Oregon mine illustrates problems with national law

EPA PROJECT manager Chris Cora describes future cleanup plans Thursday, April 17, 2014, at the abandoned Formosa Mine, a Superfund site outside Riddle, Ore. The $900,000 bond posted by Canadian owners before walking away covers only a fraction of the estimated $20 million or more in cleanup costs that will be paid for by taxpayers.

RIDDLE — U.S. Rep. Peter DeFazio on Thursday toured an abandoned copper mine in southwestern Oregon that is on the Superfund list of major pollution sites as he prepares to file legislation to overhaul the nation’s primary mining law.

DeFazio, D-Ore., said the Formosa Mine, which is on federal and private land outside Riddle, illustrates what is wrong about the 1872 Mining Act: The Canadian companies that reopened the mine in the 1990s have disappeared, the bond put up for cleanup was nowhere near enough to cover the true costs, and the federal government never got a penny in royalties.