Chattanooga Times Free Press

‘Not now, not ever’

Public tells officials to stop Okefenokee mine

- BY DREW KANN

“There’s just no sense in risking the (Okefenokee) National Wildlife Refuge just to make rich people richer by mining for an extremely non-essential mineral”

— JOSH HOWARD, PRESIDENT OF FRIENDS OF THE OKEFENOKEE NATIONAL WILDLIFE REFUGE

Gail Jane Whatley said she was just 10 years old when she visited Georgia’s Okefenokee Swamp for the first time six decades ago. Taken by the swamp’s “beauty and otherworld­ly serenity,” Whatley said she has been returning ever since.

“As an outdoor enthusiast, I have traveled extensivel­y, visiting many wild places around the world and have found little to compare with the Okefenokee,” she said.

Whatley was one of nearly 100 speakers representi­ng generation­s of visitors to the Okefenokee Swamp who spoke passionate­ly during a virtual public meeting Tuesday night in opposition to an Alabama company’s plan to strip mine at the wetland’s edge. None spoke in favor of the project.

Last month, the Georgia Environmen­tal Protection Division (EPD) released draft permits to Twin Pines Minerals for a 584-acre mine that would extract titanium and other minerals from atop the ancient sand dunes on the swamp’s eastern border, which holds water in the refuge.

The company says its analysis shows the mine will not lower water levels in the swamp, an assessment EPD officials have agreed with. But environmen­talists say the company has failed to prove its case. Prominent scientists, including some with the federal government, have also questioned Georgia regulators’ conclusion­s that the mine won’t damage the fragile ecosystem.

State legislator­s, meanwhile, appear unlikely to advance legislatio­n that might stop Twin Pines from expanding the mine in the future. One bill in the General Assembly, HB 71, has been bottled up in a House committee for three sessions, despite bipartisan support from a majority of the chamber’s lawmakers.

Over three hours, fishermen, paddlers, geologists, educators, parents and grandparen­ts ticked through a myriad of scientific, legal and moral arguments for why EPD should deny the company permits.

Speaking on behalf of the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (FWS), Michael Lusk, the refuge manager for the Okefenokee National Wildlife Refuge, said the agency opposes the mine and does not believe the company’s modeling accurately reflects the impact it will have on the swamp. Twin Pines is seeking a permit to pump 1.4 million gallons of groundwate­r a day from the Floridan Aquifer.

“We need better informatio­n before taking a risk that could impact such an important national treasure,” Lusk said.

Others pointed to a recent letter FWS Acting Regional Director Mike Oetker sent to EPD Director Jeff Cown, asserting federal rights to the water that fills the Okefenokee as a legal rationale for the state to deny the permits. In the Jan. 31 letter, which was first reported by the Associated Press, Oetker said the agency is “concerned that the issuance of a permit at this juncture would not preserve sufficient water” for the refuge.

The board of commission­ers in Charlton County, where much of the swamp is located, has endorsed Twin Pines’ project and the economic boost the company claims it will bring. Twin Pines has promised to create about 400 full-time jobs, with annual salaries averaging around $60,000. That’s significan­tly higher than the county’s median household income of $45,770, according to the U.S. Census Bureau.

But on Tuesday night, several local residents said they oppose the mine.

Josh Howard, president of the nonprofit Friends of the Okefenokee National Wildlife Refuge and a lifelong Charlton County resident, said local elected officials and wealthy landowners who support the mine don’t represent the majority’s view.

“There’s just no sense in risking the (Okefenokee) National Wildlife Refuge just to make rich people richer by mining for an extremely nonessenti­al mineral,” Howard said. Titanium alloys can be used in aircraft and weapons systems, but the element’s most common use is in titanium dioxide, a whitening agent used in toothpaste and other household products.

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