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Finance...
Obamaland:
American Mules Must Eat
Certified Weed-Free Hay
By Marita Noon
October 31, 2011
Nevada
has the highest unemployment
rate in the country and is one of the worst in foreclosures. “In my
district,”
Nevada Assemblyman Hansen reports, “one in seventeen houses is in
foreclosure.
One in eight is vacant. The people are economically desperate.
Meanwhile we
have an industry that would love to open up mines and create jobs with
an
average salary of $80,000. Unfortunately we also have a government that
takes
ten years to permit a mine.”
No
wonder 77% of Americans believe the
country is heading in the wrong direction.
“Couldn’t
we streamline the process or
eliminate some steps?” asks Nevada State Senator Settelmeyer. He points
out that
the high gold and silver prices present a huge opportunity but he’s
afraid that
if we do not strike while the iron is hot, gold prices may fall before
the
mining projects get approved and get into production. “We have the
resources
and people need the jobs.”
In
1900 silver and gold were found in
Tonopah, Nevada. Within weeks of the discovery, there was digging and
within a
year the mine was fully operational. In 1900 dollars, the mine brought
in $125
million. Today, it would be multi-billions of dollars.
The
Comstock Lode was discovered in
1859 and during its six year run an estimated $50 million of ore was
removed.
The discovery was largely responsible for Nevada becoming a state and
it is
credited with helping the Union’s finances as it backed the paper
money—assisting the Union’s ultimate victory in the civil war. If
Comstock was
burdened with today’s regulatory environment, the war would have been
over long
before an ounce of silver was legally extracted and the outcome could
have been
different.
Mining
has played an important role in
the development of the western United States—providing jobs and
revenues. It
should be doing the same now. In Nevada’s mining towns, the
unemployment rate
is among the lowest in the country: 5-7%—according to Tim Crowley
President of
the Nevada Mining Association who says there are hundreds of mining
jobs
available in Nevada. Skills from the hard hit construction industry can
be
transferred to mining.
General
Moly plans to hire 450 people
by the end of the year. There are major copper operations in
permitting.
Companies are looking at mining rare earths and lithium—both of which
are
essential for cell phones, batteries, computers, and wind turbines and
solar
panels.
Imagine
the jobs and new wealth that
could be created if mining was encouraged. Senator Settelmeyer says,
“It is
hard enough for companies to get through the regulatory process and get
a
permit. On top of that there is frivolous environmental litigation that
lengthens the process—cutting off vital resources and delaying jobs.”
Last
week environmental groups hailed
a decision from the 10th Circuit Court of Appeals that upheld a law
prohibiting
roads on nearly 50 million acres of national forest. Lawyers for the
Colorado
and Wyoming Mining Associations contend that the 2001 Roadless Area
Conservation Rule violated the law. Previous conflicting federal court
rulings
have both upheld and overturned the road-building ban.
Jane
Danowitz, director of the Pew
Environmental Group’s U.S. public lands program acknowledges that the
roadless
rule blocks “logging, drilling and industrial development.”
Expressing
disappointment with the
decision, Stuart Sanderson, President of the Colorado Mining
Association said,
“The decision does not reflect a practical understanding of the impact
that the
rule will have upon mining jobs or access to needed minerals here in
Colorado
and the U.S. It is important to develop high quality coal and other
mineral
reserves, both to ensure our nation’s energy security and reduce our
dependence
on minerals produced in other countries.”
How
does this roadless decision impact
mining and jobs?
In
Montana’s Finley Basin there are
known tungsten deposits. An Australian company wanted to bring revenue
and jobs
to the state by developing the resource. While the property was
successfully
drilled and recognized by Union Carbide in the seventies, it is now
about 200
yards inside a roadless study area. The Forest Service was willing to
offer a
conditional drilling permit. Among the conditions were these
requirements:
The drill sites must be cleared using
hand tools,
The drilling equipment and fuel must
be transported to the site by a team of pack mules,
The mules must be fed certified
weed-free hay, and
Drill site and trail reclamation must
be done using hand tools.
The
company gave up.
How
can America remain competitive in
a global marketplace when we are required to use pick axes and mules?
How does
this help America’s heavy equipment manufacturers like Caterpillar?
No
wonder we are in trouble.
We
need these resources. They are
salable both in the US and in a global market. The question is will we
produce
our assets—creating revenues, jobs, and new wealth? Or, will we allow
countries, such as China, to have a monopoly and control the price?
The
issue goes beyond mining. If we
are not utilizing our own resources, we will have to buy them from
other
countries who are ramping up to take advantage of the boom. They can
produce
them more efficiently without the layers of bureaucratic red tape. Some
countries are working to control the market and raise prices—which
increases
America’s cost of manufactured goods, the deficit, and reliance on
foreign
suppliers.
When
America is struggling with the
deficit and Americans are economically desperate, we need to be looking
at more
than spending cuts and tax increases. We need to eliminate redundant
red tape
in order to create new wealth, cheaper energy, and real jobs—all of
which will
contribute to a stronger America.
Read
this and other columns at
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