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Page 7 of 9 <br />Division should coordinate with the federal agencies and should not act until "all relevant impact <br />reviews have been accomplished." See September 2011 Letter, 1; August 2009 Letter, 6. <br />The Division's Response: The Division reviews an EPP Amendment to ensure that it complies <br />with the applicable provisions of the Act and the Rules, not BLM's NEPA process. Nevertheless, <br />the Division has discussed the EPP Amendment with BLM's staff at the Tres Rios Field Office <br />regularly and frequently and has coordinated regulatory efforts with BLM to the greatest extent <br />possible in accordance with the MOU. The Division has gathered valuable input from BLM. For <br />example, the Division concurred with BLM's desire for more rigorous groundwater monitoring <br />and incorporated requirements for additional monitoring well locations into the EPP. The <br />Division will continue to communicate with BLM throughout the life of the permit. If any <br />additional issues are identified through the federal NEPA analyses, the Division will work with <br />the Operator and BLM to update the EPP where appropriate. <br />The Objectors incorrectly assert that the mine site lies within the Department of Energy's ULP. <br />All boundaries of the Sunday Mine Complex lie within 10,000 feet distance south of County <br />Road 20 R in T44N, R18W. The Division obtained a map of ULP lands from DOE that clearly <br />indicates the Sunday Mine Complex is not near any ULP tract. Thus, the PEIS is not relevant to <br />the Division's consideration of this EPP Amendment. <br />Permit has been in Temporary Cessation Too Long (C.R.S. $ 34- 32- 103(6)(a)(III), and Rule 1.13.9) <br />9. Objection: The Sunday Mines have been in Temporary Cessation since 1999, in violation of the <br />Act's requirement that "in no case shall temporary cessation of production be continued for more <br />than ten years without terminating the operation and fully complying with the reclamation <br />standards of this article." C.R.S. § 34- 32- 103(6)(a)(III). September 2011 Letter, 2; August 2011 <br />Letter, 3. <br />The Division's Response: The Objectors are misinformed. The Operator is in full compliance <br />with C.R.S. § 34- 32- 103(6)(a)(IIl), and Rule 1.13.9. The Carnation Mine was in active operation <br />from 2007 -2010. During this period of time, the Operator engaged in activities consistent with <br />the definition of active mining and inconsistent with the regulatory factors indicating that TC is <br />appropriate. See C.R.S. § 34- 32- 103(8); Rules 1.1(31) and 1.13.2. Specifically, the Operator <br />occupied the site, performed cleanup work, opened the previously- closed mine portal for <br />ventilation purposes, and produced approximately 3,500 tons of ore that was shipped to its mill <br />facility in Utah. See 2007, 2008, and 2009 Annual Reports. In May 2010, the Operator <br />submitted "Revision TC -2" informing the Division that active operations had ceased on <br />November 30, 2009 and requesting the Division's approval to re -enter TC. The Division <br />approved Revision TC -2 on June 30, 2010, While the Act and the Rules provide that TC cannot <br />"be continued for more than ten years," they do not prohibit operators from re- entering TC after a <br />reasonable period of active operations. <br />Furthermore, the Objectors are time- barred from raising objections to the status of the operation. <br />The Rules provide that parties who are adversely affected or aggrieved by a Division decision <br />must appeal that decision to the Board with certain prescribed time periods. Here, the applicable <br />time period was thirty days. See Rule 1.4.11. The Objectors failed to request a Board hearing <br />regarding the Division's approval of Revision TC -2 and raised their concerns to the Division over <br />a year after the applicable limitations period had run. <br />B. ISSUES NOT WITHIN THE JURISDICTION OF THE DIVISION AND BOARD <br />