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~I~p GA 1~ <br /> 998 <br />STATE OF COLORADO <br />DIVISION OF MINERALS AND GEOLOGY <br />De•parlmenl oI Natural Resources <br />131 S Sherm, n SL, Ruom ? I S <br /> <br />Denver. Colorado tl0:03 II~ <br />Phunr~ 13031 Hfifi~35fii <br /> <br /> DEPARTMENT OF <br /> NATURAL <br /> RESOURCES <br /> Rm Romer <br /> Goeemor <br />November 18, 1997 lunges S. LOChheaA <br /> Aecunve D"ecmr <br /> <br />Vern Pfannenstiel Michael B Long <br />Drvisinn Dueclor <br />Seneca Coal Company <br />P.O. Box 605 <br />Kayenta, AZ 86033 <br />RE: DMG Shrub Tour and Revegetation Rule-making <br />Dear Mr. Pfannenstiel: <br />This letter is a belated "thank you" and an update following the shrub establishment tour <br />you participated in this past July. I would also like to inform you of the progress of our <br />renewed effort to revise portions of the regulations pertaining to revegetation <br />performance standards. On behalf of the Division of Minerals and Geology, I wanted <br />to express our appreciation to Seneca Coal Company for hosting a part;of the tour and <br />to thank you and Roy Karo for participating in the tour. <br />As you know, the Division is interested in pursuing beneficial and productive resolution <br />to the challenges faced by Colorado coal mines in establishing shrubs on reclaimed mined <br />lands. Toward that goal, this year's shrub tour was organized as afact-finding mission. <br />The tour gave Division staff and reclamation staff from several northwest coal mines an <br />opportunity to review and assess some of the shrub establishment efforts undertaken in <br />the past. We at the Division feel that the tour was a successful and useful effort. We <br />hope that you gained some useful information from the tour, as well. <br />As we discussed during the tour, the Division hopes to resolve three general questions <br />related to the use of shrubs in reclamation. First, is the establishment of shrubs on <br />reclaimed lands essential? Second, what are the successes and failures of past shrub <br />establishment efforts? Finally, what types of success standards and sampling methods <br />are most appropriate for areas where shrubs are a required component of reclamation? <br />In order to address the first question, input from the Colorado Division of Wildlife will be <br />necessary. While it is unfortunate that the CDOW was unable to participate in the tour, <br />the Division hopes to seek their comments on this matter in another forum this winter. <br />