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STATE OF COLORADO <br />DIVISION OF MINERALS AND GEOLOGY <br />Department of Na[ural Resources <br />1373 Sherman St., Room 215 <br />Denver, Colorado 80203 <br />Phone: (303) 866-3567 <br />FAX: (303) 832-8106 <br />DATE: January 12, 2005 <br />TO: Memo To File <br />FROM: Joe Dudash ~~ <br />RE: Bowie No. 1 1 ,Permit No. <br />C-81-038, Bowie Resources LLC. <br />Succession of Operator SO-4 <br />Bowie No. 2 Mine, Permit No. C-96-083, Bowie Resources LLC. <br />Succession of Operator SO-2 <br />OLORADO <br />(VISION OF <br />IINERALS <br />GEOLOGY <br />RECLAMATION•MININO <br />SAFETY•SCIEN CE <br />Bill Owens <br />Governor <br />Russell George <br />Executive Direaar <br />Ronald W. Cattany <br />Division Director <br />Natural Resource Trustee <br />David Middleton, Assistant U.S. Attorney out of Lexington, Kentucky, wanted to know the distinction <br />between the Bowie No.l Mine and the Bowie No. 2 Mine as they relate to royalty payments to the <br />federal Minerals Management Service. <br />I told him that the Bowie No. 1 Mine and the Bowie No. 2 Mine are two separate mines with two <br />separate permit numbers, although they have the same organization running them. I said Bowie No 1 <br />stopped mining in 1997, although they had some stockpiled coal at the temporary coal stockpile that <br />they shipped off a few years ago. Bowie No. 2 trucked their mined coal to the Bowie No. 1 train <br />loadout for shipment until Bowie No. 2 built their own train loadout in 2002. <br />He asked which mine was associated with BLM coal lease COC-61209. I said the Bowie No. 2 permit <br />shows that that lease belongs to the Bowie No. 2 Mina. The Bowie No. 1 permit does not list that lease <br />as part of the Bowie No. 1 Mine. <br />David Middleton can be reached at (859) 233-2661 extension 177 and at david.middleton(a~usdoj.eov. <br />c:/word/bowie2/s02memo3 <br />Office of Office of Colorado <br />Mined Land Reclamation Active and Inactive Mines Geological Survey <br />