Calgary Herald

Coal mine to shut down on Dec. 24

More than 220 out of work during temporary suspension of operations

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People in a remote, small town in northweste­rn Alberta are in shock after learning the Grande Cache Coal undergroun­d mine is to shut down on Christmas Eve.

More than 220 people are to lose their jobs at a time when the community is already trying to deal with about 250 layoffs at the company’s strip mine and coal- cleaning plant earlier this year. “It is devastatin­g for us and we are still in shock as we figure out how this is going to play out,” Grande Cache Mayor Herb Castle said Tuesday.

“It translates to paycheques to workers to families to homeowners to the grocery stores to the gas stations. Everyone is going to be affected here in some way.”

Grande Cache Coal cited deteriorat­ing market conditions for its decision to “temporaril­y suspend” operations on Dec. 24, but noted it does not have a timeline for when production might resume.

The company was taken over in September by Up Energy Developmen­t Group Ltd. after it purchased a controllin­g interest last fall for just $ 2 from Marubeni of Japan and Winsway Coking Coal Holdings Ltd. The two firms had paid $ 1 billion for the mine in 2012 when coal prices were booming.

The metallurgi­cal coal mine is one of the few major businesses in the area. Once the layoffs take effect, the town’s largest employer will be the Grande Cache Institutio­n, a federal medium- security prison. Grande Cache Coal said it is considerin­g building a new mine in the region sometime in the future.

“Our technical team will continue to work on developing mining plans and preparing applicatio­ns for new mining permits and licences,” the company said in an emailed statement. “We will prepare GCC for bigger future operations when the market returns.”

Gary Taje, a spokesman for the United Mine Workers of America Local 2009, said workers have been told the layoffs are indefinite.

He said the company told the union that work on a new mine could perhaps begin in about six months, but he said his members can’t pay a mortgage or feed a family on speculatio­n.

There are no job prospects for coal miners in Western Canada right now, he said, and some of his members are considerin­g applying for jobs at a new coal mine that is to open next year in the Cape Breton area of Nova Scotia.

Castle said the community will do what it can to hang on during the economic downturn. He noted the Grande Cache area has other employers.

 ??  ?? News that Grande Cache Coal, in operation since 2004, will temporaril­y suspend its undergroun­d mining operation later this year is a hard hit for the small town of Grande Cache.
News that Grande Cache Coal, in operation since 2004, will temporaril­y suspend its undergroun­d mining operation later this year is a hard hit for the small town of Grande Cache.

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