Tuesday, June 26, 2018

Mining Claims Staked on Land Trump Cut From Monument Protection


At least 20 New Mining Claims totaling about 460 Acres have been Staked on Land President Trump Removed from National Monument Protection late last year. The Claims indicate there is Interest in Extracting Minerals from Lands that until recently were Off Limits to such Development.

Trump Signed a pair of Proclamations late last year Reducing the size of the 1.35-Million-Acre Bears Ears National Monument by 85% and the 1.87-Million-Acre Grand Staircase-Escalante National Monument by roughly 50%. It was the Largest Reduction of National Monuments in History, with more than 2 Million Acres losing Protections. Prohibitions on New Hard-Rock Mining Claims in those now Unprotected Areas were lifted in Early February.

Since then, 17 Claims have been Staked on parts of Grand Staircase-Escalante, according to Bureau of Land Management (BLM) Records. Three more have been located within the Original Boundary of Bears Ears.

A Canadian Copper and Silver Mining firm, Glacier Lake Resources Inc., has entered into an Agreement to purchase Mineral Rights to extract Copper, Cobalt, and other Minerals on roughly 200 Acres of Land at the former Colt Mesa Mine within the original boundary of Grand Staircase-Escalante. A Total of 10 Claims, each 20 Acres, were Staked March 29th by Utah Residents Dan and Nicholas Proctor, according to Public records.

The Colt Mesa Deposit, about 35 Miles Southeast of Boulder, Utah, was discovered in 1968, and a Mine operated there in the early 1970s. Glacier Lake says it Plans to begin Surface Exploration this Summer and request Drilling Permits. Company President and CEO Saf Dhillon said “the target is a high-value, underground scenario with modest disturbance.”

A claim is just the First Step a Prospector must take to Mine Public Land. The Claim only gets you Rights to the Minerals Underground. Permits are Required for any Significant Development.

A Mineral Company and several Individuals have also Staked at least 10 other Claims on previously Protected Land. On Feb. 2nd, the day portions of both Monuments Opened to New Claims for Mineral Rights, Four Members of the Lamoreaux Family, which owns a Small Mineral Company called Alpine Gems LLC, staked an 80-Acre Claim near Butler Valley, Southeast of Cannonville. And on May 9th, Alpine Gems Staked Three 20-Acre Claims in that same area.

Last year, the Utah Board of Oil, Gas and Mining awarded Alpine Gems an Earth Day Award for Reclaiming an Abandoned 13-Acre Quarry in Butler Valley. The Awards are given out to Companies that go “beyond what is required by regulation to protect the environment while responsibly developing Utah’s natural resources,” the Salt Lake Tribune reported at the time.

John and Sky Worthen, of Salt Lake City, staked Three Mining Claims on former Grand Staircase-Escalante Monument land over a Three-Day Period in Mid-May. Two are located East of Reese Canyon. The Third is just South of the Town of Escalante. The Worthens do not appear to be Affiliated with any Mining Company.

There’s been less interest in Prospecting areas carved from Bears Ears. In fact, the First New Claim there came from Two Public Land Activists, Morgan Sjogren and Michael Versteeg. It was an Experiment, they wrote in a Blog post on the website of Outdoor Retailer REI, to see whether a Claim could serve as “an unusual public lands preservation tactic.” Only Two other Claims have been Staked within the Original Bears Ears Boundary. They were Staked March 13th by Ronald and Brooks Hammond of Dallas in an area West of Monticello, Utah.

Any Exploration that will Disturbs more than 5 Acres requires a Claimant to File a Plan of Operations with BLM, a move that Initiates an Environmental Review. To date, BLM has Not Received a Plan of Operations for any Claim staked on Land removed from Grand Staircase-Escalante or Bears Ears, including those at the Colt Mesa Deposit.










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