Native Sun News: Lakota group pushes tribes on  uranium   bill

Thursday, March  24,  2011



The following story was written and reported by Talli Nauman. All 
content © Native Sun 
News. 

PIERRE — South Dakota will surrender oversight of water quality in 
uranium mining and related injection wells  if Gov. Dennis Daugaard 
signs a bill that just passed the state legislature.

The non-profit Lakota organization Owe Aku (Bring Back the Way) is 
calling on tribal government representatives to urge that Daugaard 
reject the initiative, which arises from the Canadian-owned Powertech 
USA Inc.’s proposal to conduct the first ever in-situ leach (ISL) 
uranium mining in South Dakota.
“If the governor does sign SB158, he is dooming not only the current 
people of South Dakota and the surrounding area, as well as the plant 
nation and animal nation, the water, land, and air, but also the future 
for thousands of years, in order to accommodate corporate share-holders’
 profits,” Owe Aku founder Debra White Plume told the Native Sun News.
The bill is entitled: “An Act to toll the Department of Environment and 
Natural Resources administrative rules on underground injection control 
Class III wells and ISL mining until the department obtains primary 
enforcement authority of the comparable federal programs.” The verb 
“toll” means “suspend” in legal language.
Powertech has failed in two attempts to obtain state approval for a 
South Dakota Class III Underground Injection Control permit for the 
uranium mine and processing plant proposed in the Black Hills about 13 
miles northwest of Edgemont, at the Dewey Burdock site in Fall River and
 Custer counties, which adjoin the Pine Ridge Reservation.
Currently, a Class III Underground Injection Control permit is one of 
several state permits required before an ISL mine can begin construction
 or operation in South Dakota. The federal government is in charge of 
other related permits processed by the Nuclear Regulatory Commission.
The purpose of this particular state permit is to ensure protection of 
underground sources of drinking water by evaluating aquifer conditions, 
identifying potential risks to water quality as a result of the 
injection process, as well as establishing protection plans and 
restoration requirements, according to the S.D. Department of 
Environment and Natural Resources.
White Plume warned that the protection could be relaxed if Daugaard 
signs the bill. “It is impossible to clean up an aquifer after ISL 
mining of uranium,” she added. “Will that be his legacy?”
Backers of the bill suggested that continuing to have both state and 
federal regulation of uranium mining implies unwanted duplication of 
effort. But White Plume argued that the deadly radioactive properties of
 uranium, as well as water conservation, warrant maximum oversight.
“Why make it easier for corporations to damage our environment?” she 
said. “It takes generations of human life for radioactivity to slowly 
become less deadly.”
Instead, she said, “Human beings must learn to change their viewpoint of
 energy use. The impacts of environmental degradation far outweigh the 
necessity of making life easier for by providing electricity for any and
 all needs,” she said.
Senators responsible for introducing the bill were Republican Timothy 
Rave (Hanson, McCook, Minnehaha), Republican Corey Brown (Campbell, 
Edmunds, Faulk, Hyde, McPherson, Potter), Republican Bob Gray (Hughes, 
Stanley, Sully), Democrat Jim Hundstad (Brown, Spink), Republican 
Russell Olson (Lake, Miner, Moody, Sanborn), and Republican Bruce 
Rampelberg (Custer, Fall River, Pennington). 
Representatives responsible for introducing it were Republican Val 
Rausch (Brookings, Deuel, Grant, Moody), Republican Justin Cronin 
Campbell, Edmunds, Faulk, Hyde, McPherson, Potter, Walworth), Democrat 
Paul Dennert (Brown, Spink), Republican Brian Gosch (Pennington), 
Republican David Lust (Pennington), Republican Lance Russell (Custer, 
Fall River, Pennington), and Republican Mike Verchio (Custer, Fall 
River, Pennington).
Native American legislators voted with the minority, against the measure.

ISL mining entails pumping brine into an ore body to dissolve solids and
 bring them to the surface, then disposing the waste solution 
underground or on the land. The mining technique already is employed in 
other states, including adjacent Nebraska and Wyoming.

Powertech USA Inc.’s Vice President for Environmental Health and Safety 
Richard Blubaugh had submitted a revised permit application to the state
 early last year, asking that a vertical section of the Inyan Kara 
aquifer be set aside for uranium mining beneath 67 percent of the 
10,850-acre Dewey Burdock Project area.

“This allows recovery of mineral resources and an adequate area to 
safely operate the recovery process without contaminating or threatening
 to contaminate underground sources of drinking water,” Blubaugh said in
 a letter to authorities.

South Dakota Ground Water Quality Program Hydrology Specialist Brian J. 
Walsh rejected the application, claiming it was incomplete, like a 
previous one the company made in 2009.

“In general the application lacks sufficient detail to address 
fundamental questions related to whether Powertech can conduct the 
project in a controlled manner to protect ground water resources,” Walsh
 said in a letter to Blubaugh.

(Talli Nauman is co-director of Journalism to Raise Environmental Awareness. 
Contact her at [email protected])

http://64.38.12.138/News/2011/000904.asp



      

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