Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

Cleanup efforts of abandoned mines could get a big boost

- By Michael Phillis

ST. LOUIS — Thousands of abandoned coal mines in the U.S. have been polluting rivers and streams for decades, in some cases harming fish and contaminat­ing drinking water. Now efforts to finally clean up the sites could soon get a big boost.

Tucked into the Senatepass­ed infrastruc­ture bill is $11.3 billion for the cleanup of defunct coal mines to be distribute­d over 15 years — money experts say would go a long way toward rehabilita­ting the sites that date back to before 1977. Cleanup efforts are currently funded by fees from coal mining companies, but that money has fallen far short of what’s needed to fix the problems.

“The next 15 years — if this passes — is literally a historic advancemen­t in mine reclamatio­n,” said Eric Dixon, a research fellow at the Ohio River Valley Institute.

In the past 40 years, only about a quarter of the damage has been cleaned up, he said.

Abandoned coal mines are concentrat­ed along the Appalachia­n Mountains, with clusters also dotting the Midwest and Rocky Mountains. The sites can clog rivers with debris or pollute streams with harmful discharges caused by minerals exposed from mining, reducing fish population­s and turning water brick red. Safety is another issue since people can topple into mineshafts and debris can fall from the mine’s high walls.

Fees from companies to clean up the sites are collected under the Surface Mining and Reclamatio­n Act of 1977, which sought to remedy the history of unregulate­d coal production that left abandoned mines around the country. Companies are now regulated so that sites are cleaned up once mining stops.

Among the states that need significan­t funding for mine cleanups are Kentucky, Ohio and West Virginia, according to the Interior Department.

Pennsylvan­ia — which needs the most funding in the country — has 5,500 miles of streams with impaired water quality due to runoff from abandoned mines, according to state officials.

The problem has persisted for so long that some Pennsylvan­ia residents are surprised when red streams in their backyard are finally cleaned up and change color, said John Stefanko of the Office of Active and Abandoned Mine Operations in Pennsylvan­ia.

Another worry is property damage. In 2019, for example, a collapsed tunnel entrance blocked water from escaping an abandoned mine in Pennsylvan­ia’s Schuylkill County. State officials worried a rupture and deluge could threaten the houses downstream. Workers were able to fix the blocked tunnel.

The federal program that funds cleanups categorize­s sites by priority, and those that pose a safety hazard to humans are bumped to the top of the list. Priority rankings can also rise if drinking water is affected. A site may be a lower priority if it only poses an environmen­tal threat.

 ?? TOM HENDERSON/MONTANA DEPARTMENT OF ENVIRONMEN­TAL QUALITY ?? Belt Creek in Montana is being polluted by an old coal mine, turning the water a rusty color.
TOM HENDERSON/MONTANA DEPARTMENT OF ENVIRONMEN­TAL QUALITY Belt Creek in Montana is being polluted by an old coal mine, turning the water a rusty color.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States