Sierra Club, Earthworks and other groups, said the mining industry "shouldn't be allowed to poison groundwater" and cause other environmental problems.

"The Trump administration has this proposal at the top of its deregulatory agenda," attorney Jaimini Parekh said. "By taking no action they're giving a huge subsidy to the mining industry at the cost of our public health, our rivers and our hard-earned taxpayer dollars."

Hard-rock mining companies would have faced a combined $7.1 billion financial obligation under the Obama era rule, costing them up to $171 million annually to set aside sufficient funds to pay for future cleanups, according to an EPA analysis.

EPA spokeswoman Maggie Sauerhage said officials were reviewing the ruling.

"In signing the final action in December 2017, EPA was confident that modern industry practices, along with existing state and federal requirements, addressed risks from hardrock mining," Sauerhage said in a statement.

Since 1980, at least 52 mines and mine processing sites had spills or other releases of pollution, according to documents previously released by the EPA.

But Friday's ruling noted that the "vast majority" of EPA spending on hardrock mining cleanups involved contamination from legacy mines, not ongoing operations.

The industry's troubles were highlighted in 2015, when an EPA cleanup team accidentally triggered a 3 million gallon (11 million liter) spill of contaminated water from Colorado's inactive Gold King mine, tainting rivers in three states with heavy metals including arsenic and lead.

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Follow Matthew Brown at https://twitter.com/matthewbrownap

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