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Some criticize Gore's profits from toxic mining
WBIR.com ^ | 3/18/07 | BILL THEOBALD

Posted on 03/18/2007 1:33:55 PM PDT by LdSentinal

CARTHAGE, Tenn. - Al Gore has profited from zinc mining that has released millions of pounds of potentially toxic substances near his farmstead, but there is no evidence the mine has caused serious damage to the environment in the area or threatened the health of his neighbors.

Two massive white mountains of leftover rock waste are evidence of three decades of mining that earned Gore more than $500,000 in royalty payments for the mineral rights to his property.

New owners plan to start mining again later this year, after nearly four years of inactivity. In addition to bringing 250 much-needed jobs to rural Middle Tennessee, mine owners will resume paying royalties to some residents who, like Gore, own land adjacent to the mine and lease access to the zinc under their property.

Gore has yet to be approached by the new owner, Strategic Resource Acquisition, said his spokeswoman Kalee Kreider, and he and wife, Tipper, have not decided whether they will renew their lease. It was terminated when the mine closed in 2003.

Last week, Gore sent a letter asking the company to work with Earthworks, a national environmental group, to make sure the operation doesn't damage the environment.

"We would like for you to engage with us in a process to ensure that the mine becomes a global example of environmental best practices," Gore wrote.

Victor Wyprysky, the company's president and chief executive officer, did not respond to requests for comment on the letter.

The letter was sent the week after The Tennessean's Washington bureau posed questions to the former vice president about his involvement with the mine.

Previous mine owners released toxic substances into waterways above the allowable levels several times in the eight years before the mine closed.

But state regulators consider those permit violations minor, and monitoring reports provide a clean bill of health for the surface water in the area. Community leaders and health officials recall no health problems ever associated with the mining.

But now that the mine is reopening and Gore's status as an environmentalist has grown, some of Gore's neighbors see a conflict between the mining and his moral call for environmental activism.

"Mining is not exactly synonymous with being green, is it?" said John Mullins, who lives in nearby Cookeville. A conservative, Mullins welcomes the resumption of mining for the benefits it will bring the community. But he says Gore's view that global warming is a certainty is arrogant and that by being connected to mining, Gore is not "walking the walk."

At the same time, the Caney Fork Watershed Association, which works to conserve and improve the waterways near the mine, has heard no concerns from its members about the mine's reopening.

"The operation has a record of vigilance in not operating to harm the environment, and we certainly hope that the renewed operation will maintain this record," John Harwood, with the association, said in a written response to questions. "It is important that this waste material . be permanently secured from causing environmental contamination."

And Earthworks president and chief executive Stephen D'Esposito said Gore's involvement with mining doesn't bother him "in any way, shape or form." "We are going to have mining. The question is doing it in the right place and the right way," said D'Esposito, who has not studied the Carthage mines.

Gore's mining history

Al Gore Jr.'s involvement in mining can be traced to Sept. 22, 1973.

Former U.S. Sen. Albert Gore Sr. bought about 88 acres along the Caney Fork River from Occidental Minerals, a subsidiary of Occidental Petroleum, for $160,000. Included in the deal was the subsurface area. The rights to the minerals below ground were then leased back to Occidental.

On the same day, Gore Sr. sold the land and subsurface area to his 25-year-old son and daughter-in-law for $140,000. The mineral lease to Occidental was put in their names.

Kreider said the terms of the 30-year agreement provided the Gores "no legal recourse" even if they had wanted to cancel it, Kreider said.

The Gores, she said, would not comment on whether they tried to pursue legal action to void the lease. "There is a certain zone of privacy once people go into private life."

Gore received $20,000 a year for 27 years and $10,000 a year for three years, making a total of $570,000 in lease payments. Kreider said the Gores never considered selling the land.

She said the lease has to be viewed in a "1973 context, not a 2007 context."

"There was a different environmental sensibility about all sorts of things," she said.

Emission from the mine

The mine is a complex of several interconnected sites known as the Gordonsville Mine and Mill, the Cumberland Mine and the Elmwood Mine, which is the closest to Gore's property. In addition, previous mine owners operated a refining plant in Clarksville.

Through the years, mining operations expanded as the facilities went through several ownership and name changes. Horizontal shafts, called drifts, extend under the Gore property, Kreider said, although the Gores don't know their number and location.

By 1983, the Elmwood-Gordonsville complex was the largest zinc-producing mine in the country and Tennessee the largest zinc-producing state. The Elmwood-Gordonsville mine kept the title every year until 1990, except for 1984.

Zinc is used primarily to protect steel from corrosion. Other metals released during the mining process - such as lead, mercury and copper - are necessary to a modern economy. But human exposure to high levels of these metals can cause health problems.

The Environmental Protection Agency began reporting toxic releases from metal mining operations for the first time in 1998. The mining industry objected to being included in the reports because of the sheer size of the emission numbers and the fact that much of what is reported is the naturally occurring substance - in this case zinc - that is being mined.

In the five-year period from 1998 to 2003, before the mines were shuttered, 16.6 million pounds of toxic substances were released into the air, water and land at the Gordonsville site, according to the EPA's Toxic Release Inventory data, and 2.6 million pounds were released at the Cumberland site. Most of that was the zinc pulled from ground during mining.

In its last year of full operation in 2002, the Gordonsville-Cumberland mines ranked 22nd among all metal mining operations in the U.S., with about 4.1 million pounds of toxic releases. The top releasing mine, Red Dog Mine in Alaska, emitted about 482 million pounds that year. In 2002, Smith County ranked 39th out of more than 3,000 U.S. counties for lead compound releases and 21st for cadmium releases, according to tallies by Scorecard, a Web site run by environmentalists that compiles federal data.

Even Gore noted in his letter that, according to Scorecard, "pollution releases from the mine in 2002 placed it among the 'dirtiest/worst facilities' in the U.S."

How much was released in the previous quarter century when the mines were in their heyday is unknown.

The Clarksville processing plant emitted more than 26 million pounds of pollutants in 2004, ranking Montgomery County 21st among all U.S. counties for the amount of toxic releases discharged into the environment.

Water discharge violations

While all the sites have systems in place to protect nearby rivers and streams, the state discharge permit records for the Carthage area mines show several examples in recent years of releases of toxic substances into waterways above the allowable levels set under the federal Clean Water Act. The majority of samples taken found acceptable levels of the various substances being tested.

Violations cited were:

. Gordonsville Mine and Mill. Sampling at one site where the mine discharges into a tributary of the Caney Fork River found 23 violations of the limit on zinc levels out of 30 samples taken between October 1995 and August 2000, according to permit documents. Nineteen of those readings above permit limits occurred between December 1995 and March 1997 and caused the Tennessee Department of Environment and Conservation to issue three notices of violation to Savage Zinc Inc., the mine owner then.

Because the company worked to correct the problem, state officials said the department did not take tougher action such as a fine. The other four violations, between January 1998 and August 2000, were considered minor, officials said. Two other notices of violation were issued in 1997 for zinc limit violations at a nearby discharge point.

Two other zinc violations were found in samples in 2003; one for high levels of solids that year and in 2004; and one for copper in a 2003 sample.

. Elmwood Mine. State inspectors found a permit violation in January 2000 that was caused when a valve failure on a pipe carrying lime slurry from the Gordonsville mine caused it to bypass a treatment structure and empty into a tributary of the Caney Fork. Higher than permitted zinc levels were found in one sample each in 2000 and 2001.

. Cumberland Mine. Violations of the solids levels were found twice in 2002, and one sample that year contained excessive zinc.

"We think those violations (are) considered minor," said Paul Schmierbach, environmental program manager for the state's Division of Water Pollution Control.

The most recent permit for the Clarksville plant includes no permit violations. But very high zinc levels were found in many samples taken from 2001 to 2005 at two sites where storm water flowed into a tributary of the Cumberland River. The Clarksville permit did not set limits for storm water runoff so those were not counted as violations.

Water quality OK, for now

Test samples taken of the surface water in the Caney Fork and Cumberland rivers near the mine sites in recent years show no readings of dangerous substances above the legal limits.

"I don't see anything here that indicates a water quality issue," said Greg Denton, manager of the planning and standards section in the Division of Water Pollution Control, after reviewing testing data compiled by The Tennessean's Washington bureau.

And state and county health officials, along with community leaders, can recall no reports of unusual health problems in the area.

At the same time, the state counts the two water systems in Smith County that draw from the Caney Fork and Cumberland downstream from the mines as highly susceptible for contamination, according to the Tennessee Source Water Assessment Report issued in August 2003, the most recent report done.

That is in part because of the mines and other facilities that discharge into the rivers, according to the report. The report scored nearly half of the state's 457 community water sources as having "high susceptibility" for contamination.

In addition, state environmental officials said in a 2006 report that Tennessee needs a more accurate picture of the health of its underground water supply.

According to the report, the state:

. Has not done a systematic statewide study of its aquifers.

. Requires that public water systems sample only the treated water they provide to customers, not raw ground water samples.

. Does not require routine sampling of private wells and springs.

Smith Utility District, one of the two water treatment plants in the area, draws from the Caney Fork, which Gore used as a backdrop in his Oscar-winning documentary An Inconvenient Truth. The other, Carthage Water System, takes its water from the Cumberland.

Only a few violations of safe drinking water regulations have been found in recent years during tests at the Smith, Carthage and other water systems in the area. Most are monitoring violations, and the only health-related ones are for high levels of the chemicals used to disinfect the water.

Marcus Kemp, plant and distribution superintendent for the Smith Utility District plant, said he never had problems with discharges from the mines during his 28 years with the district, nor has Don Taylor, who runs the Carthage water plant.

Still, Kemp is concerned about what will happen when the new owners pump out the water that has filled the mine since it was shut down.

"That is going to be a different issue," Kemp said of the restart of mining. "Water went into all the cracks and crevices."

Mining set to restart

Community leaders see no problem with Gore, or the hundreds of other landowners in the area, reaping the benefits of owning property rich in zinc. In 2002, a previous mine owner held 355 leases in the area, totaling 16,339 acres, or more than 25.5 square miles.

"I don't think he would want to stand in the way of economic development of a community," said Michael Nesbitt, mayor of Smith County, where the mines are located.

Nesbitt and others are excited about the jobs the mine will create for some of the county's nearly 19,000 people whose per capita personal income was below the state's in 2003, the most recent county data available.

Strategic Resource Acquisition, the Canadian company that will operate under the name Mid-Tennessee Zinc, estimates it will take a year to reactivate the mines. Mining itself should begin in the third quarter of this year, said Wyprysky, the CEO. The mill should begin putting out ore ready for shipping to refining plants in the first quarter of 2008.

In an interview prior to Gore's letter being sent, Wyprysky declined a request for a tour of the mining sites and declined to comment on their connection to Gore. He said the company was still in the process of negotiating lease agreements with the surrounding property owners.

The Gores won't speculate on whether they will refuse to renew their lease if the new owners don't follow their request to work with the environmental group, Kreider said. They do plan, she said, to encourage their neighbors to join their effort.

Also to be decided is what to do about the leases on two parcels owned by Albert Gore Sr., which Gore eventually will inherit when his parents' estates are settled.

The company said the mine already has produced 2.6 billion pounds of zinc metal, and still contains 26 million tons of zinc material containing 3.25 percent zinc.

That means that mining there could continue for years, creating an ongoing environmental threat to Gore and his neighbors in the rolling hills of Middle Tennessee.

"The real protection," said Harwood of the Caney Fork Watershed Association, "lies in the good faith and diligence of the mine operators, and of the state regulators."


TOPICS: Culture/Society; News/Current Events; Political Humor/Cartoons; Politics/Elections; US: Tennessee
KEYWORDS: 5mansions; biggayal; carbonfootprint; carbonoffsets; convenientlie; doasisaynotasido; envirowacko; fat; fatalbert; fatso; globalwarming; gore; hypocrites; manbearpig; phatal; scam; sheeple; soreloserman; stripmining; therichgetricher; treehuggers; twofaced

1 posted on 03/18/2007 1:34:10 PM PDT by LdSentinal
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To: LdSentinal

Al Gore became obessessed with Global Warming because he's still upset over the 2000 Election. Al Gore is the biggest hypocrite out there.


2 posted on 03/18/2007 1:37:55 PM PDT by Ptarmigan (Ptarmigans will rise again!)
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To: LdSentinal; dcnd9; fishhound; rbosque; B-Chan; Froufrou; GlasstotheArson; Trainer; Mrs. Frogjerk; ..
+

Freep-mail me to get on or off my pro-life and Catholic Ping List:

Add me / Remove me

Please ping me to all note-worthy Pro-Life or Catholic threads, or other threads of interest.

3 posted on 03/18/2007 1:41:39 PM PDT by narses ("Freedom is about authority." - Rudolph Giuliani)
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To: LdSentinal
I'm sure that Algore will have the zinc mine shut down for the good of the environment. Right.
4 posted on 03/18/2007 1:41:55 PM PDT by oyez (In politics perception is reality.)
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To: oyez

AlGore is the biggest hypocrite on the american political scene.


5 posted on 03/18/2007 1:47:22 PM PDT by OldCorps
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To: oyez

They toss that rag,The Tennessean (Pravda on the Cumberland) every Sun. for subscribing to our local
county paper.

I was stunned to see this article on their front
page. Trying to knock out Hitlery`s rivals probably.

I still get a warm fuzzy feeling knowing Gore lost Tn.


6 posted on 03/18/2007 1:55:32 PM PDT by 31M20RedDevil
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To: OldCorps

That's liberalism in a nut shell.


7 posted on 03/18/2007 1:59:44 PM PDT by ShandaLear (When somethng is true, one need not lie to prove it.)
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To: OldCorps
Gore defines "hypocrisy". Maybe Webster's will one day describe being "Gorish" as being a "supreme narcissist blinded by his own hypocrisy and self importance with his image protected by extreme elements of liberal society". There is a good article on this subject(Gore's Zinc Mine Scandal) in today's USA Today, but it can't be posted on Free Republic. Search "Gore".
8 posted on 03/18/2007 2:00:43 PM PDT by Sleeping Freeper
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To: 31M20RedDevil
I still get a warm fuzzy feeling knowing Gore lost Tn.

I have a lot of respect for the voters of Tennessee for that one also.

9 posted on 03/18/2007 2:11:52 PM PDT by kidd
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To: LdSentinal
Image hosted by Photobucket.com offsets, Offsets... i, i, i bought OFFSETS damn it!!!
10 posted on 03/18/2007 2:12:58 PM PDT by Chode (American Hedonist ©®)
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To: 31M20RedDevil; kidd
Tennessee voters have been burned so many times in the past by their elected officials, that they are beginning to show some true judgment. I hope they get even better.
11 posted on 03/18/2007 2:25:50 PM PDT by oyez (In politics perception is reality.)
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To: LdSentinal; Killing Time; Beowulf; Mr. Peabody; RW_Whacko; honolulugal; gruffwolf; BlessedBeGod; ...

FReepmail me to get on or off


Click on POGW graphic for full GW rundown

Ping me if you find one I've missed.


..bit of a re-hash.
12 posted on 03/18/2007 2:43:08 PM PDT by xcamel (Press to Test, Release to Detonate)
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To: LdSentinal
But state regulators consider those permit violations minor, and monitoring reports provide a clean bill of health for the surface water in the area. Community leaders and health officials recall no health problems ever associated with the mining.

Weasel words abound. What about the underground waters? What about the stream beds? What is the nature of the pollutants and the likelihood that stream bed contamination is the expected outcome? If that is true then a statement about the "surface waters" is disingenuous at best and criminal at worst. And puleeeeez, "recall no health problems?" Hillary speak! There probably were problems but they're pulling a memory lapse out of their, er, hat.

13 posted on 03/18/2007 2:54:38 PM PDT by NonValueAdded (Prevent Glo-Ball Warming ... turn out the sun when not in use)
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To: LdSentinal

The scope of Gore's hypocrisy is just being revealed. I'm sure he has more lucrative investments in some of the most polluting industries on the planet.


14 posted on 03/18/2007 3:03:28 PM PDT by The Great RJ ("Mir we bleiwen wat mir sin" or "We want to remain what we are." ..Luxembourg motto)
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To: LdSentinal
More inconvenient truth, like the fact that Gore's house uses 20X the electricity as the average American household. What a hypocrite.
15 posted on 03/18/2007 3:52:56 PM PDT by Paladin2 (Islam is the religion of violins, NOT peas.)
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To: LdSentinal
Al Gore has profited from zinc mining that has released millions of pounds of potentially toxic substances near his farmstead, but there is no evidence the mine has caused serious damage to the environment in the area or threatened the health of his neighbors.

Algore is an elitist, and THIS is exactly how elitists expect to live. They think they are above all of us. Rules and regulations only apply to the lower class of people. Get used to it. This is a little glimpse into the NWO that the globalists have planned out for us!

16 posted on 03/18/2007 7:18:44 PM PDT by NRA2BFree (Duncan Hunter for President '08 - A genuine "Reagan Republican" for America!)
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To: LdSentinal
"Some criticize Gore's profits from toxic mining"

But NOT US~!! because we are the LIBERAL MEDIA and he is a DEMOCRAP.

But we will endlessly hound W about firing lawyers he had a perfect legal right to fire...and we'll also demand criminal incvestigations into this non-crime....

because WE ARE THE LIBERAL MEDIA~!! And we'll take it on our knees for DEMOCRAPS

17 posted on 03/21/2007 1:07:27 PM PDT by Mr. K (Some days even my lucky rocketship underpants don't help)
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