Save the Scenic Santa Ritas

Fighting to protect the Santa Rita and Patagonia Mountains from the devastating impacts of mining.

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The Bulletin: Australian firm looks to drill near Patagonia

August 24, 2011 By Administrator Leave a Comment

Another mining company has its eye on the mineral wealth of the Patagonia Mountains.

The Coronado National Forest has recently sent out a scoping notice that indicates it is considering a new request by a multinational mining firm to conduct an exploratory operation 10 miles south of Patagonia.

“OZ Exploration Pty. Ltd, a Delaware corporation authorized to do business in the State of Arizona, proposes to drill seven core holes to test for copper mineralization in the Guajalote Flat and Paymaster areas of the Patagonia Mountains,” wrote Richard Ahern, minerals program manager for the Coronado National Forest, in a letter dated Aug. 18 that gives the public 30 days to respond. “If approved, the proposed action would be completed, including reclamation, in less than one year (about 35 weeks) from the date of approval.”

“This is not a mine. They are just poking around to see what is there,” Ahern told the Weekly Bulletin. He said the notice has not been posted in any newspapers. Instead, Ahern said he has sent out “around 1,000 e-mails.” He said so far response has been minimal.

Click here to read the full article

 

Filed Under: News, Other mining news

Brewer hails acid-pumping mine

August 4, 2011 By Administrator Leave a Comment


Brewer hails acid-pumping mine

Howard Fischer Capitol Media Services | Posted: Thursday, August 4, 2011

PHOENIX – Gov. Jan Brewer is throwing her support behind a large and controversial plan by a Canadian firm to mine copper in Florence by pumping weak acid into the ground.

Brewer attended a closed-door meeting Tuesday with executives of Curis Resources and other area business leaders, a meeting that was not on her public schedule or disclosed ahead of time. Gubernatorial press aide Matthew Benson said no one was told because the event was secret and that Brewer was only “there to learn as much as possible about the project.”

“She hasn’t made a final decision on the project,” Benson said.

But that’s not what she told those present. “I’m grateful for the opportunity to stand together with you tonight in support of such a wonderful economic development opportunity,” Brewer said in prepared remarks obtained after a public-records request by Capitol Media Services. “I hope that we’ll be able to see this through and that Florence, Pinal County and Arizona will continue to thrive.”

Read more: http://azstarnet.com/business/local/article_1c034d09-0288-5add-a850-504e6750282e.html

Filed Under: Other mining news

Arizona’s mining agency to shut down

January 20, 2011 By Administrator Leave a Comment


Arizona’s mining agency to shut down

Office out of money, its director says, but some resources may be shifted elsewhere

by Ryan Randazzo – Jan. 20, 2011 12:00 AM
The Arizona Republic

The state Department of Mines and Mineral Resources, which helps companies looking to dig for minerals in Arizona, will close Friday because it’s out of money, the director said Wednesday.

Gov. Jan Brewer has proposed moving its duties to the state Geological Survey when the new fiscal year begins in July, but the department with three employees and three contract workers doesn’t have the money to last that long after recent budget cuts, Director Madan Singh said.

“We would have needed supplemental funds to complete this fiscal year, and they’ve decided this is the time to close us down,” he said.

The department was created in 1939 to promote mining in Arizona, and last year, it provided 410 customers with information about mines and minerals in the state, according to the governor’s executive budget summary.

Turning its duties over to the Geological Survey will save the state $220,000 a year, according to the report. But the governor also proposes transferring $100,000 to the Geological Survey to digitize the department’s mineral records.

Downsizing of the Department of Mines and Mineral Resources began last summer when the Legislature transferred the Arizona Mining and Mineral Museum from the department to the state Historical Society.

The museum is scheduled to close this summer and reopen as the Centennial Museum, although not in time for the actual state centennial celebration in February 2012.

The people who will lose their jobs when the department closes include Singh, a mining engineer who conducts economic analyses of the industry, and a clerk who helps with data inquiries. The department also has three contract workers, including one who visits schools to talk about the economic benefits of mining in Arizona.

The contract workers could be transferred to the Geological Survey, which might also have money to hire part of the staff, but “the situation is very fluid,” Singh said.

The department’s main duty is to help companies interested in mining in Arizona.

“The people that normally come to us are the smaller companies that don’t have a lot of information in their own files,” Singh said. “We tell them where some past deposits have been explored and help them dealing with various agencies like (the Department of Environmental Quality) and Water Resources.”

Singh said he is disappointed to leave his job of more than five years. “I think we were doing the state and the mining industry a service, especially the new (companies) coming in that would in the long run help the state,” he said. “They create jobs and produce minerals, which we need.”

The Governor’s Office did not respond to a request for comments Wednesday.

Some geology enthusiasts said the job cuts could hurt the industry. “The new mining people that come in won’t know how to access the (mining and mineral) records,” said Mardy Zimmerman, a retired teacher who is on the board of the Friends of the Arizona Mining and Mineral Museum, a non-profit.

“The records will be in storage when our economy could really use the new mining jobs,” she said. “We have the richest copper deposits, and we are hindering the development and furthering of mining in our state.”

She also said the job cuts don’t bode well for the museum and its plans to close and reopen as the Centennial Museum.

Zimmerman helped develop a program to teach children about minerals at the museum, and she said that losing the Department of Mines and Mineral Resource employees and moving the museum to the Historical Society could take away the scientific focus at the museum.

Filed Under: Other mining news

Mining plan spurs concern in Patagonia

January 12, 2011 By Administrator Leave a Comment


Mining plan spurs concern in Patagonia

By JB Miller
The Bulletin
Published Wednesday, January 12, 2011 9:20 AM CST

Over 50 people met up at the Patagonia Community Center on Jan. 5 in order to discuss a proposed mine that most agree would change the character of the small town.

“I thought it was important for people to know what was going on,” said Patagonia resident Odell Borg, who helped organize the meeting along with a half-dozen other locals who are concerned about the proposed mine that would be located just east of Patagonia along Harshaw Road.

In November, Canadian-based Wildcat Silver Corporation president and CEO Chris Jones held an informational meeting at the Stage Stop Hotel in Patagonia that was attended by approximately 20 people.

Jones said the Hardshell Silver Project would be a combined 600-foot deep, open-pit and underground operation that would cover approximately 107 acres and extract mainly silver and manganese.

He estimated the mine would use 3,000 to 5,000 gallons of water per minute on average, and that much of the water would be recycled. In all, the project would last 27 years from beginning to end and would cost an estimated $300 million.

“We are at least three years from production,” said Jones during the November meeting, adding that plans for the mine are tentative and his company still has a number of hurdles, including the National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA) process. Immediate plans called for bringing in drills in order to take core samples, the results of which would be published sometime this year.

“What I’m trying to do here is to make sure people understand the project,” Jones said during the November meeting, “so that we walk forward knowing what the criticisms are going to be.”

But Borg said the meeting that was by invite only did not reach enough people in the community.

“It was very orchestrated at that point,” Borg said. “I just thought it was important to let the rest of the town know what is going on. And see how they feel about it. That was basically the idea.”

Borg said those that did attend last week’s meeting were “taken aback and disturbed that someone could just come in and sort of takeover.”

“It takes a lot of guts for someone to come in and say we’re going to use most of the water that is available and drive 40 ton trucks through your town all day,” he said.

Reaching out

By the end of the meeting, a lot of people were asking what they could do to have a say in future developments, Borg said.

“At this point we don’t know,” he said. “We’d love to find out a way to at least come up with some suggestions and get people together and find out what our options are.

“Right now we don’t know what our options are,” he continued. “The people living around the Santa Ritas have a lot of experience with that because of the Rosemont Mine – we don’t.”

Borg said those concerned about the Hardshell Mine are going to try contact those people challenging the Rosemont Mine and find out what can they can do.

Wildcat Silver Corporation is part of Augusta Resources companies, which is developing the Rosemont Mine.

“It’s not like an anti-mine thing,” said Borg. “We’re more concerned about our water quality and the environment and the impact the traffic is going to have on the town.”

Meanwhile, Jones said Wildcat Silver Corporation has tentatively planned another meeting for sometime in February.

Filed Under: Other mining news

Canadian company plans silver mine near Patagonia

January 7, 2011 By Administrator Leave a Comment


Canadian company plans silver mine near Patagonia

By Tony Davis, Arizona Daily Star, 1/7/11

PATAGONIA – A Canadian company with ties to the company proposing the Rosemont Mine promises nearly 300 permanent, mostly high-paying jobs at a mine that would take silver and other metals from the hills southeast of Patagonia.

The Hardshell property in the Patagonia Mountains could bring Wildcat Silver Corp. $99 million annually in profits if it gets state and federal approvals and once it spends $337 million to build the project, company documents show.

But plans for a combined open-pit and underground mine, now in their early stages, are stirring fears among many residents that their tourist town’s way of life will disappear.

Barely three times as many people live in the town today as would work at the mine. Today, the town has a two-block business district, a hotel, a bar, five restaurants and five or six art galleries and antique shops.

Opponents are concerned about trucks, water use, blasting noise and land disturbance connected with the mine. More than 50 opponents turned out at a meeting at the town’s senior center Wednesday night.

“It will kill the town as we know it,” Gini Thatcher Hengen said at the meeting. Hengen and her husband have run a fine-arts gallery in Patagonia for six years.

“The water, the environment, the ecotourism that the state talks about, that will kill it,” she said. “I’ve already heard customers say that ‘we won’t come back here if we have to fight mining trucks.’ “

Chris Jones, Wildcat Silver’s president and CEO, said it’s understandable for people to be concerned about things they don’t know much about.

“Our first position is to make sure we educate folks as we develop our plans,” Jones said. “As we encounter areas that are sensitive we’ve asked residents who feel strongly to work with us to solve those issues jointly.”

Wildcat Silver is working on a feasibility study that will lead to submission of an operating plan for the mine to the U.S. Forest Service.

Each year for 18 years, the mine would take 4.1 million ounces of silver, about 256,000 tons of a manganese compound, about 22,200 tons of zinc and about 1,050 tons of copper.

The company would dig a 600-foot-deep open pit, and go at least 1,800 feet underground to mine what’s too deep to be gathered in the pit.

Wildcat Silver has been exploring since 2006. But It could be years before the Vancouver, B.C.-based company can begin mining on land it owns along a dirt road at elevations of up to 6,200 feet. The site lies six miles southeast of Patagonia and about 50 miles southeast of Tucson.

Jones said it could be two years before Wildcat Silver presents a formal plan to the Forest Service to mine 150 acres of private land and, “potentially,” put waste rock and tailings on up to 2,800 acres of surrounding national forest.

Yet it’s clear that this project poses similar issues to those being discussed for the proposed, billion-dollar Rosemont Mine in the Santa Rita Mountains closer to Tucson:

• Water. Hardshell would use 720,000 gallons of groundwater daily. That’s more than a third of what the entire town of Patagonia used last November and more than a fifth of what the town used last July. Much of the mine water would be recycled, but Jones said he doesn’t know now how much.

• Traffic. Four to eight heavy trucks, possibly weighing 40 tons, would be driving up and down the narrow, winding Harshaw Road each hour to get to and from the mine site. Harshaw is paved for 6.2 miles outside of Patagonia and is a dirt road for the remaining three miles to the mine site.

Jesus Valdez, Santa Cruz County’s interim public-works director, said that much truck traffic could require the mining company to upgrade the road.

Without knowing exactly how many trucks would use the site, it is hard to predict today what the traffic impacts would be, Jones said.

• Chemical use. The company would use a sodium cyanide compound to leach silver out of the ore, and a combination of sulfuric acid and sulfur dioxide gases to leach out the other metals. Jones said there is no danger of leaks because the leaching would take place inside tanks, but residents are concerned about the prospect of these materials’ being trucked to the site through the town and the forest.

At Wednesday night’s meeting, a leader of the opposition, Odell Borg, said he wouldn’t want to continue his High Spirits Flutes flute-making business off Harshaw Road if the mine is approved. But he said he doesn’t see this as a “gloom and doom” issue – “I think this thing is very positive. We can stop that mine,” he said.

Pulitzer Prize-winning author Philip Caputo, a part-time Pata-gonia resident, said in an interview after the meeting that the project involves “appalling exploitation” of a local resource by a foreign company.

“They exploit the resources and what do they put back in? Nothing,” said Caputo, adding, “If this kind of thing produced real, good-paying jobs for people living here, my opposition might be muted.”

Wildcat Silver’s Jones said the company’s goal is to hire locally when possible and it’s willing to train people. But hiring almost 300 people strictly from a town of 900 may not be very practical, said Jones, adding that officials plan on hiring mainly from surrounding cities such as Tucson, Sierra Vista and Nogales.

As for neighbors’ environmental concerns, Jones said the company will first estimate the impacts in its feasibility study, then work with the community to address their concerns when possible, and integrate their concerns into the project’s design.

ROSEMONT CONNECTION

Wildcat Silver’s board of directors contains four members associated with Augusta Resource Corp., the Vancouver, B.C.-owner of the Rosemont mine site. Among them are Augusta CEO Gil Clausen and Richard Warke, chairman of Augusta’s and Wildcat Silver’s boards. Rosemont Copper Co., which would build the Rosemont Mine in the Santa Rita Mountains southeast of Tucson, is Augusta’s Arizona subsidiary.

Filed Under: Other mining news

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Recent Posts

  • THE HOT TOPIC: WATER OR LACK THEREOF January 24, 2023
  • Hudbay ramps up excavation for Copper World Complex as local resistance continues and expands January 7, 2023
  • Meet The Man Who Shoots At Birds All Day To Keep Them Off A Toxic Pit | World Wide Waste (video) January 5, 2023
  • Lithium America Mine Project Hampered After Judge Schedules Hearing on Nevada Mine January 5, 2023
  • Thousands Will Live Here One Day (as Long as They Can Find Water) January 5, 2023
  • Latest Updates About Local Water Issues and Rosemont / Copper World Mine Complex January 5, 2023
  • Hudbay, Forest Service won’t appeal ruling blocking Rosemont Mine December 19, 2022
  • Letter: Proposed New Mines in Santa Ritas November 28, 2022
  • Wells are running dry in drought-weary Southwest as foreign-owned farms guzzle water to feed cattle overseas November 28, 2022
  • Annual pulses of copper-enriched sediment in a North American river downstream of a large lake following the catastrophic failure of a mine tailings storage facility November 28, 2022

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Rosemont/ Copper World Mine Complex News

THE HOT TOPIC: WATER OR LACK THEREOF

Hudbay ramps up excavation for Copper World Complex as local resistance continues and expands

Meet The Man Who Shoots At Birds All Day To Keep Them Off A Toxic Pit | World Wide Waste (video)

Lithium America Mine Project Hampered After Judge Schedules Hearing on Nevada Mine

More Posts from this Category

Copper World Flyover January 6, 2023 by David Steele

Another shocking sight of the incredible destruction happening on our beautiful Santa Ritas.WATCH VIDEO NOW

Russ McSpadden’s recent fly-over showing mine activity

In Nov 2022 Russ captured recent bulldozing in the Santa Rita Mountains. His video starts over the Rosemont mine project on the east side and then swings over the Copper World project on the west side. WATCH VIDEO NOW

Explore the proposed Rosemont and Copper World projects virtually

Check out Pima County’s updated map of the proposed mine site. Click on any spot on the map for ownership/status information. Mapping details are based on Hudbay’s PEA dated May 1.

Proposed Rosemont/ Copper World Mine Complex

Image compilation of the area

LENS ON THE LAND

October 2022 Powerpoint Presentation

Click here to download (PDF)

Litigation Update

There have been two recent judicial rulings on the Rosemont Copper Company projects — one favorable and one unfavorable.

Click here to learn more

The latest on Hudbay’s Copper World project in the Santa Rita Mountains

Click here to download (PDF)

Where is the Rosemont/Copper World Mine Complex?

Click here for directions

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