Calhoun Times

Bipartisan group announces opposition to mine near Okefenokee

- By Jill Nolin Georgia Recorder

WAYCROSS -- A bipartisan group of former federal and state officials – including former Secretary of the Interior Bruce Babbitt, who helped block a strip-mining proposal near the Okefenokee Swamp decades ago – have come out in opposition to a plan to mine at the “doorstep” of the wildlife refuge.

The group took out a fullpage ad in the Sunday edition of the Atlanta JournalCon­stitution to prominentl­y publish a letter condemning the proposed mining project. The Okefenokee Protection Alliance, which is a coalition of groups opposing the project, paid for the advertisem­ent.

“There is a time and place for industry, but it’s not on the edge of the Okefenokee,” the ad reads. “The state should engage national and local leaders in a stakeholde­r effort and provide the direction and leadership to permanentl­y end the threat of mining near the Okefenokee National Wildlife Refuge.

“If a wild and pristine Okefenokee is lost, future generation­s will not forgive us,” the ad continued.

The group pointed to the failed mining proposal from the 1990s, which chemical giant DuPont abandoned after Babbitt, who served under Democratic President Bill Clinton, Gov. Zell Miller, a conservati­ve Democrat, and others slammed the company’s plan to strip mine along the eastern ridge bordering the largest U.S. wildlife refuge east of the Mississipp­i River.

Former Secretary of the Treasury, Henry Paulson Jr., who served under President George W. Bush, and directors of the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service under Presidents Nixon, Ford and Carter also signed onto the letter.

Lonice Barrett, a former commission­er of the state Department of Natural Resources under Democratic governors Miller and Roy Barnes and Republican Gov. Sonny Perdue, and Noel Holcomb, who served as commission­er under Perdue, also backed the message.

Alabama-based Twin Pines Minerals plans to mine for titanium dioxide along the edge of the wildlife refuge, a proposal that has won over supporters with its promise of new jobs in a rural corner of the state.

Twin Pines has submitted applicatio­ns for permits, and the state Environmen­tal Protection Division, which is housed within the Department of Natural Resources, last week requested more informatio­n from Twin Pines.

The company wants to start out by conducting a 740-acre mining demonstrat­ion along Trail Ridge, which is a hydrologic­al divide between the swamp and St. Marys River. But it has signaled it plans to grow its footprint, although the state has said expansion would require new permits.

Environmen­talists and others have panned the proposal as a needless threat to a prized natural wonder that is home to more than 600 plant species as well as rare animals like indigo snakes, gopher tortoises and wood storks – features that have made the gator-filled area a tourist destinatio­n for wildlife lovers.

The group of former officials also raised concerns about the potential impact a mine could have on tourism should water levels drop as result of the mining, damaging the ecosystem.

“With as many as 700,000 annual visits, the refuge supports over 750 local jobs and generates $64 million for local communitie­s per year. Risking the continued growth of Georgia’s recreation­al tourism economy to mine titanium dioxide — a product commonly used to whiten household paint — defies common sense,” the opposing group wrote in the ad.

A group of faith leaders, including dozens of Christian ministers, rabbis and imams, also recently sent a letter to Charlton County commission­ers, the state’s U.S. senators and Gov. Brian Kemp urging them to reject the project. The letter refers to the Okefenokee Swamp as “a uniquely holy and sacred space.”

 ?? Photo Contribute­d by Joy Campbell via Georgia recorder/Townnews.com Content exchange ?? Visitors canoe along the Okefenokee Swamp in south Georgia near the Florida state line.
Photo Contribute­d by Joy Campbell via Georgia recorder/Townnews.com Content exchange Visitors canoe along the Okefenokee Swamp in south Georgia near the Florida state line.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States