
COMMITTEE SUBSTITUTE
FOR
Senate Bill No. 603
(By Senator Tomblin, Mr. President)
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[Originating in the Committee on Energy, Industry and Mining;
reported April 4, 2001.]
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A BILL to amend and reenact sections five and nine, article two-a,
chapter five-b, of the code of West Virginia, one thousand
nine hundred thirty-one, as amended; and to amend and reenact
section ten, article three, chapter twenty-two of said code,
all relating to economic development; office of coalfield
community development; expanding the authority of the office
of coalfield community development; developable land;
infrastructure; master land use plan; surface mining
reclamation plans; including recommendations by local economic
redevelopment authorities in reclamation plans; and including industrial, commercial and public land uses as an post-mining
land use for reclamation plans upon approval of a development
authority and affected county commission.
Be it enacted by the Legislature of West Virginia:

That sections five and nine, article two-a, chapter five-b of
the code of West Virginia, one thousand nine hundred thirty-one, as
amended, be amended and reenacted; and that section ten, article
three, chapter twenty-two of said code be amended and reenacted,
all to read as follows:
CHAPTER 5B. ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT ACT OF 1985.
ARTICLE 2A. OFFICE OF COALFIELD COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT.
§5B-2A-5. Powers and duties.

The office shall have and has and may exercise the following
duties, powers and responsibilities:

(1) To establish a procedure for developing a community impact
statement as provided in section six of this article and to
administer the procedure so established;

(2) To establish a procedure for developing and implementing
coalfield community development statements as provided in section
seven of this article and to administer the procedure so
established;

(3) To establish a procedure for determining the assets that could be developed in and maintained by the community to foster its
long-term viability as provided in section eight of this article
and to administer the procedure so established;

(4) To establish a procedure for determining the land and
infrastructure needs in the general area of the surface mining
operations as provided in section nine of this article and to
administer the procedure so established;

(5) To establish a procedure to develop action reports and
annual updates as provided in section ten of this article and to
administer the procedure so established;

(6) To determine the need for meetings to be held among the
various interested parties in the communities impacted by
surface-mining operations and, when appropriate, to facilitate such
the meetings;

(7) To establish a procedure to assist property owners in the
sale of their property as provided in section eleven of this
article and to administer the procedure so established; and

(8) In conjunction with the division, to maintain and operate
a system to receive and address questions, concerns and complaints
relating to surface mining; and

(9) On its own initiative or at the request of a community in
close proximity to a mining operation, or a mining operation, offer assistance to facilitate the development of economic or community
assets. Such assistance may include the preparation of a master
land use plan pursuant to the provisions of section nine of this
article.
§5B-2A-9. Securing developable land and infrastructure.

(a) As a part of the coalfield community development statement
required by section seven of this article, the office, in a
collaborative effort with those persons and entities identified in
subdivision (1), subsection (b), section seven of this article,
shall determine the land and infrastructure needs in the general
area of the surface mining operations.

(b) For the purposes of this section, the term "general area"
shall mean the county or counties in which the mining operations
are being conducted, or any adjacent county.

(c) To assist the office in the development of the coalfield
community development statement, the operator shall be required to
prepare and submit to the office the information set forth in this
subsection, as follows:

(1) A map of the area for which a permit under article three,
chapter twenty-two of this code is being sought or has been
obtained;

(2) The names of the surface and mineral owners of the property to be mined pursuant to the permit; and

(3) A statement of the post-mining land use for all land which
may be affected by the mining operations.

(d) In making a determination of the land and infrastructure
needs in the general area of the mining operations, the office
shall consider at least the following:

(1) The availability of developable land in the general area;

(2) The needs of the general area for developable land;

(3) The availability of infrastructure, including, but not
limited to, access roads, water service, wastewater service and
other utilities;

(4) The amount of land to be mined and the amount of valley to
be filled;

(5) The amount, nature and cost to develop and maintain the
community assets identified in section eight of this article; and

(6) The availability of federal, state and local grants and
low-interest loans to finance all or a portion of the acquisition
and construction of the identified land and infrastructure needs of
the general area.

(e) In making a determination of the land and infrastructure
needs in the general area of the surface mining operations, the
office shall give significant weight to developable land on or near existing or planned multilane highways.

(f) In addition to the coal field community development
statement cited in subsection (a) of this section, the office may
secure developable land and infrastructure for a development office
or county through the preparation of a master land use plan for
inclusion into a reclamation plan prepared pursuant to the
provisions of section ten, article three, chapter twenty-two of
this code. Participation in a master land use plan is voluntary.

(1) State, local, county or regional development authorities
may determine land and infrastructure needs within their
jurisdictions through the development of a master land use plan
which incorporates post-mining land use needs that include
industrial uses, commercial uses, agricultural uses, public
facility uses or recreational facility uses.

(2) A master land use plan must be reviewed by the office of
coalfield community development before the master land use plan can
be implemented.


(3) The required infrastructure component standards needed to
accomplish the designated post-mining land uses identified in
subdivision one of this subsection shall be developed by the
relevant state, local, county or regional development authority.
These standards must be in place before the respective state, local, county or regional development authority can accept
ownership of property donated pursuant to a master land use plan.
Acceptance of ownership of such property by a state, local, county
or regional development authority may not occur unless it is
determined that: (a) The property use is compatible with adjacent
land uses; (b) the use satisfies the relevant development
authority's anticipated need and market use; (c) the property has
in place necessary infrastructure components needed to achieve the
anticipated use; (d) the use is supported by all other appropriate
public agencies; and (e) the use is feasible. Required
infrastructure component standards require approval of the relevant
county commission or commissions before such standards are
accepted. County commission approval may be rendered only after a
reasonable public comment period.
CHAPTER 22. ENVIRONMENTAL RESOURCES.
ARTICLE 3. SURFACE COAL MINING AND RECLAMATION ACT.
§22-3-10. Reclamation plan requirements.

(a) Each reclamation plan submitted as part of a
surface-mining permit application shall include, in the degree of
detail necessary to demonstrate that reclamation required by this
article can be accomplished, a statement of:

(1) The identification of the lands subject to surface mining over the estimated life of these operations and the size, sequence
and timing of the operations for which it is anticipated that
individual permits for mining will be sought;

(2) The condition of the land to be covered by the permit
prior to any mining, including: (A) The uses existing at the time
of the application and, if such the land has a history of previous
mining, the uses which preceded any mining; (B) the capability of
the land prior to any mining to support a variety of uses, giving
consideration to soil and foundation characteristics, topography
and vegetation cover and, if applicable, a soil survey prepared
pursuant to subdivision (15), subsection (a), section nine of this
article; and (C) the best information available on the productivity
of the land prior to mining, including appropriate classification
as prime farmlands and the average yield of food, fiber, forage or
wood products from such the lands obtained under high levels of
management;`

(3) The use which is proposed to be made of the land following
reclamation, including a discussion of the utility and capacity of
the reclaimed land to support a variety of alternative uses and the
relationship of such the use to existing land use policies and
plans and the comments of any owner of the surface, other state
agencies and local governments which would have to initiate, implement, approve or authorize the proposed use of the land
following reclamation;

(4) A detailed description of how the proposed postmining land
use is to be achieved and the necessary support activities which
may be needed to achieve the proposed land use;

(5) The engineering techniques proposed to be used in mining
and reclamation and a description of the major equipment; a plan
for the control of surface water drainage and of water
accumulation; a plan where appropriate, for backfilling, soil
stabilization and compacting, grading, revegetation and a plan for
soil reconstruction, replacement and stabilization pursuant to the
performance standards in subdivision (7), subsection (b), section
thirteen of this article for those food, forage and forest lands
identified therein; and a statement as to how the operator plans to
comply with each of the applicable requirements set out in section
thirteen or fourteen of this article;

(6) A detailed estimated timetable for the accomplishment of
each major step in the reclamation plan;

(7) The consideration which has been given to conducting
surface-mining operations in a manner consistent with surface owner
plans and applicable state and local land use plans and programs;

(8) The steps to be taken to comply with applicable air and water quality laws and rules and any applicable health and safety
standards;

(9) The consideration which has been given to developing the
reclamation plan in a manner consistent with local physical
environmental and climatological conditions;

(10) All lands, interests in lands or options on such the
interests held by the applicant or pending bids on interests in
lands by the applicant, which lands are contiguous to the area to
be covered by the permit;

(11) A detailed description of the measures to be taken during
the surface mining and reclamation process to assure the protection
of: (A) The quality of surface and groundwater systems, both on-
and off-site, from adverse effects of the surface mining operation;
(B) the rights of present users to such the water; and (C) the
quantity of surface and groundwater systems, both on- and off-site,
from adverse effects of the surface mining operation or to provide
alternative sources of water where such the protection of quantity
cannot be assured;

(12) The results of tests borings which the applicant has made
at the area to be covered by the permit or other equivalent
information and data in a form satisfactory to the director,
including the location of subsurface water and an analysis of the chemical properties, including acid forming properties of the
mineral and overburden: Provided, That information which pertains
only to the analysis of the chemical and physical properties of the
coal, except information regarding such the mineral or elemental
contents which are potentially toxic in the environment, shall be
kept confidential and not made a matter of public record;

(13) The consideration which has been given to maximize the
utilization and conservation of the solid fuel resource being
recovered so that reaffecting the land in the future can be
minimized; and

(14) Such Any other requirements as the director may prescribe
by rule.

(b) Any surface mining permit application filed after the
effective date of this subsection may contain, in addition to the
requirements of subsection (a) of this section, a master land use
plan, prepared in accordance with article two-a, chapter five-b of
this code, as to the post-mining land use. A reclamation plan
approved but not implemented or pending approval as of the
effective date of this section may be amended to provide for a
revised reclamation plan consistent with the provisions of this
subsection.


(b) (c) The reclamation plan shall be available to the public for review except for those portions thereof specifically exempted
in subsection (a) of this section.
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(NOTE: The purpose of this bill is to provide for the review
and recommendations by local economic or redevelopment authorities
of surface-mining reclamation plans and to allow the coal field
community development office to prepare a master land use plan for
inclusion in a reclamation plan.

Strike-throughs indicate language that would be stricken from
the present law, and underscoring indicates new language that would
be added.)