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<br />To: *@coal ~ III III~II~III~IIIII <br />From: BurgmaiS@COAL <br />Cc: <br />Bcc: <br />Subject: Availability of Records <br />Attachment: <br />Date: 10/15/97 9;22 AM <br />During the last coal staff meeting, Susan Mc. asked me to look into the <br />availability of records at forfeiture sites. Here's what I found. On Jan. <br />26, 1995, Susan Mc. gave us all a memo with the county courthouse notice. <br />The memo says the notice applies to sites where the public does not have <br />access to a mine office to see records, such as mines in TC, PC, or those <br />for which the permit has been revoked. The notice provides a list of <br />available records, and says that persons can get information regarding <br />copying costs and payment by contacting the Division. <br />The rules, at 5.02.4, say that records must be immediately available to the <br />public at the Division office and at a convenient place in the area of <br />mining. When the courthouse notice went out, we had determined that, for <br />the forfeiture sites, making the information immediately available from DMG <br />would satisfy the requirement that the public have access to the records. <br />After DMG terminates jurisdiction on a site, the records are maintained at <br />the nearest DMG office for a minimum of 5 years. <br />Some of the forfeiture sites might still have records in the courthouses, <br />but the complete set of records is said to reside at the Division offices. <br />It was my understanding that we wouldn't be doing a field inspection of <br />records at forfeiture sites since the records are here. As was mentioned in <br />the staff meeting, though, we should verify that the records notice is in <br />the courthouse. <br />