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-54- <br />report is the deletion of a specific underdrain system beneath the <br />initial waste rock pile. The consultant bases this request upon <br />the impermeable nature of the upper most 50 feet of foundational <br />subsoil beneath the proposed waste pile, the relatively small <br />volume of the waste pile, and the proposed impermeable 4.0 feet of <br />cover material. The Division agrees with the consultants <br />recommendations and waives the underdrain requirement. <br />West Elk Coal Company applied for a permit revision to allow the <br />construction of an upper waste rock pile in October of 1984. The <br />operator had noted its intention to construct an upper waste pile <br />in the original permit application. The permit revision <br />application represented the submission of a detailed engineering <br />plan for that structure, for which a general plan had earlier been <br />submitted, <br />West Elk Coal proposes, within the amended permit revision <br />application, to construct a five million ton coal processing waste <br />pile. The refuse will consist of coarse coal reject and <br />development waste rock. The mine projects waste production at a <br />rate of 150,000 tons for the first year and 100,000 tons per year <br />thereafter. The completed waste pile structure will cover <br />approximately 40 acres, and attain a maximum thickness of 160 feet. <br />The waste pile will have 2.5 H:1V (horizontal to vertical) facial <br />slopes with 30 foot wide benches at 50 foot vertical intervals. <br />The overall final facial slope will be approximately 3 H:1V <br />(horizontal to vertical slope of approximately 18.2 degrees) in <br />order to facilitate reclamation. Samples of currently produced <br />waste were collected and tested, in order to provide material <br />properties for a mathematical stability analysis. Samples were <br />also collected and tested of subgrade colluvium and bedrock for the <br />same purpose. The stability analysis projected a minimum static <br />slope safety factor of 1.64 for an overall facial slope of 2.5 <br />H:1V, steeper then the requested configuration. <br />At the request of the Division, West Elk Coal Company also <br />completed an analysis of the potential stability effects upon the <br />F-Seam, from the placement of a five million ton surcharge load <br />upon the existing workings within the mine. The plan calls for <br />approximately the eastern half of the waste pile to be undermined. <br />In completing this analysis, the operator assumed: <br />1. An ultimate configuration of the waste pile reaching <br />elevation 6,880 feet above sea level. <br />2. No secondary extraction beneath the pile. <br />3. No barrier pillars, even though one is planned. <br />4. A continuous crack existing from the elevation of the <br />F-Seam's floor to the ground surface at the top of the <br />pile. <br />