The Trentonian (Trenton, NJ)

Tribes, environmen­talists battle copper mine in Arizona

- By Anita Snow

SONOITA, ARIZ. >> Scenic State Highway 83 gently curves through southeaste­rn Arizona’s wine country, past waves of blond grass dotted with orange-tipped ocotillo plants before the dark Santa Rita Mountains loom into view.

The Milepost 44 pullout offers a panorama of the range in the Coronado National Forest where a Canadian firm wants to carve out a massive copper mine near Tucson. The $1.9 billion Rosemont Mine, at a half-mile deep and a mile wide, would sprawl across federal, state and private land, leaving a waste pile the height of skyscraper.

Native American tribes and environmen­tal groups have sued to stop Hudbay Minerals Inc. of Toronto, arguing its mine could desecrate sacred, ancestral lands and dry up wells and waterways while ravaging habitat for endangered jaguar and other species. Last week, they asked a federal judge to prevent the project from proceeding until the lawsuits are decided.

“I pray to our Creator every morning that things will work out,” said Austin Nunez, chairman of the Tohono O’odham’s San Xavier District, a piece of tribal land just south of Tucson. “Our ancestors’ remains are there, along with archaeolog­ical sites, including a ball court. We cannot risk any further harm to our ancestral heritage.”

The Tucson and state chambers of commerce are Rosemont cheerleade­rs, noting the project will immediatel­y create 500 jobs and pour $16 billion into the local economy over 20 years.

The fight comes amid a larger battle across the West over using public lands for mining.

The Trump administra­tion in late 2017 slashed about 85% of Utah’s Bear Ears National Monument to allow for mining claims. New Mexico tribal leaders have pressured U.S. officials to ban oil and gas exploratio­n near the remnants of an ancient Pueblo civilizati­on at Chaco Culture National Historical Park. And conservati­onists fret over plans to reopen a gold mine in California’s Castle Mountains National Monument, home to ancient rock art and a Joshua tree forest.

“You could go to virtually every state and find a push by big corporatio­ns to grab resources before it’s too late,” said Richard White, a historian of the American West at Stanford University. “It’s a resurrecti­on of these extractive industries that were so much a part of the Old West.”

Arizona produces about two-thirds of U.S. copper for wiring and other electronic­s, generating about $5.38 billion in 2017, according to the Arizona Mining Associatio­n. “Mining in Arizona represents 60,000 jobs,” said Amber Smith, president and CEO of the Tucson Metro Chamber of Commerce. She is confident Hudbay will mitigate any potential problems by building extra roadways and employing technology to recycle water used in the mining process.

Arizona Chamber of Commerce and Industry spokesman Garrick Taylor said Rosemont would be among the biggest constructi­on projects in Arizona history. “Its impacts will be measured in the billions of dollars,” he said.

Responding to questions in writing, Hudbay told The Associated Press that delaying the project would result in “significan­t financial costs” and “we’re proposing in the short term to move forward on aspects that don’t fall under the litigation.”

The company said the current project was the result of a dozen years of review and “it’s designed intelligen­tly and in accordance with public and policy priorities.” It has told Tucson officials the mine would not harm water quality or affect supplies.

Still, environmen­talists worry about the impacts on the Santa Rita Mountains, where white-tailed deer and black bear, bobcats and the occasional cougar roam among the Apache pines and Douglas firs. Numerous kinds of hummingbir­ds and woodland warblers fly through Madera Canyon, among the world’s premier bird-watching spots.

Randy Serraglio, a conservati­on advocate with the Tucson-based Center for Biological Diversity, predicted ore trucks would rumble down a scenic highway built in 1927 that stretches some 50 miles (80 kilometers) from Interstate 10 to the tourist hotspot of Sonoita.

 ?? ANITA SNOW — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? In this photo taken Monday a sign for Sonoita stands in the heart of southeaste­rn Arizona where owners of wineries and other small tourism operations worry that the Rosemont Copper Mine proposed to be built in the nearby Santa Rita Mountains could harm their businesses with mining trucks rumbling down scenic state highway 83 that runs past the range. Native American tribes are seeking an injunction to halt work on the copper mine project they say will desecrate burial and other sacred sites in the Santa Rita Mountains of southeaste­rn Arizona.
ANITA SNOW — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS In this photo taken Monday a sign for Sonoita stands in the heart of southeaste­rn Arizona where owners of wineries and other small tourism operations worry that the Rosemont Copper Mine proposed to be built in the nearby Santa Rita Mountains could harm their businesses with mining trucks rumbling down scenic state highway 83 that runs past the range. Native American tribes are seeking an injunction to halt work on the copper mine project they say will desecrate burial and other sacred sites in the Santa Rita Mountains of southeaste­rn Arizona.

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