Feds release Copper Flat Mine analysis

Outside the town of Hillsboro, N.M., remains of the Copper Flat Mine are visible down a graded gravel road off Highway 152. A white pickup truck moves along in the distance. And there are a couple of buildings and a small electric line. The mine operated for just a few months before closing in July […]

Feds release Copper Flat Mine analysis

Outside the town of Hillsboro, N.M., remains of the Copper Flat Mine are visible down a graded gravel road off Highway 152. A white pickup truck moves along in the distance. And there are a couple of buildings and a small electric line.

The mine operated for just a few months before closing in July 1982. But a new company hopes to reopen it on 2,190 acres of federal and private land, and put to use water rights it says date back decades. Now, the federal government has released its environmental impact statement (EIS) and recommendations for the mine.

In April, the U.S. Bureau of Land Management finalized its 2,096-page EIS, noting that its “preferred alternative” would allow New Mexico Copper Corporation (NMCC) to process 30,000 tons per day of copper ore at the mine over the course of 12 years. NMCC is a subsidiary of the Canada-based company, THEMAC Resources.

Later this spring, the BLM will issue what’s called a “record of decision,” and the project can potentially move forward.

Understanding the ‘local situation’

Hillsboro resident Max Yeh is still wading through the EIS and its three appendices. He’s overwhelmed by the sheer volume of the analysis. And he finds himself questioning the process, which is required under the National Environmental Policy Act.

“The decision on this, the record of decision, will be made in Washington, based on the information that is gathered here locally,” Yeh said. “And there is an indication here that the people who are not on the ground don’t understand the local situation.”

In the draft environmental impact statement, the BLM ignored litigation over the mine’s water rights, he said: And while the final EIS acknowledges that the company’s water rights are being contested in court, it contains factual errors.

This particular local situation has a long history.

To run the mine, NMCC wants to use groundwater rights that two men purchased after operations were abandoned at Copper Flat in 1982. William Frost and Harris Gray, along with the company and its attorneys, tried to show that those rights were still valid, even though the water hadn’t been put to use over the past four decades—or even when the mine operated.

In New Mexico, water is a public resource; it belongs to the people of the state. To maintain legal rights to the water—from rivers or streams or pumped from beneath the ground—people or entities must put it to “beneficial use.”

In December 2017, New Mexico Third Judicial District Court Judge James J. Wechsler found that the combined water right of Frost, Harris and NMCC is only 861.84 acre feet per year—far less than the 6,000 acre feet the company says it needs to operate.

The company appealed Wechsler’s decision, with support from the New Mexico Mining Association and GCM, a privately-owned company with interest in the water rights.

Now, the state of New Mexico and Turner Ranch Properties, which owns the nearby Ladder Ranch, have until later this month to file their answer briefs. They’re supported by the State of Texas and Pat Gordon, the Texas Commissioner on the Rio Grande Compact Commission, as well as by Elephant Butte Irrigation District (EBID), the Navajo Nation and the Sierra Club.

While residents and ranchers worry about local impacts from the mine and its tailings and pit, the mine has drawn wider attention. That’s because downstream water users in New Mexico and Texas are concerned that groundwater pumping could affect the Lower Rio Grande Basin.

In 2013, Texas sued New Mexico and Colorado over the waters of the Rio Grande, alleging that by allowing farmers in the southern part of the state to pump groundwater, New Mexico violated the Rio Grande Compact and didn’t send enough water downstream. The U.S. Bureau of Reclamation also joined the suit, saying that New Mexico is allowing people to use more water than they legally should. If New Mexico loses that U.S. Supreme Court case, southern farmers and towns could be forced to curtail groundwater pumping, and the state could be liable for billions of dollars in damages.

There are more moving pieces, too.

Pending state permits

Last December, at the tail-end of the administration of Gov. Susana Martinez, the New Mexico Environment Department approved the company’s groundwater discharge permit—just one of the state permits the company will need to start operations.

Representing Turner Ranch Properties and the Hillsboro Pitchfork Ranch, the New Mexico Environmental Law Center appealed that decision.

The most troubling problem, said Charles de Saillan, an attorney with the law center, is how NMED classified the mine’s pit lake. Once mining ceases, the open pit will fill with water—water which will have high levels of mercury, selenium and vanadium.

“The Environment Department has taken the position that this pit lake will not be a ‘water of the state,'”—protected under state law—”and as a consequence, the [water quality] standards don’t apply,” said de Saillan. “We take issue with that.”

Under state statute, he said, a body of surface water is a “water of the state” unless it’s entirely on private property and its waters won’t “combine” with other waters, including groundwater.

In 2017, NMCC commissioned a survey of the existing pit, which was believed to cross both federal and private land. The BLM accepted the new survey, concluding the existing pit lake is limited to private land. And the company says the future pit will only be on private land, too.

The existing pit and buildings at Copper Flat Mine

“Making predictions on what the pit is going to look like, and what the pit lake is going to look like, before it’s even constructed, and making those predictions to within a couple of feet, we think is fairly absurd,” de Saillan said. Moreover, he called NMED’s assertion that the pit lake’s water won’t mix with any other waters “troubling,” and he said it departs from the Environment Department’s handling of similar situations in the past.

The law center and its clients also dispute how the underlying bedrock has been characterized by the company, and they’re concerned about risks to nearby properties, a lack of planning for groundwater monitoring and uncertainty over long-term financial assurances for cleanup after the mine’s operations end.

After opponents appealed the permit, in April the state’s Water Quality Control Commission appointed a hearing officer. NMED’s public information officer, Maddy Hayden, said the hearing officer has yet to announce a scheduling conference. But once that happens, a briefing timeline and dates for oral arguments will be established.

NMED will also need to issue a certification, showing the company’s mining closure plan meets state environmental standards. Then, the Mining and Minerals Division of the New Mexico Energy, Minerals and Natural Resources Department can issue a mining permit.

For now, residents like Yeh will continue to pore over documents. And wonder what might happen.

Whether it comes to understanding the intricacies of the battle over the water rights—or even how water rights are administered in New Mexico—Yeh wonders how someone in Washington, D.C. can decide the future of New Mexico’s land and water.

Throughout Hillsboro, population about 100, yellow banners hang from fences throughout the tiny town. The black and red lettering blares out, “PROTECT YOUR WATER. SAY NO!! TO THE COPPER FLAT MINE.”

“You can have a whole bunch of maps, with names of gulches and arroyos and creeks running into each other, but someone sitting in Washington, who is not familiar with the on-the-ground situation, it will be very abstract to them,” Yeh said. “Their decision, which is ostensibly based on the facts given them by the local office, well, there are details that just don’t make any sense locally.”

NMPR reached out to NMCC via the media link on its webpage, but did not hear back from the company before publication.

We're ad free

That means that we rely on support from readers like you. Help us keep reporting on the most important New Mexico Stories by donating today.

Related

Politics Newsletter: LFC Budget report

Politics Newsletter: LFC Budget report

The Dec. 4 politics newsletter includes Legislative Finance Committe revenue tracking report, countdown to the legislative session and Meanwhile on the Hill.
Judge rules that congressional map is not an unlawful gerrymander

Judge rules that congressional map is not an unlawful gerrymander

A judge upheld the congressional maps that Republicans alleged included illegal gerrymandering, particularly in the case of the state’s 2nd Congressional District. Ninth Judicial…
Challenger announces she’ll run for Ivey-Soto Senate seat

Challenger announces she’ll run for Ivey-Soto Senate seat

Former New Mexico House Democratic Campaign Committee finance director Heather Berghmans announced her run for state senate District 15 on Thursday. She is running…
Illegal cattle grazing remains a problem in Valles Caldera National Preserve

Illegal cattle grazing remains a problem in Valles Caldera National Preserve

Legal grazing is allowed in an allotment in the national preserve and Tuell said the cattle grazed on that allotment have not caused problems…
A different perspective on the energy transition

A different perspective on the energy transition

Merrie Lee Soules has never worked for a utility in any sense, which, on first glance, could make her an odd choice to testify…
Energy transition brings new challenges to utilities planning distribution

Energy transition brings new challenges to utilities planning distribution

As of today, 8 percent of the Public Service Company of New Mexico’s customers—approximately 41,000 customers—have solar panels or battery storage on their properties,…
More learning time, free meals coming to students this school year

More learning time, free meals coming to students this school year

As children prepare to return to school for the new public school year, they will see some changes after legislation passed in the 2023…
Legislature hears about post-COVID impacts on education

Legislature hears about post-COVID impacts on education

Public education is still recovering from the effects of COVID-19 lockdowns. The state Legislative Finance Committee’s Public Education Subcommittee released a report Wednesday detailing…
ECECD hosts baby showers to let parents know about resources

ECECD hosts baby showers to let parents know about resources

Friday afternoon, a line of people formed outside a room in the Explora Science Center and Children’s Museum in Albuquerque.  The line was made…
Gov. Lujan Grisham tests positive for COVID

Gov. Lujan Grisham tests positive for COVID

Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham tested positive for COVID-19 for a third time. The governor’s office said that Lujan Grisham is experiencing mild symptoms and…
Study: New Mexico had highest increase in abortion since 2020

Study: New Mexico had highest increase in abortion since 2020

Between January 2020 and June 2023, New Mexico saw a larger increase in abortion than any other state, according to a new report. The…
Doctors encourage vaccinations for respiratory illnesses, including COVID

Doctors encourage vaccinations for respiratory illnesses, including COVID

Health officials from hospitals throughout the state encouraged New Mexicans to get vaccinated against three respiratory illnesses, including COVID-19. After the U.S. Food and…
US Supreme Court expected to hear the abortion medication case this term

US Supreme Court expected to hear the abortion medication case this term

Two upcoming U.S. Supreme Court cases  this term could impact abortion rights and victims of domestic violence. The high court has not set a…
Indigenous Women Rising: Abortion fund budget has doubled since Dobbs

Indigenous Women Rising: Abortion fund budget has doubled since Dobbs

Representatives from the abortion fund provider Indigenous Women Rising told members of the Interim Indian Affairs Committee on Monday that their monthly abortion fund…
Study: New Mexico had highest increase in abortion since 2020

Study: New Mexico had highest increase in abortion since 2020

Between January 2020 and June 2023, New Mexico saw a larger increase in abortion than any other state, according to a new report. The…
Indigenous Women Rising: Abortion fund budget has doubled since Dobbs

Indigenous Women Rising: Abortion fund budget has doubled since Dobbs

Representatives from the abortion fund provider Indigenous Women Rising told members of the Interim Indian Affairs Committee on Monday that their monthly abortion fund…
Study: New Mexico had highest increase in abortion since 2020

Study: New Mexico had highest increase in abortion since 2020

Between January 2020 and June 2023, New Mexico saw a larger increase in abortion than any other state, according to a new report. The…
A human donor milk repository in Albuquerque needs to expand

A human donor milk repository in Albuquerque needs to expand

A human donor milk repository in Albuquerque has a growing demand and, with a need to expand, is exploring a private-public partnership to do…
Local election results certified, with some recounts pending

Local election results certified, with some recounts pending

The New Mexico State Canvass Board met Tuesday in Santa Fe to certify the official 2023 local election results. The State Canvass Board is…
NM Supreme Court hears gerrymandering oral arguments, decision to come at later date

NM Supreme Court hears gerrymandering oral arguments, decision to come at later date

Attorneys for both the Republican Party of New Mexico and Secretary of State Maggie Toulouse Oliver delivered oral arguments on Monday in the case…
Voter education campaign begins as voting begins in local elections

Voter education campaign begins as voting begins in local elections

Tuesday marked the beginning of early voting for local elections throughout the state. It also marked the beginning of a voter education public service…
Lujan Grisham renews executive order on gun violence

Lujan Grisham renews executive order on gun violence

Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham renewed two executive orders establishing public health emergencies regarding gun violence and substance misuse.
Politics Newsletter: LFC Budget report

Politics Newsletter: LFC Budget report

The Dec. 4 politics newsletter includes Legislative Finance Committe revenue tracking report, countdown to the legislative session and Meanwhile on the Hill.
Illegal cattle grazing remains a problem in Valles Caldera National Preserve

Illegal cattle grazing remains a problem in Valles Caldera National Preserve

Legal grazing is allowed in an allotment in the national preserve and Tuell said the cattle grazed on that allotment have not caused problems…

GET INVOLVED

© 2023 New Mexico Political Report