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a <br />1 <br />2 <br />3 <br />4 <br />5 <br />6 <br />7 <br />8 <br />9 <br />10 <br />11 <br />12 <br />13 <br />14 <br />15 <br />16 <br />17 <br />18 <br />19 <br />20 <br />21 <br />22 <br />23 <br />24 <br />25 <br />70 <br />the property of prime farmland must remain that way. <br />No ponds, ditches, or roads can be built through <br />prime farmland. <br />MR. PAULIN: But when they end up <br />with what I read in PR 6, you know, they have <br />certain things that they have to do. You know, <br />we're not to that point yet. PR 6 says what they're <br />going to do <br />MS. TURNER: PR 6 is inaccurate and a <br />lot of untruths in PR 06. Even their compliance <br />document does not reflect the truth. In their <br />compliance document right there it says no damages <br />have ever been done. <br />Well, when you go from a two -lift to <br />a one -lift operation and you remove the soils off <br />the property and you're not capable of putting them <br />back like it was, there's a lot of damages being <br />done. <br />MR. MORGAN: On this first 51 acres <br />that is the disturbance line up to 2008, the average <br />topsoil then was 48.83 inches taken from Jim <br />Irvine's soil survey, and now they say they only <br />have 21 or 22 inches to put back without using the <br />substitute subsoil that we're not going to accept. <br />MS. TURNER: And that's a mixed lift. <br />