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Borehole only), grading to establish level drill -pads and improve the existing light -use road (6Rt Borehole only), <br />placement of gravel as surfacing for the light -use road, excavation of temporary cuttings pits on the drill -pads, drilling <br />and casing of the boreholes, and installation of protective access manholes. On completion of drilling and casing <br />operations, the cuttings pits were allowed to dry-out, material excavated from the pits was replaced and graded, and <br />the pad surface was graveled to control erosion and sediment and provide an all- weather operating surface. The <br />completed thickener underflow borehole installations include the light -use road (6RT only), a soil material stockpile <br />(pad and road); the drill -pad (I MN — 25 x 180 feet, 6RT- 70 x 70 feet, 7RT — 100 x 75 feet); the 6- to 8 -inch cased <br />boreholes, 16 -inch cemented surface casings, and covered 8 -foot diameter CMP culvert manholes with lightening <br />protection. <br />With timing and weather constraints, portions of the pipeline may be temporarily installed on the surface, to be <br />buried when ground conditions are more favorable. Pipeline installation will involve removal and windrowing of <br />soil materials from the pipeline construction corridor (maximum - 40 -foot wide); trenching in most areas; <br />placement of suitable bedding materials; placement, connection, and pressure testing of the pipelines; backfilling <br />and compaction of suitable fill materials around and over the pipelines; backfilling and compaction of the trench; <br />regrading; replacement of soil materials; and revegetation of all disturbed areas. Where the pipelines pass under <br />RCR27, the Twentymile Mine railroad spur, and Foidel Creek, the pipeline trench was expanded to provide room <br />for horizontal boring equipment, and the pipelines were trenched or bored under these features. Because pipeline <br />placement and construction of portions of the 6RT and 7RT pads necessarily involved activities within the Foidel <br />Creek buffer zone, TC is requesting a temporary variance for pipeline construction and a longer -term variance for <br />the limited pad areas from the regulatory requirements for operations within a buffer zone. The pipelines are a <br />double HDPE pipe system in critical areas, with a 6 to 8 -inch carrier pipe inside a larger (maximum size - 10 -inch <br />diameter) containment pipe, buried approximately 5 -feet deep. The 1MN pipeline extends approximately 1,800 <br />feet, with the 6RT pipeline extending approximately 8,000 feet and continuing another 1,600 feet to 7RT. <br />Electronic moisture sensors, along with pump controls, and shut -off valves provide for timely detection, shut -off, and <br />isolation of the pipeline in the event of pipeline leakage. Access /inspection manholes and pipe -tees for the moisture <br />detection system are located at key points along the pipeline routes. <br />When the new Washplant and Thickener were installed, a new Thickener Overflow Sump was constructed to <br />contain minor amounts of washdown water and to serve as a temporary catch basin for the contents of the <br />Thickener, if required for maintenance or under upset conditions. The Thickener Overflow Sump is located <br />between the Refuse Conveyor and Sedimentation Pond D. The Thickener Sump is partially incised, incorporates a <br />compacted clay liner to minimize seepage, and is sized to fully contain the contents of the Washplant I1 Thickener <br />(150,000 gallons) plus minor amounts of washdown water and incident precipitation for the design event. <br />Impoundment design, operation, and maintenance information for the Thickener is provided in Exhibit 8X. Given <br />that the potential for both the Washplant I and Washplant 11 Thickeners to experience an upset or require <br />maintenance at the same time is negligible, with completion of the Washplant II Thickener Overflow Sump, the <br />Washplant I Thickener Overflow Sump was decommissioned, filled -in and replaced by a discharge pipe from the <br />Washplant I Thickener to the new Washplant 11 Thickener Overflow Sump. As an incised and closed basin (ie: no <br />outlet) the only potential inputs to the Sump are thickener overflow, washdown water, or minor incident <br />precipitation, which are subsequently pumped back into the system by a portable floating pump installation. The fl- <br />inch thickener overflow line has been extended to the new Thickener Overflow Sump (4,800 feet), allowing <br />overflow from either thickener to be controlled by valves and routed to the Sump. Water level in the Sump is <br />monitored and managed as part of the ongoing Washplant operations. <br />Given the power and system control requirements for the Washplant, an associated Motor Control Center <br />(MCC) /Office Building was constructed immediately adjacent to the Washplant. The MCC /Office Building houses <br />electrical, control, and monitoring equipment for the Washplant and includes office space. The building consists of <br />three connected modular steel containers (2 - 8 x 40 x 10 feet high, and 1 -8 x 20 x 10 feet high), located on the <br />north side of the Overland Conveyor and Washplant 11. The building sets on a reinforced concrete slab floor (20 x <br />60 x 0.75 feet thick). <br />A new Coal Sampling Station, located on the Overland Conveyor, to the west of Washplant 11 and Sedimentation <br />Pond D, was installed to provide sampling capabilities prior to discharge to the BOB stockpile. The coal sampling <br />system consists of an automated sweep sampler, which cuts samples from the coal stream on the Overland <br />Conveyor at regular intervals, a small sample crusher, a sample splitter to reduce sample volume, and associated <br />MR13 -270 2.05 -32.4 11/21/13 <br />