© 2024 KGOU
News and Music for Oklahoma
Play Live Radio
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
0:00 0:00
Available On Air Stations

Lawmakers Join Landowners Who Think Getting A Mining Permit Is Too Easy

Johnston County Landowner Clyde Runyon just outside a limestone mining operation near Mill Creek, Okla.
Logan Layden
/
StateImpact Oklahoma

Limestone and sand miners are getting a lot of attention lately. The amount of groundwater they can displace from the Arbuckle-Simpson Aquifer was recently capped, and the state House could authorize a new tax on the industry.

That’s not all. The Oklahoma Department of Mines has an unusual permitting process some landowners say leaves them feeling helpless when a new mine is proposed, and they want that process changed.

“It’s really screwed up,” Citizens for the Protection of the Arbuckle-Simpson Aquifer President Amy Ford says.

First, an application to mine is made. Then it’s time for informal conferences. In an email, Department of Mines Minerals Division Director Bret Sholar says the informal conference opens communication between the mining company and public without the expense of a legal proceeding. But Ford says it’s mostly just for show.

“There’s no admission of evidence, anything,” Ford says. “It’s just kind of a — somebody from the Department of Mines, or sometimes a hearing examiner, just kind of sits in there and listens to everybody.”

After the informal conferences, the Department of Mines issues a permit.

“Those that have participated in the informal conference are notified of this and allowed to file a request for a formal hearing,” Ford says.

So the first formal public hearing doesn’t happen until after a permit is issued. For most agencies, the opposite is true.

“You’re climbing an uphill battle,” Ford says.

U.S. Silica's sand processing plant north of Mill Creek, Okla.
Credit Logan Layden / StateImpact Oklahoma
/
StateImpact Oklahoma
U.S. Silica's sand processing plant north of Mill Creek, Okla.

Senate Bill 1184, by State Senator Susan Paddack, would make the informal conferences formal hearings, with evidence and testimony, before a permit is issued. The bill’s future is uncertain, but it was passed unanimously by the Energy Committee, and awaits more action by the full Senate.

Local rancher Clyde Runyon says he fought most of the mines in this area — in vain — hopes the formal hearings will help slow the permitting process down at least.

“See, we’ve got all these mines. It starts up here. You have the new silica plant five miles north of Mill Creek. Then you got Martin-Marietta here. Then you’ve got another silica plant half a mile north of Mill Creek,” Runyon says.

The signs of mining are clear from the highway, but to get a real sense of the size of these operations, you have to navigate the grid of dusty county roads Runyon knows by heart. Back here there are craters in the earth football stadiums would disappear into; some empty, some filled with clear groundwater. If combined, the mines would take up about the same space as the nearby City of Ada.

“Go just a little further south and there’s a hole in the ground probably, oh my gosh, I want to say it’s well over half a mile deep. There’s seven of them, just almost in line right through here,” Runyon says.

Sholar says t’s extremely rare for the Oklahoma Department of Mines to deny a mining permit application.

“At some point it just might get held up, but flat out denying it, I can’t recall myself when we’ve done it. Not in my time here,” Sholar says.

Ford says that’s because of the agency’s … unique permitting process.

------------------------------

StateImpact Oklahoma is a partnership among Oklahoma’s public radio stations and relies on contributions from readers and listeners to fulfill its mission of public service to Oklahoma and beyond. Donate online.

Logan Layden is a reporter and managing editor for StateImpact Oklahoma. Logan spent six years as a reporter with StateImpact from 2011 to 2017.
More News
Support nonprofit, public service journalism you trust. Give now.