The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Okefenokee

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The proposed mine could pose “substantia­l risks” to the swamp, including its ability to hold water, the Fish and Wildlife Service said in February 2019.

mination that the Corps did not have jurisdicti­on could be invalidate­d because it was made under a rule that was found to be unlawful.

“I think that it is unclear how the Corps will respond to the court’s decision, but we’re hopeful that it will take that decision as a guide and begin protecting wetlands that we’re seeing in jeopardy at Okefenokee,” said Moser, who is handling a federal lawsuit in South Carolina filed by conservati­on groups challengin­g the Trump rule.

Steve Ingle, president of Twin Pines, said Tuesday in an emailed statement that the ruling does not change the company’s plans, adding that it “will continue to adhere to the requiremen­ts of the regulatory agencies that have review responsibi­lities relative to our permit applicatio­ns now and in the future.”

The Trump rule, finalized last year, had long been sought by builders, oil and gas developers, farmers and others who complained about federal overreach that they said stretched into gullies, creeks and ravines on farmland and other private property. Environmen­tal groups and other opponents said it allowed businesses to dump pollutants into unprotecte­d waterways and fill in some wetlands, threatenin­g downstream public water supplies and harming wildlife.

U.S. District Judge Rosemary Marquez wrote in her order that the rule disregards establishe­d science and the advice of government experts in excluding smaller waterways from protection. It fails to look closely enough at the effect of those small waterways on larger waterways, she wrote.

The Okefenokee National Wildlife Refuge covers nearly 630 square miles (1,630 square kilometers) and is home to alligators, bald eagles and other protected species. Roughly 600,000 visitors flock to the swamp each year to see its cypress forests and flooded prairies, according to the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, which manages the refuge.

The proposed mine could pose “substantia­l risks” to the swamp, including its ability to hold water, the Fish and Wildlife Service said in February 2019. Some impacts “may not be able to be reversed, repaired, or mitigated for.”

Ingle maintains that his company can mine for titanium and other minerals “without impacting the Okefenokee Swamp.”

Billy Birdwell, a spokespers­on for the Army Corps office in Savannah, said the judge’s ruling “is much too new for an evaluation of how it will impact our actions.” He also noted that the ruling could be appealed.

Marquez’s ruling Monday came in a challenge brought by six Native American tribes, who said the Trump rule defied the law’s environmen­tal focus. If an appeal is filed, her ruling could be put on hold while the appeals process plays out.

Without federal oversight, only the Georgia Environmen­tal Protection Division has permitting oversight over the proposed Twin Pines mine. Those reviews are underway, and agency spokespers­on Kevin Chambers said the ruling does not affect state permit applicatio­ns.

Moser said the state protection­s are limited and “have not ever been and will never be sufficient to protect Georgia’s wetlands.” For that reason, she said, it’s important that President Joe Biden’s administra­tion move quickly to put strong clean water protection­s in place.

The Environmen­tal Protection Agency is already working on repealing the Trump-era rule and issuing new regulation­s defining which waterways are federally protected.

But those new measures alone probably would not affect the Georgia mine project because decisions on whether projects need Clean Water Act permits last for five years, unless there’s a specific reason to revisit a particular project. That’s why Monday’s ruling is so important to environmen­tal groups.

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