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Compliance with the Basic Standards for Ground Water <br />(Regulation 41 of the Colorado Water Quality Control Commission) <br />Section 4.05.13(1) of the Regulations requires the establishment of one or more <br />ground water points of compliance (wells) for an operation which has the potential <br />to negatively impact the quality of ground water. The mine monitors the Middle <br />Sandstone in well TR -7a and the Williams Fork alluvium in well AVF -5. The TR- <br />7a well is within the expected bedrock flowpath of mine leachate, should the mine <br />discharge leachate to bedrock units. The AVF -5 well is within the expected alluvial <br />flowpath of leachate, should the mine discharge leachate to Williams Fork River <br />alluvium. AVF -5 is also within the expected flow path of pumped mine water, <br />should mine water adversely impact the alluvial water. Both wells meet the <br />qualifications of a compliance point, as those qualifications are listed in Section <br />4.05.13(1)(b). Monitoring data from both wells indicate the mine has not caused an <br />exceedance of the Basic Standards for Ground Water with the exception of <br />Manganese levels in AVF -5 which is often above the Basic Standards for <br />Groundwater drinking limit. However, according to section 2.04.7 of the permit, <br />dissolved solids, iron, lead, manganese and sulfate often exceed the drinking water <br />standards naturally. <br />Observed Surface Water Impacts <br />Discharges from the 5 and 6 Mines have not caused measurable depletion of stream <br />flows in the mine vicinity. If all of the mine inflows during active mining (approxi- <br />mately 2 cfs) came from the Williams Fork and Yampa Rivers, it would be too <br />small of a depletion to detect in those rivers' 7- day /10 -year low flows. Monitoring <br />data in the annual hydrology reports from 1981 through 2013 indicate the Williams <br />Fork Mines have not significantly impacted the water quality of the Williams Fork <br />River. <br />G. No surface water is proposed to be discharged into, or directed into, underground <br />mine workings. <br />H. MCM does not plan to convert any monitoring wells to water supply wells. <br />I. Stream Buffer Zones - Rule 4.05.18 <br />The Williams Fork Mines includes several structures which are located within 100 <br />feet of the perennial Williams Fork River. These structures are a coal storage silo, <br />a 48 -inch cross country conveyor, waste water ponds, No. 5 Mine dewatering wells <br />and associated substation and access road, haul road bridge, well 259 and pond <br />HR -P1, and rail road at tail track end. The conveyor is an enclosed structure as it <br />crosses the river and the highway, therefore minimizing disturbance to the stream. <br />The coal storage silo is a concrete structure utilized to load railroad cars. These <br />variances from the 100 -foot buffer zone for perennial streams have been granted by <br />the Division upon finding: 1) that the original stream channel will be restored; 2) <br />during and after mining, the water quantity and quality from the stream section <br />Williams Fork Mines 27 Permit Renewal 06 <br />C- 1981 -044 December 8, 2014 <br />