[OPINION] Amber Smith: With mining in Tucson’s blood, it’s time to move ahead with Rosemont

The proposed Rosemont Copper Mine’s open pit would span 6,000 to 6,500 feet in all directions and drop up to 3,100 feet into the ground. The mine would have about 400 employees. / Photo by Mamta Popat / Arizona Daily Star 2013

 

(Editor’s note: Opinion pieces are published for discussions purposes only.) 

Arizona is a mining state. To this day, Arizona mining companies produce 65 percent of the copper in the United States. This history of mining in our region runs deep, most prominently when Tombstone was the largest city between New Orleans and San Francisco soon after Ed Schieffelin struck silver in the late 1870s.

Yet, as reported in the Arizona Daily Star, three organizations are filing suit in the latest attempt to stop the Rosemont project, a mining project named after the mining community that inhabited the area in the late 1890s.

The process to open a mine today is painstakingly arduous. The Forest Service initiated the Environmental Impact Statement (EIS) process in March 2008, and that process closed in December 2013. During that time, 19 public hearings and open houses were conducted, and more than 36,000 comments were filed. Rosemont Copper Co. is following the federal process and will ultimately be required to abide by the stipulations set out in the EIS . But despite millions of dollars spent and countless hours modifying plans based on public comment, that doesn’t seem to stop groups from adding additional roadblocks.

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