0001| HOUSE JOINT MEMORIAL 55
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0002| 43RD LEGISLATURE - STATE OF NEW MEXICO - SECOND SESSION, 1998
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0003| INTRODUCED BY
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0004| G. X. McSHERRY
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0005|
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0006|
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0007|
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0008|
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0009|
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0010| A JOINT MEMORIAL
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0011| REQUESTING THE PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATE AND CONGRESS TO
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0012| MAKE THE MORE THAN ONE BILLION DOLLARS ($1,000,000,000) OF
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0013| FEDERAL MONEY IN THE ABANDONED MINE LAND TRUST FUND ALREADY
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0014| EARMARKED FOR ABANDONED MINE RECLAMATION AVAILABLE TO STATES.
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0015|
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0016| WHEREAS, New Mexico has an estimated thirteen thousand
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0017| hazardous mine openings, sixty-nine miles of degraded streams
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0018| and more than thirty thousand acres of land that have been
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0019| adversely affected by previous mining activities; and
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0020| WHEREAS, numerous personal injuries, deaths, property
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0021| damages and environmental concerns have resulted from early
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0022| mining activities; and
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0023| WHEREAS, the mining and minerals division of the energy,
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0024| minerals and natural resources department estimates it will
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0025| cost more than three hundred million dollars ($300,000,000) to
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0001| reclaim and restore these abandoned mine lands; and
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0002| WHEREAS, New Mexico now receives only about one million
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0003| five hundred thousand dollars ($1,500,000) a year from the
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0004| federal government for abandoned mine land reclamation
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0005| projects; and
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0006| WHEREAS, there is now a balance of more than one billion
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0007| dollars ($1,000,000,000) in the federal abandoned mine
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0008| reclamation trust fund that is set aside by law to take care
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0009| of lands adversely affected by early coal mining activities;
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0010| and
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0011| WHEREAS, New Mexico is the thirteenth largest coal
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0012| producing state in the nation, and coal operators contribute
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0013| significantly to the fund by paying a special fee for each ton
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0014| of coal they mine; and
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0015| WHEREAS, New Mexico coal mine operators paid more than
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0016| five million four hundred thousand dollars ($5,400,000) in
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0017| special coal mining fees in 1997; and
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0018| WHEREAS, the unappropriated federal abandoned mine
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0019| reclamation trust fund balance is increasing at the rate of
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0020| more than one hundred million dollars ($100,000,000) per year;
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0021| and
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0022| WHEREAS, New Mexico has a seventeen-year record of
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0023| reclamation success in administering the abandoned mine land
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0024| program; and
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0025| WHEREAS, New Mexico's current undistributed state share
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0001| of the federal abandoned mine reclamation trust fund is more
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0002| than twelve million dollars ($12,000,000); and
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0003| WHEREAS, New Mexico has been working with the western
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0004| governors' association, the western interstate energy board,
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0005| the national association of abandoned mine land programs,
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0006| Indian tribes and other states to free more of these funds to
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0007| safeguard and reclaim abandoned mine lands; and
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0008| WHEREAS, making more funds available to states for
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0009| abandoned mine reclamation should preserve the interest
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0010| revenues now being made available for the united mine workers
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0011| combined benefit fund; and
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0012| WHEREAS, the federal office of surface mining, the United
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0013| States environmental protection agency and congress have not
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0014| agreed to make more funds available to states for abandoned
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0015| mine reclamation;
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0016| NOW, THEREFORE, BE IT RESOLVED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE
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0017| STATE OF NEW MEXICO that the president of United States and
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0018| congress be urged to make the more than one billion dollars
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0019| ($1,000,000,000) of federal money already earmarked for
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0020| abandoned mine land reclamation available to states to reclaim
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0021| and make safe our abandoned mine lands; and
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0022| BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED that copies of this memorial be
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0023| transmitted to the president of the United States, the
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0024| presiding officers of each house of congress and all other
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0025| members of congress.
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