The Arizona Republic

Mohave asks feds to relax mine ban

- RON DUNGAN

The Mohave County Board of Supervisor­s asked Secretary of the Interior Ryan Zinke this week to consider lifting a 20-year uranium mining ban on public lands in northern Arizona.The supervisor­s said in letters to Zinke that mining would restore jobs and pump money into the local economy, and asked the Interior Department to consider the status of the ban while he reviews 27 national monuments, including Grand Canyon Parashant.

“This ban took away much needed growth and jobs from our area,” one of the letters said. “We are requesting that your office look into this ban and if necessary start a process with public comments to with--

draw the ban.”

The board endorsed the letter Monday on a unanimous vote. The final version of the letter was mailed Wednesday.

“The jobs pay real well,” County Supervisor Buster Johnson said. Arizona Strip uranium is considered high grade, and the mines could potentiall­y bring millions into the local economy, as well as into Utah.

“You have that kind of money sitting in the ground and you think, somebody’s got to use that,” Johnson said.

The Arizona Strip’s potential for uranium drew thousands of speculator­s to the region until then-Secretary of the Interior Ken Salazar banned new mines while researcher­s looked at their impact on groundwate­r.

Conservati­onists had asked President Barack Obama to create a new national monument, which would essentiall­y have made the ban permanent. Obama declined to name the Arizona monument, however, and conservati­onists have been watching to see how the Trump administra­tion might handle the ban.

“On the one hand it’s not really a surprise,” Roger Clark, of the Grand Canyon Trust, said of the request.

But Clark said problems with water contaminat­ion in the past have shown research is needed on the effects of uranium mining, and that thousands of people spoke in favor of the ban during a long public comment process.

“None of the arguments that the county is making have any bearing in relation to the facts,” he said.

 ?? KAIBAB NATIONAL FOREST ?? Mohave County has asked the U.S. to lift a mining ban near the Grand Canyon.
KAIBAB NATIONAL FOREST Mohave County has asked the U.S. to lift a mining ban near the Grand Canyon.

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