The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Bill to ban mining near swamp stalled

Irreversib­le damage to Okefenokee refuge is feared.

- By Emily Jones

A bill to ban mining near the Okefenokee National Wildlife Refuge is still stalled in a state House committee after receiving a longawaite­d hearing last week. The proposed legislatio­n was prompted by a controvers­ial proposal by Twin Pines Minerals to mine for titanium and other minerals near the refuge.

House Bill 71, the Okefenokee Protection Act, has attracted more than 90 sponsors from both sides of the aisle since January. But the proposal has gone nowhere so far this session.

Lawmakers held their first hearing Tuesday on the measure in the House Natural Resources and Environmen­t’s Resource Management Subcommitt­ee. That came a week after Crossover Day, the deadline for bills to pass one chamber if they’re going to succeed this year.

The subcommitt­ee did not vote on the bill.

Supporters and opponents of the bill each spoke for about an hour. Its author, Republican state Rep. Darlene Taylor said the Okefenokee is too important to risk harming.

“It cannot be replaced,” she said of the National Wildlife Refuge. “A miscalcula­tion cannot be corrected. The permanent damage to the entire ecosystem cannot be ruled out or fixed after it happens.”

The bill’s supporters expressed their concern that mining near the Okefenokee could harm the swamp — a place many Georgians love and that also draws tourists from around the world.

Opponents of the bill echoed that love for the Okefenokee. But they said a ban on mining would be an overreach.

“Let me explain why I won’t sign that bill: It walks all over private property rights,” said Republican state Rep. John Corbett, who represents the area where the proposed mine would sit. “We’re taking somebody’s property and not compensati­ng them.”

The bill would not seize or condemn private property, but it would ban one possible use of land along a geologic feature known as Trail Ridge, to the east of the Okefenokee.

The legislatio­n would also not affect the current proposed mine, but it would block future mining permits, including any expansions of the current footprint.

Supporters of the mine say it would bring muchneeded jobs with minimal impact on the swamp.

“There’s no way we’d do anything to harm the swamp,” said Twin Pines president Steve Ingle in a video played during the hearing. “The mine will provide good-paying jobs in Charlton County and the surroundin­g areas.”

But many are skeptical the jobs would really go to locals, or last in the long term. They point out that the swamp itself attracts tourism dollars.

The state Environmen­tal Protection Division is currently accepting public comment on the proposed mine.

A large number of scientists have come out against the mining proposal — more than 40 scientists signed a letter against it, and UGA hydrologis­t Rhett Jackson spoke against the mine at Tuesday’s hearing — because of concerns that disrupting the ground on Trail Ridge would affect the water level in the swamp. Even a slight change in that water level would increase the frequency of drought and the likelihood of wildfires, according to Jackson.

Water modeling expert Sorab Panday of GSI Environmen­tal, a consulting firm working for Twin Pines, pushed back against those concerns, stressing that the mine would only disrupt small areas at any given time. He argued the mine would only stand to change the swamp’s water level by a fraction of an inch, if at all.

Mine opponents have said even a minimal threat to the Okefenokee isn’t worth it.

“It would be a tremendous mistake to take this kind of risk,” said Cliff Oxford, an author and entreprene­ur who grew up in Waycross, near the swamp. “I think Georgia would have a scar, not only in the swamp, but it would be a scar for this state forever.”

Although the subcommitt­ee did not vote on the bill, Taylor remained optimistic. Because this is the first year of the two-year session, bills carry over to next year.

“The bill is still alive,” she said after the hearing. “It … can be heard and addressed next year.” Taylor also proposed a study committee to look into the issue of mining on Trail Ridge.

 ?? HYOSUB SHIN/HYOSUB.SHIN@AJC.COM 2019 ?? This Aug. 6, 2019, photo shows the view from the Owls Roost Tower in Okefenokee National Wildlife Refuge. A proposal to expand mining near the historic swamp has sparked opposition.
HYOSUB SHIN/HYOSUB.SHIN@AJC.COM 2019 This Aug. 6, 2019, photo shows the view from the Owls Roost Tower in Okefenokee National Wildlife Refuge. A proposal to expand mining near the historic swamp has sparked opposition.

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