My WebLink
|
Help
|
About
|
Sign Out
Home
Browse
Search
2016-03-23_REVISION - M1982075
DRMS
>
Day Forward
>
Revision
>
Minerals
>
M1982075
>
2016-03-23_REVISION - M1982075
Metadata
Thumbnails
Annotations
Entry Properties
Last modified
6/16/2021 6:15:09 PM
Creation date
3/28/2016 9:02:14 AM
Metadata
Fields
Template:
DRMS Permit Index
Permit No
M1982075
IBM Index Class Name
Revision
Doc Date
3/23/2016
Doc Name
Technical Revision No. 3
From
Mosch Exploration and Mining, LLC
To
DRMS
Type & Sequence
TR3
Email Name
MAC
Media Type
D
Archive
No
There are no annotations on this page.
Document management portal powered by Laserfiche WebLink 9 © 1998-2015
Laserfiche.
All rights reserved.
/
5
PDF
Print
Pages to print
Enter page numbers and/or page ranges separated by commas. For example, 1,3,5-12.
After downloading, print the document using a PDF reader (e.g. Adobe Reader).
View images
View plain text
Recently on January 21St,2016, an inspection by a representative of the Colorado Division of Reclamation, <br /> Mining and Safety Minerals Program conducted an inspection of the permitted portions of the Phoenix mine. <br /> During this inspection, it was determined that the mining at the Phoenix mine had not taken place in less than <br /> 180 days causing violations of Rule 1.13.5, requiring the operation attain Temporary Cessation status, and that <br /> the current mine plan needed to be updated with additional clarification to satisfy C.R.S. 34-32-112 (2)f, since <br /> details of how potentially acid generating or toxic materials that might be produced was not sufficiently <br /> addressed. Lastly, the issue of bonding was addressed. The bond for the Phoenix mine is currently$200 and <br /> the representative observed that it would be impossible to conduct reclamation of the facility that amount. <br /> Correspondence based upon that inspection also provided a new required bond requirement of $9,200.00. <br /> The majority of this was stated as the amount to do "Demolition of structures and removal of refuse." The <br /> Mosch Family agrees that the bond is low to conduct reclamation work but strongly disagree with the assumed <br /> action of demolition of structures.The Mosch family,the owners of the mine,tour business and permit M-1982- <br /> 075 do not want the structure dismantled as part of reclamation activities. It is a necessary component of the <br /> currently operating mine museum tourist business and the buildings main core structure was constructed in <br /> the early 1920's, predating all current reclamation laws. The mine building contains various antique mineral <br /> concentration equipment that has and is used as a educational display for various tours. <br /> On the third of March, 2016, a meeting was held with the same representative of the Colorado Division of <br /> Reclamation, Mining and Safety Minerals Program. During that meeting, the possible violations found during <br /> the January 21st inspection were discussed and what actions might be appropriate to mitigate them.The Mosch <br /> Family concern about requiring the dismantling of the mine building and displayed equipment was discussed. <br /> Based upon the discussions at that meeting, it was decided by The Mosch Family, to discontinue exploration <br /> and mining activities and allow the Phoenix Mine property to solely be a recreational tour mine and museum <br /> facility. The Mosch family has no desire to desire to convert the current permit to a 110D permit. It was <br /> determined at the March 3ed meeting that an amendment to the current permit will initially be required to define <br /> details of how the property should be reclaimed. After obtaining this amendment, the mine will then be <br /> reclaimed per the agreed upon amendment and the permit will be released. <br /> Proposed Revision of Permit M-1982-075 <br /> The purpose of this revision is to describe details of how the operators of the Phoenix mine will reclaim the <br /> permitted areas of the property rather than describe operational characteristics of how the facility will handle <br /> acid and toxic materials. The near term goal for the property is to reclaim it as a tour mine museum and to do <br /> so requires details of how the reclamation will be completed. <br /> The Current Mine Site Description <br /> The surface plant consists of five areas. These are shown in Figure 1 and are described as follows: <br /> Labeled with the letter"A" in Figure 1, is the historic mine building with the little concentration plant, shop and <br /> offices attached.The main structure of this facility was constructed in the early 1920's and was used as a shop <br /> and ore loading facility. This includes a trestle that was rebuilt in the early 1970's. The east side of this facility <br /> contains an addition that houses antique mineral concentration equipment. On the west side of the main <br /> building is an addition that was similar to the original attached shop. This addition contains an antique lathe <br /> and vertical machine parts milling machine. Above the addition on the east side is a mine office. <br /> The Letter"B" in Figure 1 shows the location of the two entrances accessing the underground portions of the <br /> Phoenix mine. Both of these have substantial steel doors with lock guards covering two sizable five tumbler <br /> paddle locks each. Both of these openings access portions of the mine that were used for exploration, mining <br /> and tour activities. <br /> The letter"C" in figure 1 shows the location of a trailer that contains an antique twin piston Gardner Denver air <br /> compressor and a rare 100 kw Cat generator that is started with a hand crank. <br /> 2 <br />
The URL can be used to link to this page
Your browser does not support the video tag.