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999 <br />STATE OF- COLOR4D0 RIC ~anRn U. L41A`A. Govc'^m <br />DEPARTMENT OF NATURAL RESOURCES <br />U. Monte Pascoe, Ezecu[ive Director <br />b1INED LAND RECLAl1~1ATION <br />423 Centennial Building, 1313 Sherman Street <br />Denver, Colorado 80203 TeI. (303) 866-3567 <br />David C. Shelton <br />Director <br />M E M O R A N D U M <br />TO: Dave Shelton & Joe Zalkind <br />FROM: Jerry Zimpfer <br />DATE: May 17, 1982 <br />RE: Preliminary comments following a reconnaissance inspection <br />of the Colony Oil Shale Project, May 6, 1982. <br />She following includes some preliminary observations and comments resulting from ~ _-' <br />my May 9th, 1982 site visitation with Jim McArdle, Jim Pendleton and Roy Cox. <br />My thinking on these problems is very preliminary. Detail solutions can be worked <br />out after the company makes its proposals for reclamation. Issues that should - <br />be discussed with the company include: <br />1) The existing sediment ponds on the Middle Fork of Parachute Creek were <br />sized for a limited watershed area on the assumption that two major dams <br />(bliddle Fork and Davis Gulch) would be constructed upstream. At the present <br />time, Neither dam has been constructed. Without these dams, the sediment ponds <br />are grossly undersized and should be reconstructed. The sediment ponds will - - <br />require periodic inspection and maintenance. <br />2) If the Middle Fork dam is not constructed, some provision must_ be made to <br />route surface flow across the mine bench. The current system of piping flow <br />through the mine bench and releasing it to a concrete flume down the face of <br />the fill would require periodic maintenance. It is not a final reclamation <br />solution. It may be appropriate to replace this system with a surface diversion <br />channel as described in the permit application. <br />3) Activities in the plateau area and Davis Gulch are a major disturbance <br />which is, at present, in a highly erosive configuration. The area needs to <br />be graded, topsoiled, and revegetated to reduce the current excessive erosion <br />rates. The Davis Gulch dam should be constructed both to trap sediment from <br />above, and to protect the downstream haul road fill from extreme runoff events. <br />(This may not require the PF1F structure currently planned, but the modified - <br />design would have to be judge adequate.) <br />4) The existing disturbance is crisscrossed by numerous roads. Unnecessary <br />minor roads should be removed and the area reclaimed. For those roads that <br />must be left, a road drainage system should be completed including ditches, <br />culverts, riprap outfalls, etc. Provisions for periodic maintenance would be <br />necessary. <br />