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H Road, Grand Junction, Colorado 81506. At the close of the scoping <br />comment period, written comments, including names and addresses of <br />respondents, will be available for public review at the offices of the <br />BLM Grand Junction Field Office, 2815 H Road, Grand Junction, Colorado <br />81506, during normal working hours (7:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m., except <br />holidays). Submissions from organizations or businesses will be made <br />available for public inspection in their entirety. Individuals may <br />request confidentiality with respect to their name, address, and phone <br />number. If you wish to have your name or street address withheld from <br />public review, or from disclosure under the Freedom of Information Act, <br />you must state this prominently at the beginning of your comment. Such <br />requests will be honored to the extent allowed by law. Comment contents <br />will not be kept confidential. The Draft EIS will consider comments and <br />issues received during public scoping, and responses to comments on the <br />Draft EIS will be published as part of the Final EIS. <br />FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: For further information or to have <br />your name added to our mailing list, contact David Lehmann, Supervisory <br />Natural Resource Specialist, at (970) 244-3021. E-mail can be directed <br />to David Lehmann@blm.gov and mail can be sent to the address above. <br />SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: On September 28, 2005, CAM filed a Right-of- <br />Way application with BLM for facilities associated with the proposed <br />Red Cliff Mine. Subsequently, on February 10, 2006, CAM submitted a <br />Land Use Application to the BLM for other facilities supporting the <br />proposed coal mine project. A mine permit will also be required for all <br />mine facilities, in accordance with U. S. Office of Surface Mining and <br />Colorado Division of Minerals and Geology regulations. This EIS will <br />meet the National Environmental Policy Act requirements for the mine <br />permit. There will be additional opportunities for public <br />[[Page 42660]] <br />involvement when the mine permit application is processed. <br />The proposed Red Cliff Mine is located approximately 11 miles north <br />of the towns of Mack and Loma, Colorado, and 1.5 miles east of Colorado <br />State Highway 139. CAM is proposing a new portal and associated <br />facilities to extract low-sulfur coal from Federal Coal Leases C- <br />0125515 and C-0125516 and from several potential new Federal leases as <br />well as a small amount of private coal. <br />The proposed railroad line would traverse approximately 9.5 miles <br />of Federal land, and include one crossing of State Highway 139 and <br />approximately 5 miles of private land. The EIS will analyze the <br />potential impacts associated with the construction and operation of <br />facilities proposed in CAM's Right-of-Way and Land Use Applications, <br />and other potential impacts associated with the Red Cliff Mine project. <br />Citizens are invited to help identify issues or concerns and to provide <br />input on the proposed action. Alternatives will be developed through <br />the public involvement process and analyzed in the EIS. <br />A company affiliated with CAM is currently mining approximately <br />280,000 tons of coal per year from the nearby McClane Canyon Mine. <br />CAM's production from the Red Cliff Mine would be approximately 8 <br />million tons per year. CAM is proposing to load the coal onto rail cars <br />at the mine site and ship it to coal consumers. CAM would recover this <br />coal by mining the Cameo Seam using both room and pillar and longwall <br />mining techniques. As is consistent with the goals of the 2001 National <br />Energy Policy report and the Energy Policy Act of 2005, this project <br />DBMS 366 <br />