CBS– The same week President Barack Obama riled environmentalists with plans
for offshore oil drilling, he faces criticism for signaling he will
support a Bush-era policy criticized as giving mining companies
unlimited access to public lands to dump toxic waste.
The administration asked a federal judge Tuesday to dismiss a
challenge by environmental and community groups to a rule that lifted a
restriction on how much public land companies can use. The groups are
also challenging a 2008 rule that says companies aren’t required to pay
the going rate to use the land.
Environmentalists said the administration’s decision conflicts with
its pledge to overhaul the nearly 140-year-old law regulating the mining
of gold, silver and other hard-rock minerals on public land.
“The Obama administration can’t have it both ways,” said Jane
Danowitz of the Pew Environment Group in Washington. “Either it stands
by its earlier commitment to bringing mining law into the 21st Century,
or it continues to allow the industry to dump unlimited toxic waste on
public land at the expense of taxpayers and the environment.”
National Mining Association spokeswoman Carol Raulston said Friday
that her group is pleased with the Obama administration’s decision to
support the Bush policy.
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