The Catoosa County News

State opens public comment period on proposed mine near Okefenokee Swamp

- By Dave Williams

The Georgia Environmen­tal Protection Division (EPD) launched a 60-day public comment period Thursday, Jan. 19, on an Alabama-based company’s plan to mine titanium near the Okefenokee Swamp that has drawn intense opposition.

The public comment period coincides with the EPD’S release of a draft mining land use plan submitted by Twin Pines Minerals, which is proposing a mine along Trail Ridge in Charlton County near the southeaste­rn edge of the largest black water swamp in North America.

Jurisdicti­on over permitting for the project shifted back and forth last year between the state and federal government­s.

The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers suspended the EPD’S review of the proposed mine last June. But the federal agency later agreed in an out-of-court settlement with Twin Pines to step aside and let the EPD resume its considerat­ion of the permits, drawing a lawsuit from environmen­tal activists.

On Thursday, Jan. 19, the Southern Environmen­tal Law Center (SELC) urged the project’s opponents to take advantage of the opportunit­y to comment on the plan.

“It is a critical time for the public to weigh in by sending comments opposing the Twin Pines mine that will destroy hundreds of acres of wetlands on the doorstep of the Okefenokee,” said Megan Huynh, a senior attorney in the SELC’S Georgia office.

“Beyond the state permitting process, Twin Pines cannot legally fill these wetlands — which are once again protected by the federal Clean Water Act — without a federal permit.”

“When leading independen­t scientists say the mine will dry up part of the swamp and pollute it with salt … one would expect [Twin Pines’] dangerous project to be rejected out of hand by Georgia’s environmen­tal watchdog,” added Josh Mark, an environmen­tal lawyer who led a successful fight in 1990s against a proposed Dupont mining project at the Okefenokee.

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