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JkECEPJ GO <br /> March 31, 2016 AFAR 0 4 2016 <br /> Colorado Division of Reclamation,Mining and Safety GF f*N <br /> 1313 Sherman Street,Room 215 NllA IMAWWPIX <br /> Denver,Colorado 80203 <br /> Re:Transit Mix Concrete Company application for Reclamation Permit,Hitch Rack Ranch <br /> Quarry(#M2016010) <br /> Dear Madam or Sir; <br /> I am writing to express my opposition to the referenced quarry permit application. I live in the <br /> Pinons of Turkey Canon Ranch,just south of the proposed Hitch Rack Ranch Quarry operation. <br /> I,along with all my neighbors within the Pinons,am opposed to bringing yet another large-scale <br /> aggregate mining operation to our community, in addition to the three quarries already in service <br /> along a five mile stretch of Highway 115. Significant constraints to additional quarry <br /> development exist in the area, including limited water supplies, a fragile groundwater system,rich <br /> wildlife and vegetation resources,public health and safety,air and noise contamination, <br /> compromised transportation within the community,traffic hazards along Highway 115,existing <br /> quarries that satisfy the demand,violation of current development plans for the area,proximity to <br /> local residents, and limited or no alternatives for residents. <br /> Water Sunnly.All residents along the Highway 115 corridor depend on ground water for their <br /> domestic water supply. With the exception of Red Rock Valley,Rock Creek Mesa and the Pinons <br /> of Turkey Canon Ranch(which are on central well systems),residents are served by individual <br /> wells.These wells likely depend on the fracture system within the granitic rock for water supply; <br /> while wells in the adjacent upturned sedimentary rocks may depend upon both these fracture <br /> systems and infiltration along the granite-sedimentary rock boundary for recharge.This situation <br /> makes such wells dependent on the quality of the recharging surface water and highly susceptible <br /> to contamination. Contamination from mining operations can travel very quickly through the <br /> fracture system to affect domestic wells.The very geology and topography of the proposed Hitch <br /> Rack Ranch Quarry site makes such effects exceedingly difficult to predict.Further,the effect <br /> from blasting operations(which Transit Mix proposes to conduct two or three times each week) <br /> on the fracture system will likely exacerbate the problem,and is equally difficult to predict. <br /> Wfldlife.An independent and objective wildlife study needs to be completed,rather than accept <br /> questionable statements by the applicant.The proposed quarry site is adjacent to and contiguous <br /> with the Aiken Canyon Preserve(managed by the Nature Conservancy of Colorado),and <br /> included as part of the Aiken Canyon Potential Conservation Area. This area is identified by the <br /> Colorado Natural Heritage Program as a 132 site—Very High significance.It should be noted that <br /> the Nature Conservancy shares our opposition to the quarry permit.The quarry site is an area rich <br /> in wildlife.It lies between large concentrations of wildlife in the federal lands to the west and <br /> Fort Carson to the east,and serves as a major migration route between the two ecotypes.It is <br /> inhabited by a great diversity and in some cases high density of wildlife.Most notably,the site is <br /> mapped by the US Fish and Wildlife Service as Critical Potential Conservation Habitat for the <br /> Mexican Spotted Owl,a federally listed threatened species.The Mexican Spotted Owl has been <br /> documented in the immediate area. The applicant's statement that"turkeys are not common in the <br /> mining area" is ludicrous.Anyone who frequents this area knows it harbors one of the largest <br /> concentrations of turkeys in this part of Colorado. Sighting of turkeys is an almost daily <br /> occurrence here.Turkeys, in particular,are intolerant of industrial operations such as mining. <br /> Colorado Parks and Wildlife identifies the proposed quarry site as a primary elk residence and <br /> migration area.More than 100 species of birds have been documented using the area, and the <br /> 1 <br />