Experience With Georgia's Mined Land Reclamation Law - Inception Of The Idea

Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
Jesse H. Auvil
Organization:
Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
Pages:
19
File Size:
2436 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1970

Abstract

In January of 1966, during the annual session of Georgia's General Assembly, Representative Paul E. Nessmith of Statesboro, Georgia, walked into my office and asked me what I thought of the advisability and feasibility of a law which would require the mining operators to reclaim their mined out lands. My answer to him was, as a one time mine superintendent and operator, that I probably would not think very highly of the added cost which reclamation would impose on the operation; but that since assuming the job of Chief Geologist and Assistant Director of the Georgia Department of Mines, Mining and Geology, and in retrospect, I could recommend it very highly, particularly in view of the increased pressure being applied by the Federal government along these lines. I stated then and still emphatically state that this sort of administration should be done on the State level rather than the Federal level. He asked me if I would conduct him on a tour through some of the mining country in which I had worked and to this I readily agreed. The result of this trip was that he was adversely impressed by the devastation which the mining operations had wreaked on that area of middle Georgia along the fall line known as the kaolin belt. Very little except talk was done for the remainder of 1966.
Citation

APA: Jesse H. Auvil  (1970)  Experience With Georgia's Mined Land Reclamation Law - Inception Of The Idea

MLA: Jesse H. Auvil Experience With Georgia's Mined Land Reclamation Law - Inception Of The Idea. Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration, 1970.

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