98-7924. Smith River National Recreation Area  

  • [Federal Register Volume 63, Number 59 (Friday, March 27, 1998)]
    [Rules and Regulations]
    [Pages 15042-15062]
    From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
    [FR Doc No: 98-7924]
    
    
    
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    Part III
    
    
    
    
    
    Department of Agriculture
    
    
    
    
    
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    Forest Service
    
    
    
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    36 CFR Part 292
    
    
    
    Smith River National Recreation Area; Final Rule
    
    Federal Register / Vol. 63, No. 59 / Friday, March 27, 1998 / Rules 
    and Regulations
    
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    DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE
    
    Forest Service
    
    36 CFR Part 292
    
    RIN 0596-AB39
    
    
    Smith River National Recreation Area
    
    AGENCY: Forest Service, USDA.
    
    ACTION: Final rule.
    
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    SUMMARY: This final rule implements Section 8(d) of the Smith River 
    National Recreation Area Act of 1990 and sets forth the procedures by 
    which the Forest Service will regulate mineral operations on National 
    Forest System lands within the Smith River National Recreation Area.
        This rule supplements existing Forest Service regulations and is 
    intended to ensure that mineral operations are conducted in a manner 
    consistent with the purposes for which the Smith River National 
    Recreation Area was established.
    
    EFFECTIVE DATE: This rule is effective April 27, 1998.
    
    FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Sam Hotchkiss, Minerals and Geology 
    Management Staff, (202) 205-1535.
    
    SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
    
    Background
    
        The Smith River National Recreation Area (SRNRA) was established by 
    the Smith River National Recreation Area Act of 1990 (the Act) (16 
    U.S.C. 460bbb et seq.). The purpose of the Act is to ensure ``* * * the 
    preservation, protection, enhancement, and interpretation for present 
    and future generations of the Smith River watershed's outstanding wild 
    and scenic rivers, ecological diversity, and recreation opportunities 
    while providing for the wise use and sustained productivity of its 
    natural resources * * *.''
        In order to meet the purposes of the Act, Congress directed the 
    Forest Service to administer the SRNRA to, among other things, provide 
    for a broad range of recreation uses and improve fisheries and water 
    quality. Subject to valid existing rights, Congress prohibited 
    locatable mineral operations, prohibited mineral leasing (including 
    leasing of geothermal resources), and limited the extraction of mineral 
    materials within the SRNRA to situations where the material extracted 
    is used for construction and maintenance of roads and other facilities 
    within the SRNRA and in certain areas excluded from the SRNRA by the 
    Act.
        The SRNRA consists of approximately 300,000 acres of National 
    Forest System lands in the Six Rivers National Forest in northern 
    California. The Act divides the SRNRA into eight distinct management 
    areas and specifies a management emphasis for each. There are also four 
    areas within the exterior boundaries of the SRNRA that were expressly 
    excluded from the provisions of the Act.
        One of the eight management areas in the SRNRA is the Siskiyou 
    Wilderness, most of which was designated by Congress on September 26, 
    1984. The Gasquet-Orleans Corridor was added to the Siskiyou Wilderness 
    by the Act in 1990. The Act specifies that the Siskiyou Wilderness is 
    to continue to be managed pursuant to the provisions of the Wilderness 
    Act. In accordance with Section 4(d)(3) of the Wilderness Act, the 
    federal lands within the Siskiyou Wilderness (excluding the Gasquet-
    Orleans Corridor addition) were withdrawn from the operation of the 
    mining and mineral leasing laws, subject to valid existing rights, as 
    of September 26, 1984.
        The Act also redesignated the following rivers and some of their 
    tributaries as components of the National Wild and Scenic Rivers 
    System: (1) The Smith River; (2) the Middle Fork of the Smith River; 
    (3) the North Fork of the Smith River; (4) the Siskiyou Fork of the 
    Smith River; and (5) the South Fork of the Smith River. These same 
    rivers and most of the designated tributaries had previously been 
    designated components of the Wild and Scenic Rivers System on January 
    19, 1981, pursuant to Section 2(a)(ii) of the Wild and Scenic Rivers 
    Act. The Act designated as wild segments two tributaries which had not 
    previously been designated--Peridotite Creek, tributary to the North 
    Fork of the Smith River, and Harrington Creek, tributary to the South 
    Fork of the Smith River. The Act also changed the classification of 
    some tributaries designated in 1981, from recreational to scenic or 
    wild. For example, the lower 2.5 mile segment of Myrtle Creek, 
    tributary to the Middle Fork of the Smith River, was reclassified as 
    wild. In the Act, Congress directed that these designated wild and 
    scenic rivers and tributaries be managed in accordance with the Act and 
    the Wild and Scenic Rivers Act, whichever is more restrictive. In 
    accordance with Section 9(a)(iii) of the Wild and Scenic Rivers Act, 
    the federal lands within segments of designated rivers or tributaries 
    classified ``wild'' (except for Peridotite Creek, Harrington Creek, and 
    the lower 2.5 miles of Myrtle Creek that were reclassified in the Act) 
    were withdrawn from the operation of the mining and mineral leasing 
    laws, subject to valid existing rights on January 19, 1981.
        Under this patchwork of wild and scenic rivers, wilderness, and 
    national recreation area designations there emerge three different 
    dates of withdrawal which apply to federal lands. First, there are the 
    federal lands within ``wild'' segments of wild and scenic rivers 
    (excluding those that were designated or reclassified as ``wild'' in 
    the Act) which were withdrawn subject to valid existing rights on 
    January 19, 1981, pursuant to Section 9(a)(iii) of the Wild and Scenic 
    Rivers Act. Second, there are the federal lands within the Siskiyou 
    Wilderness (excluding both the Gasquet-Orleans Corridor addition and 
    the aforementioned ``wild'' segments of wild and scenic rivers) which 
    were withdrawn subject to valid existing rights on September 26, 1984, 
    pursuant to Section 4(d)(3) of the Wilderness Act. Third, the remaining 
    federal lands that comprise the SRNRA (which includes, among others, 
    the ``scenic'' and ``recreational'' segments of wild and scenic rivers, 
    the ``wild'' segments of wild and scenic rivers as designated or 
    reclassified by the Act, and the Gasquet-Orleans Corridor addition to 
    the Siskiyou Wilderness) that were withdrawn subject to valid existing 
    rights on November 16, 1990, pursuant to Section 8(a) of the Act.
        Mining and prospecting for minerals have been important parts of 
    the history of the Smith River area since the 1850's. Historically, 
    mining operations within the Smith River area have been small-scale 
    placer gold exploration and recovery operations within the bed and 
    banks of the Smith River and its main tributaries. Panning, sluicing, 
    and dredging operations occur predominantly during the summer months. 
    In recent years, large, low-grade, nickel-cobalt resources in the 
    uplands of the Smith River watershed have attracted the attention of 
    prospectors. Based on a review of Bureau of Land Management (BLM) 
    records, there were approximately 2,776 mining claims covering about 
    30,000 acres of National Forest System lands within the SRNRA upon the 
    date of enactment of the Act in 1990. By May 1997, however, BLM records 
    indicate that there were only approximately 297 mining claims covering 
    about 7,700 acres of National Forest System lands in the SRNRA that met 
    current filing requirements. None of the claims are for mill site 
    locations. There are no active operations on mining claims or on lands 
    with outstanding mineral rights.
    
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        In Section 8 of the Act, Congress addressed the extent to which 
    mineral operations would be authorized within the SRNRA. Section 8(a) 
    of the Act withdrew as of the effective date of the Act, all federal 
    lands in the SRNRA from the operation of the mining, mineral and 
    geothermal leasing laws subject to valid existing rights. Section 8(b) 
    precluded the issuance of patents for locations and claims made prior 
    to the establishment of the SRNRA. Section 8(c) of the Act prohibited 
    all mineral operations within the SRNRA except where valid existing 
    rights are established. Section 8(c) also prohibited the extraction of 
    mineral materials such as, common varieties of stone, sand, and gravel, 
    except if used in the construction and maintenance of roads and other 
    facilities within the SRNRA and the excluded areas. Finally, under 
    Section 8(d), the Secretary was authorized and directed to promulgate 
    supplementary regulations to promote and protect the purposes for which 
    the SRNRA was designated.
        On November 8, 1994, the largest claimholder in the SRNRA filed 
    suit against the Department of Agriculture in United States District 
    Court for the Northern District of California alleging violations of 
    the Act. California Nickel Corp. v. Espy, No. C94-3904-DLJ (N.D. Cal.). 
    Specifically, the suit alleged that the Department violated the Act by 
    not promulgating regulations for mineral operations in the SRNRA as 
    required under Section 8(d). The Department did not dispute that 
    Section 8(d) of the Act required the promulgation of supplementary 
    regulations for the SRNRA. In fact, preliminary progress towards the 
    development of a regulation had been made prior to the initiation of 
    litigation.
        On June 23, 1995, proposed supplementary regulations for mineral 
    activities in the SRNRA were published in the Federal Register for 
    notice and comment (60 FR 32633). Seven letters were received during 
    the 60-day comment period and were considered in the development of a 
    final rule which was published on April 3, 1996 (61 FR 14621). Upon 
    publication, the claimholder who had initiated litigation against the 
    agency amended its complaint to challenge the substance of the April 3, 
    1996, final rule. On March 14, 1997, the court invalidated three 
    provisions of the April 3, 1996, final rule. California Nickel Corp. v. 
    Glickman, No. C-94-3904-DLJ, slip op. (N.D. Cal. Mar. 14, 1997). 
    Specifically, the court held that a provision limiting the period of 
    approval of a plan of operations to 5 years was arbitrary and 
    capricious because the agency had failed to evaluate whether mining 
    under such a time constraint might result in a taking of private 
    property. The court also ruled that the agency had been arbitrary and 
    capricious by failing to explain why the supplementary regulations did 
    not include a timetable for processing and reviewing plans of 
    operations. Finally, the court ruled that mining operators had been 
    denied due process because the rule did not include a mechanism by 
    which Forest Service determinations that valid existing rights had not 
    been established could be reviewed within the Department of the 
    Interior.
        On September 8, 1997, the Forest Service published a second 
    proposed rule for notice and comment which included provisions that 
    addressed the court's concerns (62 FR 47167). Specifically, the second 
    proposed rule provided that plans of operations would be approved for 
    the minimum time reasonably necessary for a prudent operator to 
    complete mining operations. The second proposed rule also stipulated 
    that plans of operations would be reviewed for completeness within 120 
    days of submission and that valid existing rights determinations would 
    be completed within 2 years except when the Forest Service could show 
    cause as to why additional time was necessary. Finally, the second 
    proposed rule included a provision requiring the Forest Service to 
    promptly request the Bureau of Land Management to initiate a contest 
    action whenever it concluded that an applicant had failed to establish 
    the presence of valid existing rights. Other modifications were made to 
    clarify and improve the regulations generally, but they were not 
    required as a result of the March 1997 court decision.
        Four letters were submitted during the 60-day comment period that 
    ended on November 7, 1997. The comments contained in these four letters 
    were considered by the Forest Service in the development of this final 
    rule. Based on the comments, several changes were made in the text of 
    the final rule. Some of these changes were made to the provisions of 
    the second proposed rule which had been added to respond to the court's 
    concerns with the first final rule. For example, a new provision was 
    added to this final rule which expressly provides for an extension of 
    the approval period for a plan of operations. Additionally, the time to 
    review a plan of operations for completeness was shortened from 120 to 
    60 days. Finally, the procedure by which a Forest Service valid 
    existing rights determination is referred to the Bureau of Land 
    Management was refined and clarified. These and other changes and the 
    reasons for the changes are explained more fully in the following 
    paragraphs.
        All comments received are available for review in the Office of the 
    Director, Minerals and Geology Management Staff, Auditors Building, 4th 
    Floor, 201 14th Street, SW., Washington, DC, during regular business 
    hours (8 a.m. to 5 p.m.) Monday through Friday. The Department 
    appreciates the time and energy the reviewers invested in preparing 
    these letters and in articulating their views regarding the proposed 
    rule.
    
    Analysis of Public Comment
    
        Comments on the proposed rule dealt with general issues, including 
    whether supplementary regulations are necessary, whether a taking of 
    private property had occurred, whether the agency exceeded its 
    authority to regulate mineral operations on National Forest System 
    lands, whether the new provisions in the second proposed rule were the 
    same or substantially similar to those in the first final rule that had 
    been struck down by the court, whether the supplementary regulations 
    were in furtherance of the Act, whether the supplementary regulations 
    were punitive, whether mineral collecting was a permissible 
    recreational activity in the SRNRA, whether the requirement for a plan 
    of operations should apply to suction dredge and sluice operations, and 
    whether delay by the Forest Service in promulgating the supplementary 
    regulations caused the abandonment of more than 4,500 mining claims. In 
    addition to the preceding general comments, several specific issues 
    concerning the enumerated provisions of the proposed rule were raised. 
    A summary of the comments and the Department's responses to them 
    follows.
    
    General Comments
    
        1. Supplementary mining regulations are unnecessary since the 
    Forest Service already has adequate authority to protect the SRNRA in 
    accordance with the Act. One reviewer stated that there is no need for 
    additional regulations pertaining to mineral operations in the SRNRA 
    since existing Forest Service regulations governing these activities at 
    36 CFR part 228 provide ample protection to the SRNRA and its 
    resources.
        Response: The issue of whether additional regulation of mineral 
    operations in the SRNRA is necessary was conclusively determined by 
    Congress in Section 8(d) of the Act. This provision specifically states 
    that ``the Secretary (of Agriculture) is authorized and directed to 
    issue supplementary
    
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    regulations to promote and protect the purposes for which the (SRNRA) 
    is designated.'' It is not within the discretion of the Department to 
    evaluate whether such regulations are necessary. The Act obligates the 
    Department to issue them, therefore, no change to the rule has been 
    made based on the comment.
        2. The new regulations should not differ from the Forest Service's 
    current mining regulations at 36 CFR part 228 unless ``some unique 
    aspect of the SRNRA'' justifies a change. One reviewer felt that the 
    supplementary regulations for mineral operations in the SRNRA should be 
    identical to the current mining regulations at 36 CFR part 228 unless 
    ``a reasonable and rational justification * * * based upon some unique 
    aspect of the SRNRA'' can be identified to justify the change.
        Response: The Department disagrees with this comment for the 
    following reasons. First, there is no indication in the Act or its 
    legislative history that the supplementary mining regulations must 
    mirror the current mining regulations at 36 CFR part 228 unless a 
    unique attribute of the SRNRA might warrant a change. The Act vested 
    the Department with considerably more discretion to determine the 
    appropriate form and content of the supplementary regulations. It is 
    worth noting, however, that the supplementary regulations build upon, 
    and are integrated with, the Forest Service's current mining 
    regulations at 36 CFR part 228.
        Secondly, even assuming that this reviewer was correct, the Act and 
    its legislative history contain numerous references to the unique 
    attributes of the SRNRA which justify different and more stringent 
    regulation of mineral development activities than elsewhere on National 
    Forest System lands. Section 2 of the Act recognizes the ``invaluable 
    legacy'' represented by the undammed and free-flowing Smith River; the 
    unusual ``richness of ecological diversity,'' ``renowned anadromous 
    fisheries,'' ``exceptional water quality,'' and ``abundant wildlife'' 
    in the Smith River watershed; and the ``exceptional opportunities'' for 
    wilderness, water sports, fishing, hunting, camping, and sightseeing. 
    Similar language is contained in the House committee report and floor 
    debate pertaining to the establishment of the SRNRA. See, H.Rep. No. 
    707, 101st Cong., 2d Sess. 11-12 (1990); 136 Cong. Rec. 24720 (Sept. 
    17, 1990). Thus, there appear to be several ``unique aspects'' in the 
    SRNRA which justify departing from the general Forest Service mining 
    regulations at 36 CFR part 228. Based on the foregoing discussion, no 
    change was made to the rule.
        3. The second proposed rule utilizes many of the provisions from 
    the first final rule that were invalidated by the court. One reviewer 
    criticized the second proposed rule for containing provisions that 
    varied only slightly from those in the first final rule that were 
    invalidated by the court.
        Response: The Department disagrees with this reviewer's 
    characterization.
        On March 14, 1997, the court invalidated three provisions of the 
    first final supplementary regulations for the SRNRA that had been 
    published on April 3, 1996. California Nickel Corp. v. Glickman, No. C-
    94-3904-DLJ, slip op. (N.D. Cal. Mar. 14, 1997). The court first ruled 
    that a provision limiting the approval period of a plan of operations 
    for mining in the SRNRA to 5 years was arbitrary and capricious because 
    the agency had failed to consider all the relevant factors in adopting 
    this provision. Specifically the court concluded that there was no 
    indication in the record that the agency had considered whether a 5-
    year limit might result in a taking of private property. Id. at 9-11. 
    The court next ruled that a provision exempting plans of operations in 
    the SRNRA from the generally applicable timetables for review set forth 
    in the mining regulations at 36 CFR part 228, subpart A, was arbitrary 
    and capricious because the agency failed to explain or justify its 
    position. Id. at 11-13. Finally, the court held that the rule denied a 
    mining operator due process because it did not provide a mechanism by 
    which the Bureau of Land Management could review determinations by the 
    Forest Service that valid existing rights had not been established by 
    the operator. Id. at 13-17.
        The Forest Service took the court's concerns seriously. Bearing in 
    mind its overall responsibility to administer the SRNRA in conformance 
    with the Act, the Forest Service published a second proposed rule on 
    September 8, 1997, which specifically responded to the deficiencies 
    that had been identified by the court (62 FR 47167).
        With respect to the approval period for a plan of operations, the 
    new proposed rule provided for approval for the ``minimum amount of 
    time reasonably necessary for a prudent operator to complete the 
    mineral development activities covered by the approved plan of 
    operations.''
        This provision ensures the protection of the SRNRA while providing 
    mineral operators the necessary flexibility to conduct their 
    activities. The Department believes this approach should allay concerns 
    about the potential deprivation of property arising from an abbreviated 
    approval period which might preclude the completion of mining 
    operations. At the same time, this provision should ensure that mining 
    operations will be conducted in an expeditious manner and will not be 
    protracted over time to the detriment of the land and resources of the 
    SRNRA.
        With respect to timetables for reviewing plans of operations in the 
    SRNRA, the second proposed rule provided that the Forest Service will 
    notify the operator within 120 days whether all the necessary 
    information to evaluate a plan of operations has been submitted. In 
    addition, the second proposed rule provided that once the necessary 
    information has been submitted, the determination of whether the 
    operator has established valid existing rights will be completed within 
    2 years unless the agency can show good cause in writing as to why more 
    time will be necessary. The preamble of the second proposed rule went 
    into considerable detail to explain why this timetable, rather than the 
    timetable set forth at 36 CFR part 228, subpart A, was more appropriate 
    for reviewing plans of operation in the SRNRA.
        Finally, with respect to appeals of valid existing rights 
    determinations adverse to a mining operator, the second proposed rule 
    provided that the Forest Service would notify the Bureau of Land 
    Management promptly of adverse determinations and request the 
    initiation of a mineral contest action against the pertinent mining 
    claims.
        The Department believes that the changes in the second proposed 
    rule are significant and address the concerns identified by the court 
    in its March 14, 1997, ruling. The Department also believes that the 
    second proposed rule was faithful to, and consistent with, the legal 
    obligations assumed by the Forest Service pursuant to the Act. It 
    should be noted that each of the provisions added to the second 
    proposed rule based on the March 14, 1997, court decision was further 
    modified in response to comments that were received on the second 
    proposed rule. Therefore, no changes were made to the rule based on 
    this comment.
        4. The regulations are unlawful because they exceed the Forest 
    Service's authority to administer minerals on National Forest System 
    lands and do not promote and protect the purposes for which the SRNRA 
    was established. Two reviewers stated that the second proposed rule 
    unlawfully augmented the Forest Service's authority to regulate 
    minerals in the SRNRA. One of these reviewers added that by effectively 
    eliminating recreational mining from
    
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    the SRNRA, the proposed rule was flawed because it did not ``promote 
    and protect'' one of the purposes for which the SRNRA was established.
        Response: The Department disagrees with this comment. This rule 
    does not increase the authority of the Forest Service to regulate 
    minerals in the SRNRA. Rather, it sets forth a system for determining 
    whether a claimholder possesses valid existing rights and, where such 
    rights exist, the terms and conditions under which National Forest 
    System lands may be used to conduct mineral development activities. 
    This system is entirely consistent with the authority delegated by 
    Congress in Section 8(d) of the Act which, the Department believes, 
    reflects an eminently reasonable compromise between an outright 
    prohibition of all mining in the SRNRA (which might have led to 
    potential takings liability) and permitting mining to continue without 
    additional regulation (which might have adversely impacted the values 
    for which the SRNRA was established).
        The Department also rejects the assertion that mining was 
    considered one of the ``recreational'' activities for which the SRNRA 
    was established and which the Forest Service must ``promote and 
    protect'' through its administration. Section 2 of the Act specifically 
    identifies ``wilderness, water sports, fishing, hunting, camping, and 
    sightseeing'' as recreational activities occurring in the SRNRA. 
    Although this recitation is not necessarily exclusive, mining is 
    clearly not the type of activity that fits comfortably within this 
    class of recreation pursuits. No changes to the rule were made based on 
    the comments of these two reviewers.
        5. The supplementary regulations target a single class of users and 
    is punitive. One reviewer contended that the second proposed rule was 
    punitive and directed at a single class of users of the SRNRA, namely 
    miners. This reviewer further noted that in other congressionally 
    designated national recreation areas, supplementary regulations 
    addressed activities other than just mining and affected parties other 
    than just miners.
        Response: The Department agrees that the supplementary regulations 
    apply only to those wishing to conduct mineral operations in the SRNRA, 
    but disagrees that they are punitive. The narrow focus of the 
    regulations is based on the statutory authority in Section 8 of the Act 
    which pertains explicitly and exclusively to mining. The legislative 
    history of the Act reinforces the view that Congressional intent in 
    adding this provision was to avoid or minimize mining practices that 
    might negatively impact the resource values for which the SRNRA was 
    established.
    
        With regard to mining, the amendments would give explicit 
    recognition to the rights associated with valid existing claims, and 
    direct the Secretary to issue supplementary regulations designed to 
    ``promote and protect'' the purposes for which the recreation area 
    is created. Although I remain concerned about the potential for 
    destructive mining, I am hopeful that the supplemental regulations 
    will address those concerns.
    
    136 Cong. Rec. H13045, 13046 (Oct. 26, 1990) (Statement of Rep. Bosco).
        The Department disagrees with the reviewer's suggestion that the 
    scope of these regulations should be expanded based on similarly 
    expansive supplementary regulations in other congressionally designated 
    national recreation areas. The statutes which established these other 
    areas specifically address the types of issues to be covered by the 
    regulations. See, e.g., the Sawtooth National Recreation Area Act, 16 
    U.S.C. 460aa-3, -10; the Hells Canyon National Recreation Area Act, 16 
    U.S.C. 460gg-7(a-e).
        Since limiting the scope of this rule to mineral operations in the 
    SRNRA is fully consistent with the Act and its associated legislative 
    history, the Department declines to expand the scope of the final rule 
    to address other uses and activities occurring within the SRNRA. 
    Therefore, no changes to the rule were made based on this comment.
        6. The rule was drafted to eliminate mining from the SRNRA and, in 
    so doing, it does not provide for the wise use and sustained 
    productivity of its resources. One reviewer asserted that the second 
    proposed rule would result in the elimination of mining from the SRNRA 
    and, thus, would not provide for the wise use and sustained 
    productivity of resources as required by the Act.
        Response: The Department disagrees with this comment. The Act, not 
    this rule, prohibits mining in the SRNRA, except where valid existing 
    rights can be established. This rule merely prescribes the procedure to 
    be used by the Forest Service to determine whether valid existing 
    rights are present and, if so, the appropriate terms and conditions 
    under which the mining operations should be conducted in order to 
    ensure that the values for which the SRNRA was established are 
    protected in perpetuity. No change was made to this rule based on this 
    comment.
        7. Forest Service's strategy of delay and burden has already 
    resulted in abandonment of 4,500 claims in the SRNRA. One reviewer 
    accused the Department, through its delay in the promulgation of this 
    rule, of being responsible for the abandonment of more than 4,500 
    mining claims in the SRNRA.
        Response: The Department disagrees with this reviewer's contention. 
    According to records maintained by the Bureau of Land Management, there 
    were approximately 2,776 claims listed as ``open'' when the SRNRA was 
    established in 1990. Assessment work for over one-half of those claims 
    had not been recorded with BLM for the 1989-1990 assessment year. In 
    some cases, assessment work had not been recorded for several years 
    prior to the establishment of the SRNRA. As a result, in 1991, BLM 
    issued ``abandoned and void'' decisions on 1,329 claims in the SRNRA. 
    None of these abandonment decisions resulted from any actions, or lack 
    thereof, as the case may be, by the Department. This meant that 
    approximately 1,447 mining claims were still listed on National Forest 
    System lands within the SRNRA in 1991.
        Beginning with the 1993-1994 assessment year, the Bureau of Land 
    Management instituted a new nationwide fee system requiring holders of 
    more than ten claims to pay a $100 per claim fee while allowing holders 
    of ten or fewer claims to obtain an exemption from the fee requirement. 
    Of the approximately 1,447 mining claims in the SRNRA in 1991, fees 
    were paid or exemptions obtained on only 320 claims. As a result, the 
    Bureau of Land Management issued ``abandoned and void'' decisions on an 
    additional 1,127 claims in the SRNRA. Once again, the abandonment of 
    these claims was unrelated to Forest Service administration of the 
    SRNRA.
        Since then, the holders of an additional 23 claims have failed to 
    pay the required fees or obtain an exemption to the fees. These claims 
    also have been declared abandoned and void by BLM. Thus, there are only 
    297 open claims in the SRNRA at this time. No change to the rule was 
    required based on this comment.
        8. Limiting ``recreational mining'' is inconsistent with the SRNRA. 
    Two reviewers stated that the purposes for which the SRNRA was 
    designated include recreational mining and prospecting activity and 
    that any attempt to limit recreational mining is at odds with 
    congressional intent.
        Response: Executive agencies of the Government cannot permit 
    activities involving the search for, and removal of, minerals on 
    federal lands, including National Forest System lands, except to the 
    extent that Congress has enacted legislation authorizing those 
    activities.
    
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    This limitation results from Section 3 of Article 4 of the United 
    States Constitution which provides in pertinent part that: ``Congress 
    shall have Power to dispose of and make all needful Rules and 
    Regulations respecting the Territory or other Property belonging to the 
    United States * * * .'' Accordingly, as the United States Supreme Court 
    has observed, the United States owns the minerals found on its lands 
    ``and it lies in the discretion of Congress, acting in the public 
    interest, to determine how much of the property it shall dispose.'' 
    Ashwander v. Tennessee Valley Authority, 297 U.S. 288, 336 (1936).
        In 1872, Congress enacted general mining laws providing for the 
    disposal of locatable minerals on federal lands now included in the 
    SRNRA. 30 U.S.C. 22 et seq. However, in 1990, when Congress enacted the 
    Act, it expressly withdrew the SRNRA from the operation of the mining 
    laws, subject to valid existing rights. 16 U.S.C. 460bbb-6(a). As noted 
    in the Supplementary Information section, some of the federal land 
    within the SRNRA had been withdrawn from the operation of the mining 
    laws prior to the enactment of the Act in 1990. Congress concluded that 
    mining in the SRNRA was inconsistent with the purposes for which the 
    SRNRA was established or else it would not have withdrawn these lands 
    from the operation of the United States mining laws. To construe the 
    Act as authorizing mining of locatable minerals, whether that mining is 
    characterized as being for ``recreational'' or ``commercial'' purposes, 
    absent the existence of valid existing rights, would frustrate 
    Congressional intent to block that very activity.
        In summary, the only mineral activities that may occur in the SRNRA 
    are those for which valid existing rights have been established, those 
    authorized by a mineral materials contract or permit, or those 
    associated with outstanding mineral rights. The Department has no 
    authority to allow locatable mineral activities on lands in the SRNRA, 
    whether the activity is characterized as a recreational pursuit or a 
    commercial venture, unless the Government determines that valid 
    existing rights have been established. This prohibition applies even if 
    an individual wishes to mine for personal enjoyment rather than 
    financial gain and even if the impact on the lands and resources of the 
    SRNRA is minimal. Therefore, no change has been made in the rule as a 
    result of these comments.
        9. Plan of operations should not be required for suction dredge and 
    sluice operations. Two reviewers contended that the rule should not 
    require plans of operations for suction dredge and sluice operations.
        Response: Locatable mineral operations on National Forest System 
    lands are primarily governed by the current locatable mineral 
    regulations at 36 CFR part 228, subpart A. In the past, suction 
    dredging operations in the SRNRA have been authorized by plans of 
    operations, notices of intent, and, occasionally, without any written 
    authorization at all. However, as noted previously, in establishing the 
    SRNRA, Congress specified that subject to valid existing rights, all 
    locatable mineral operations on federal land are prohibited. 
    Furthermore, even in those instances where an operator establishes 
    valid existing rights to conduct dredging operations, those operations 
    would still be subject to regulation to ensure that the values for 
    which the SRNRA was established were protected and enhanced.
        By requiring a plan of operations for suction dredging activities, 
    the Department can accomplish two objectives. First, it can verify that 
    the operator possesses valid existing rights to conduct suction 
    dredging operations. Second, it can ensure that the impacts of the 
    suction dredging operations are minimized to the extent practicable in 
    order to protect and preserve the values for which the SRNRA was 
    established. The Department believes that in order to protect the 
    unique fishery and other resource values of the SRNRA, careful and 
    considered evaluation of all suction dredging activities is necessary. 
    The best mechanism for this to occur is through the process of 
    developing and reviewing a plan of operations. Therefore, no changes 
    were made in the final rule to exempt suction dredging activities from 
    the plan of operations requirements.
        10. Review periods of one to two years for proposals to conduct 
    suction dredge operations is onerous and doesn't promote ``recreational 
    mining''. One reviewer asserted that suction dredge operations and 
    sluicing have negligible impact on surface resources and should not be 
    required to be approved under a plan of operations with a possible 
    processing timeframe of 1 to 2 years.
        Response: As an initial matter, it should be noted that the 
    Department does not agree that all suction dredging and small scale 
    sluicing operations have negligible environmental impacts. Furthermore, 
    the impacts of these activities must be evaluated individually and 
    cumulatively. It may well be that the effect of an individual operation 
    is minimal, but the cumulative effect of several such operations may be 
    significant.
        With respect to the time it takes to review a plan of operations, 
    the rule sets out 2 years as the maximum amount of time (except for 
    good cause shown) to evaluate whether valid existing rights are 
    present. Under certain circumstances, it may not take the full 2 years 
    to complete this evaluation.
        The issue concerning whether the Department has the authority to 
    permit ``recreational mineral activities'' absent valid existing rights 
    has been addressed previously. Based on the foregoing, no change was 
    made in the final rule in response to this comment.
        11. Characterization of nickel-cobalt resources as ``low grade''. 
    One reviewer objected to the characterization of the nickel-cobalt 
    resources in the uplands of the Smith River watershed as ``low-grade'' 
    to the extent that this characterization suggests that the resources 
    are either insignificant or unworthy of development and requested that 
    the characterization ``low-grade'' be deleted from the preamble.
        Response: ``Low grade'' is a phrase commonly used within the mining 
    industry to describe situations where the anticipated percentage of 
    elements in a given area is less than the percentage of the same 
    elements currently being mined elsewhere. This is an apt description of 
    the nickel-cobalt resources in the SRNRA. In fact, the holder of most 
    of the claims in the SRNRA where the nickel-cobalt resources are 
    located has previously acknowledged that the grade of the nickel-cobalt 
    resources in the SRNRA is less than the grade of nickel-cobalt 
    resources being mined in other parts of the world. No change was made 
    to the rule as a result of this comment.
        12. The proposed rule underestimates the amount of time required 
    for an operator to gather and submit information required as part of a 
    plan of operations. One reviewer commented that the proposed rule's 
    estimate of 2 hours as the time required for an operator to gather and 
    submit information required by the Forest Service as part of a plan of 
    operations was too low.
        Response: The Department has reassessed its original estimate. 
    Initially, it was thought that an operator could gather the data and 
    complete a plan of operations in 2 hours. The Department continues to 
    believe that the vast majority of the data and information required for 
    a plan of operations should be in the possession of the operator or is 
    readily obtainable and should take only a couple of hours to compile 
    and submit. However, in response to the
    
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    comments received on this issue, the estimated time to gather the 
    requested information and prepare a plan of operations has been 
    increased from 2 to 20 hours. The final information package submitted 
    to the Office of Management and Budget estimates that it will take an 
    average of 20 hours to gather and submit the information required for 
    review and that, on average, two parties will submit plans of operation 
    to the Forest Service each year for review. This results in an 
    estimated total annual burden of 40 hours. Based on the comment 
    regarding the time it takes to gather and submit information for a plan 
    of operations, a change was made in the ``Controlling Paperwork Burdens 
    on the Public'' section of the preamble for the second final rule.
        13. The proposed rule effects a taking of property without just 
    compensation in violation of the Fifth Amendment of the Constitution. 
    One reviewer suggested that the mere publication of a proposed rule for 
    notice and comment violated the Fifth Amendment by taking property 
    without just compensation.
        Response: The Department disagrees with the comment. The Fifth 
    Amendment states in part ``* * * nor shall private property be taken 
    for public use without just compensation.'' The act of publishing a 
    proposed rule for notice and comment does not deprive anyone of a 
    property interest protected by the Fifth Amendment. Indeed, a proposed 
    rule is not even enforceable. It is only after a final rule is 
    published in accordance with the provisions of the Administrative 
    Procedures Act that a regulation becomes enforceable. Thus, the 
    publication of a proposed rule cannot constitute a taking. Therefore, 
    no change to the preamble was made based upon this comment by a 
    reviewer.
        14. Compliance with Executive Order 12630. Several reviewers took 
    issue with the means by which the agency satisfied the obligations of 
    Executive Order 12630 which requires agency officials to evaluate the 
    potential takings implications of their actions. These reviewers 
    asserted that evaluating the agency action of publishing a proposed 
    rule for potential takings liability was ``disingenuous,'' ``false 
    reasoning,'' and ``make(s) a mockery'' of the Executive Order. Two of 
    the reviewers suggested that the takings implication of the final rule 
    should be evaluated as well.
        Response: The Department disagrees with the reviewers. Executive 
    Order 12630 was issued in 1988 to facilitate internal analysis of the 
    potential takings implications of proposed agency actions. The 
    objective of the Executive Order is to ensure that agency officials are 
    notified in advance of the potential takings implications associated 
    with proposed actions. Such advance notice should minimize inadvertent 
    takings and may lead to modifications of the proposed action, although 
    there is nothing in the Executive Order which requires an agency to 
    modify proposed actions to avoid a potential taking. Executive Order 
    12630 specifically provides that it is ``intended only to improve the 
    internal management of the Executive branch and is not intended to 
    create any right or benefit, substantive or procedural, enforceable at 
    law by a party against the United States, its agencies, its officers, 
    or any person.''
        The only agency action at issue in this instance was the 
    publication of a proposed rule. As indicated previously, a proposed 
    rule is not enforceable as law and, therefore, cannot affect private 
    property. Furthermore, it would have been inappropriate to evaluate the 
    underlying provisions of the proposed rule for takings implications 
    since those provisions might be subsequently modified in the final 
    rule.
        A takings implication assessment has been prepared on this second 
    final rule. It concludes that the action of publishing a final rule 
    does not present the risk of a taking. It does, however, acknowledge 
    that the regulation, as applied in a specific case, may present the 
    risk of a taking. Since takings claims are highly fact specific, it is 
    not prudent to engage in further conjecture at this time regarding 
    whether private property might be taken as a result of the ``as 
    applied'' affect of the rule on private property. Among the factors 
    that would be considered if such a claim arose are the character of the 
    government action, the economic impact of the government action on the 
    property, and the reasonable investment backed expectations of the 
    property owner. For obvious reasons, it is impossible to make judgments 
    regarding these factors at this point. However, additional takings 
    implication assessments will be prepared in accordance with Executive 
    Order 12630 to evaluate potential takings risks associated with agency 
    implementation of these supplementary regulations. No change was made 
    to the final rule based on this comment. However, a takings implication 
    assessment was prepared on the final rule.
    
    Specific Comments on Proposed Subpart G
    
        The following discussion addresses comments on specific sections of 
    the proposed rule and, where applicable, identifies modifications in 
    the final rule made as a result of the comments.
        No comments were received on Sec. 292.61--Definitions, 
    Sec. 292.66--Operating Plan Requirements, Sec. 292.67--Operating Plan 
    Approval, and Sec. 292.68--Mineral Material Operations. Consequently, 
    the final rule adopts the text of these sections as originally 
    proposed, and no further discussion is included in this analysis.
        In addition, in Sec. 292.60, one typographical error has been 
    corrected and paragraph (e) has been deleted. The decision to eliminate 
    paragraph (e) which dealt with the effect of the supplementary mining 
    regulations on ongoing mineral operations was made because there are no 
    ongoing operations in the SRNRA at this time nor are any plans of 
    operations currently being considered. Thus, it was determined that the 
    deletion of paragraph (e) would simplify the supplementary regulations 
    by eliminating a provision that discusses a contingency which does not 
    exist. Beyond that, no additional changes were made to Sec. 292.60 and 
    it is not discussed further in this analysis.
        Finally, citations in this final rule to these regulations or to 
    other regulations applicable to the administration of National Forest 
    System lands have been modified to conform with the format established 
    by the Office of the Federal Register. These changes do not affect the 
    rights and obligations of the Federal Government or any affected 
    interests.
    
    Section 292.62, Valid Existing Rights
    
        Paragraph (a) of this section sets forth three definitions of 
    ``valid existing rights'' that will be used to evaluate mining claims 
    in the SRNRA. The only difference in the three definitions is the date 
    by which the location and discovery of the valuable mineral deposit 
    must have occurred. The definition that applies to a given mining claim 
    will depend on whether the claim lies on federal lands within the 
    corridor of a wild segment of a wild and scenic river designated in 
    1981, within that portion of the Siskiyou Wilderness designated in 
    1984, or within the remainder of the SRNRA. Paragraph (b) of this 
    section provided that limited mining operations may be authorized in 
    order to enable an operator to confirm that discovery of a valuable 
    mineral deposit occurred prior to the applicable date of withdrawal. 
    This paragraph provided that the operations would be ``limited in scope 
    and duration'' but did not provide independent authority to prospect, 
    explore, or make a new discovery.
        Comment: The Forest Service is without authority to alter the 
    United States mining laws in defining valid existing rights. One 
    reviewer agreed
    
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    with the definition of valid existing rights in paragraph (a)(3) if it 
    merely requires the claimant to have a valid mining claim as of the 
    date of enactment of the Act, the claim has not been subsequently 
    abandoned, and the appropriate fees and filings have been made. The 
    reviewer objected to any additional requirements of the definition in 
    paragraph (a)(3) which would allegedly alter the United States mining 
    laws. In particular, the reviewer urged that paragraph (a)(3)(iv) be 
    confined to the technical aspects of retaining a valid unpatented 
    mining claim. The reviewer further stated that paragraph (a)(3)(iv) 
    should not be construed to allow the Forest Service to evaluate the 
    continued validity of a mining claim even though the reviewer 
    acknowledged that the Bureau of Land Management possessed that 
    authority.
        Response: Initially, it should be noted that the United States 
    mining laws do not contain a definition of ``valid existing rights.'' 
    To the extent that a definition of ``valid existing rights'' exists, it 
    is largely the product of judicial and administrative interpretations 
    of the United States mining laws. The definition of ``valid existing 
    rights'' in Sec. 292.62(a) is fully consistent with the United States 
    mining laws, relevant case law, and administrative interpretations. 
    These authorities have long held that for a mining claim to be valid it 
    must be properly located, supported by the discovery of a valuable 
    deposit of a locatable mineral, located and held in good faith, and 
    properly maintained in compliance with certain filing requirements and 
    annual labor or fee requirements. For a mining claim located in a 
    withdrawn area to constitute a valid existing right, the claim must 
    have been valid prior to the effective date of the withdrawal of the 
    area, continue to be held in good faith, continue to be maintained in 
    compliance with filing and annual labor or fee requirements, and 
    continue to be supported by the discovery of a valuable mineral 
    deposit. The last element means that the mineral deposit must continue 
    to remain valuable. In that regard, it is well established that the 
    exhaustion of a mineral deposit or loss of its marketability will lead 
    to a finding that the mining claimant no longer possesses valid 
    existing rights.
        To the extent that the reviewer is suggesting that the Forest 
    Service may not examine issues relevant to the question of whether a 
    mining claim constitutes a valid existing right, except in connection 
    with a mineral contest initiated by the Bureau of Land Management, the 
    position of this Department as well as the Department of the Interior 
    is to the contrary.
    
        We recognize that a final determination that a claim is invalid 
    for lack of discovery can be made only after a contest proceeding. 
    We also recognize, however, that the mere location of a claim does 
    not presumptively make it valid and that an agency operating under a 
    mandate to minimize surface disturbance may properly require the 
    mining claimant to affirmatively establish the existence of a valid 
    existing right * * * before allowing operations to proceed.
    
    Richard C. Swainbank, 141 IBLA 37, 44 (1997)(citation omitted). While 
    Swainbank involved the National Park Service, its holding applies to 
    the Forest Service, which, like the National Park Service, also 
    operates under a mandate to minimize surface disturbance resulting from 
    locatable mineral operations.
        Since the Act withdrew the lands in the SRNRA from the operation of 
    the United States mining laws subject to valid existing rights, it is 
    not within the Department's discretion to authorize operations within 
    the SRNRA unless the claimant can demonstrate that the mining claim 
    satisfies all of the requirements in Sec. 292.62(a) and, therefore, 
    constitutes a valid existing right. No change has been made in the 
    final rule in response to this comment.
        Comment: The Forest Service must approve operations for the purpose 
    of confirming a discovery of a valuable locatable mineral deposit. Two 
    reviewers objected to Sec. 292.62(b) because they contend it unlawfully 
    gives the Forest Service broad discretion to refuse to permit 
    operations necessary to confirm the discovery of a valuable mineral 
    deposit consistent with the definition of valid existing rights in 
    Sec. 292.62(a). One of the reviewers who contended that the Forest 
    Service must approve such operations, nonetheless, criticized the 
    Forest Service for including this provision in the proposed rule, 
    arguing that it simply provides another opportunity to delay a mining 
    claimant's exercise of the rights accorded by the United States mining 
    laws.
        One of the reviewers also objected to the use of the term 
    ``limited'' when describing operations to gather information to confirm 
    the existence of a discovery of a valuable mineral deposit that 
    predated the withdrawal of the SRNRA from the operation of the mining 
    laws. The same reviewer also objected to the provision in 
    Sec. 292.62(b) which stated that the information gathering operations 
    would be ``limited in scope and duration.''
        The second reviewer proposed that the Sec. 292.62(b) be revised to 
    specifically authorize mineral operations necessary to demonstrate the 
    quantity and quality of the mineralization.
        Response: Section 292.62(b) was added to the second proposed rule 
    to address situations that might arise in the SRNRA when a mining 
    claimant must gather information to confirm that the discovery of a 
    valuable mineral deposit occurred prior to the withdrawal of the SRNRA 
    from the operation of the mining laws. In response to the comments 
    received, this paragraph has been reworded to clarify that an 
    authorized officer must approve a proposed plan of operations submitted 
    by a mining claimant to conduct mineral operations which may be 
    necessary to gather information to confirm the discovery of a valuable 
    mineral deposit consistent with the rule's definition of ``valid 
    existing rights.'' The claimant must, however, provide sufficient 
    information to demonstrate that the exposure of valuable minerals on 
    the claim predated the withdrawal of the land.
        Section 292.62(b) codifies administrative interpretations of the 
    United States mining laws which hold that, under certain circumstances, 
    a mining claimant is entitled to an opportunity to collect further 
    information to assist in the determination of whether the mining claim 
    constitutes a valid existing right. The Department does not understand 
    how a procedure that a mining claimant has voluntarily elected can 
    constitute an impediment to an exercise of any rights which the 
    claimant may possess. The procedure provides a mechanism for a claimant 
    to bolster his claim of valid existing rights and presumably this 
    procedure would not be elected by a claimant who is confident that he 
    already possesses such rights. Accordingly, the Department sees no 
    reason to modify Sec. 292.62(b) based on this comment.
        The Department agrees that there was no need to refer to operations 
    conducted pursuant to Sec. 292.62(b) as ``limited.'' Similarly, the 
    Department agrees that there is no need to limit the scope and duration 
    of operations carried out under Sec. 292.62(b). Therefore, these words 
    have been omitted from the final rule. However, these changes do not 
    modify the Forest Service's authorities or a mining claimant's rights. 
    The administrative interpretations of the United States mining laws on 
    which Sec. 292.62(b) is based, recognize that the mineral operations, 
    which a mining claimant has the right to conduct on a claim located on 
    withdrawn lands prior to a determination that the claim constitutes a 
    valid existing right, are
    
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    inherently limited and those limitations are reflected in the other 
    provisions of Sec. 292.62(b). See, e.g., United States v. Conner, 139 
    IBLA 361, 372 (1997); United States v. Crowley, 124 IBLA 374, 378-379 
    (1992); United States v. Mavros, 122 IBLA 297, 310-311 (1992).
        The Department does not agree that Sec. 292.62(b) should be revised 
    to require the authorized officer to approve mineral operations needed 
    to demonstrate the quantity and quality of mineralization on a mining 
    claim in the SRNRA. Mineral operations on withdrawn lands may not be 
    permitted for the purpose of exposing new veins or lodes or performing 
    work which would otherwise result in the discovery of a valuable 
    mineral deposit. United States v. Parker, 82 IBLA 344, 384 (1984); 
    United States v. Chappell, 42 IBLA 74, 81 (1979). Thus, the Government 
    lacks authority to permit mineral operations pursuant to Sec. 292.62(b) 
    for the purpose of demonstrating the quantity and quality of 
    mineralization on a mining claim unless those operations constitute an 
    effort to confirm or corroborate the preexisting exposure of a valuable 
    mineral deposit discovered prior to the withdrawal of the lands. United 
    States v. Chappell, 42 IBLA 74, 81 (1979).
        Based on the reviewers' comments, Sec. 292.62(b) has been revised 
    to clarify these points.
    
    Section 292.63, Plan of Operations--Supplementary Requirements.
    
        Paragraph (a) of this section specified that a plan of operations 
    is required for all mineral development activities within the SRNRA 
    where a plan would be required under 36 CFR part 228, subpart A, or 
    when mechanical or motorized equipment would be used. Operations 
    covered by this requirement would include, but not be limited to, those 
    using suction dredges or sluices. Paragraph (b) specifically identified 
    the information required in a plan of operations to evaluate an 
    assertion of valid existing rights. Paragraph (c) identified the 
    information required by the Forest Service to evaluate the operational 
    details and impacts of the proposed mineral development activity as 
    well as to determine the appropriate standards to mitigate and reclaim 
    the affected areas.
        Comment: A title report prepared by a private certified mineral 
    title examiner should be sufficient to establish chain of title and 
    valid existing rights. Two reviewers suggested that an operator should 
    have an alternative way to satisfy the ``paperwork chain-of-title 
    step'' by providing the Forest Service a report from a certified 
    mineral title examiner or title company which shows an unbroken chain-
    of-title and valid existing rights.
        Response: Proposed Sec. 292.63(b) merely identified the specific 
    information that must be furnished to the Forest Service by the 
    operator in support of the operator's contention that the mining claim 
    constitutes a valid existing right. The operator is free to use anyone, 
    including private certified mineral title examiners or title companies, 
    to collect and assemble the specified information in whatever manner 
    the operator deems appropriate. Thus, no change is required in the rule 
    to enable the operator to use private mineral title examiners or title 
    companies to collect and submit the required information.
        The respondents also might be suggesting that the Department should 
    not question the opinion of a private certified mineral title examiner 
    or title company on the issue of whether a mining claim constitutes a 
    valid existing right. The Department does not agree with this 
    suggestion. The Government has a duty to insure that valid mining 
    claims are recognized, invalid mining claims are eliminated, and the 
    rights of the public are preserved. Cameron v. United States, 252 U.S. 
    450, 460 (1920). This duty is significant because, as the Supreme Court 
    also recognized in that case, unlawful mining claims result in private 
    appropriations of land which rightfully belong to the public. The 
    Department believes that it would be inappropriate to entrust a party 
    retained and paid for by the proponent of an allegedly valid claim to 
    discharge the government's duty to determine that very question.
        For the same reasons, the information that is submitted to the 
    Forest Service pursuant to Sec. 292.63(b) cannot simply be a statement 
    by a certified mineral title examiner or a title company that there is 
    a continuous chain-of-title and that the mining claim constitutes a 
    valid existing right. The submission made pursuant to Sec. 292.63(b) 
    must include the listed items and the information must be provided with 
    specificity so that the government can fulfill its obligation to 
    determine whether the operator has the right to conduct mineral 
    operations in the SRNRA. Therefore, no change has been made to the 
    final rule as a result of these comments.
        Comment: Evidence of past or present sales of minerals cannot be 
    required to establish valid existing rights. Three respondents objected 
    to what they perceived to be a mandatory requirement that an operator 
    submit evidence of past and present sales of a valuable mineral as part 
    of a plan of operations. One respondent noted that there is no 
    requirement in the United States mining laws that a claimant must have 
    actually marketed the minerals discovered in order to establish the 
    validity of the mining claim. The other two reviewers contended that 
    the requirement is not supported by case law or legal precedent. One 
    respondent observed that minerals may not have been produced or sold 
    from mining claims which constitute valid existing rights, particularly 
    with respect to lode mining claims in the developmental stage. That 
    respondent also noted that many mining claims have been patented before 
    any production occurred.
        Response: The Department agrees that the United States mining laws 
    do not require that a mining claimant must have marketed minerals in 
    order to establish the validity of a mining claim. It is possible for 
    an operator to prove that a mining claim constitutes a valid existing 
    right without having produced minerals from the claim or having sold 
    any minerals that have been produced. The Department also agrees that 
    mining claims have been patented before mineral production has 
    occurred. In proposing Sec. 292.63(b)(9), the Department did not intend 
    to suggest that an operator could not make an adequate showing of valid 
    existing rights absent mineral production or absent past or present 
    sales of minerals from the claim, or to preclude the operator from 
    making that showing.
        Nonetheless, evidence of mineral sales is relevant to the 
    operator's assertion that valid existing rights have been established. 
    Sales information represents confirmable documentation that mineral 
    production has occurred on a mining claim. Evidence of mineral 
    production is important because Department of the Interior rules 
    recognize that ``(u)ncontradicted evidence of the absence of production 
    over an extended period of time may, in and of itself, establish a 
    prima facie case of invalidity.'' United States v. Miller, 138 IBLA 
    246, 277 n.18 (1997) (citation omitted). The Department of the Interior 
    has explained that ``(t)his rule reflects the principle that, given the 
    varying economic conditions present over a period of many years, a 
    mining claim will usually be developed unless it is not commercially 
    feasible to do so profitably. In other words, the best evidence of what 
    a prudent man would do is what a prudent man has done.'' United States 
    v. Knoblock, 131 IBLA 48, 88 (1994) (citation omitted).
        For these reasons, no change has been made in Sec. 292.63(b)(9) of 
    the final rule except to insert the word ``existing'' at the beginning 
    of the paragraph. This
    
    [[Page 15050]]
    
    change makes it clear that an operator is not required to submit 
    evidence of sales which have not occurred or to submit evidence which 
    no longer exists. To the extent that sales evidence exists, it is 
    directly relevant to the determination of valid existing rights and 
    must be provided.
        Comment: The reference in the preamble to Sec. 292.63(c)(3) 
    regarding concurrent reclamation was erroneous. One reviewer observed 
    that the preamble referred to a provision of the proposed rule 
    regarding concurrent reclamation at Sec. 292.63(c)(3) but that no such 
    provision existed in the text of the proposed rule.
        Response: The reviewer is correct and a change was made in the 
    final rule. The provision concerning concurrent reclamation is set 
    forth at Sec. 292.69. The Department apologizes for any confusion the 
    incorrect citation may have caused.
    
    Section 292.64, Plan of Operations--Approval
    
        Section 292.64 of the proposed rule sets forth the procedure that 
    would be followed to review and approve a plan of operations submitted 
    in conformance with Sec. 292.63. Paragraph (a) stated that within 120 
    days of submission, the Forest Service would notify the applicant 
    whether all the necessary information had been included or whether 
    additional documentation was necessary. In addition, where all the 
    necessary information had been included, this paragraph further 
    explained that except for good cause shown, the Forest Service would 
    determine whether the applicant possessed valid existing rights within 
    2 years. Paragraph (b) provided that if an applicant failed to 
    demonstrate to the satisfaction of the Forest Service that valid 
    existing rights had been established, it would notify the applicant in 
    writing of its finding and that it would request the Bureau of Land 
    Management to initiate a mineral contest action. Paragraph (c) stated 
    that an assessment by the Forest Service that an applicant does not 
    possess valid existing rights was a final agency action that was not 
    subject to further administrative appeal within the Department. 
    Paragraph (d) explained that when valid existing rights are present, 
    the Forest Service would proceed to review the rest of the plan of 
    operations which consists largely of the operational details of the 
    mineral development activities being proposed. Paragraph (e) required 
    the Forest Service to notify the applicant whether the plan has been 
    approved or rejected, and paragraph (f) required the Forest Service to 
    explain in writing the reason(s) for not approving a plan. For plans 
    that are approved, paragraph (g) required the Forest Service to 
    establish an approval period which would be equal to the minimum amount 
    of time it would reasonably take a prudent operator to complete the 
    mineral development activities set forth in the plan. Paragraph (h) 
    identified the circumstances that would justify a modification to an 
    approved plan of operations. Finally, paragraph (i) required an 
    operator to develop a new plan of operations or amend a previously 
    approved plan of operations, if the mining operations differed in type, 
    scope, or duration from those described in the original plan, and if 
    those differences would result in resource impacts not anticipated when 
    the original plan was approved.
        Comment: The allocation of 120 days to determine whether an 
    applicant had included all the required information in a plan of 
    operations was excessive. All the reviewers remarked that the Forest 
    Service should be able to determine in less than 120 days whether a 
    plan of operations is complete.
        Response: The Department agrees. Determination of whether a plan of 
    operations is complete should be a fairly routine task that entails a 
    comparison of the items listed in Sec. 292.63 of the rule with the 
    items submitted by the applicant as part of the plan of operations. 
    Clearly, acknowledgment that a plan is complete should not be construed 
    as a determination that valid existing rights have been established or 
    that the plan has been approved. It merely means that the necessary 
    information has been supplied and that the Forest Service will use this 
    information to conduct its review. In light of the comments received, 
    the time to complete this task has been shortened to 60 days in the 
    final rule.
        Comment: The proposed rule turns mining law ``upside down'' by 
    making a claimant prove valid existing rights under a burdensome and 
    lengthy process and unlawfully provides that mineral development 
    activities of those possessing valid existing rights are subject to 
    regulation. One reviewer contended that because claimants are entitled 
    to the exclusive use and possession of the valuable minerals they 
    discover, the proposed rule violates the United States mining laws by 
    shifting the burden from the Government to the operator to demonstrate 
    the establishment of valid existing rights. In addition, by making this 
    burden as onerous and time consuming as possible, the reviewer asserted 
    that the proposed rule is an attempt to drive all mining out of the 
    SRNRA. Finally, this reviewer contended that the proposed rule violates 
    Congress's specific instructions that mining claimants are not to be 
    disturbed by the Department's management of the SRNRA.
        Response: The Department disagrees with this reviewer's 
    characterizations. The exclusive use and possession referred to by this 
    reviewer applies to other private parties but not to the United States, 
    which, in this instance, is responsible for the administration of the 
    National Forest System lands in the SRNRA on which the claims are 
    located. The mere location of a claim does not presumptively make it 
    valid and an agency operating under a mandate to minimize surface 
    disturbance may properly require the mining claimant to establish the 
    existence of a valid existing right before allowing operations to 
    proceed. Richard C. Swainbank, 141 IBLA 37, 44 (1997).
        In response to the allegation that the process was ``as onerous and 
    time consuming as possible,'' the Department merely states that one of 
    the primary objectives of this rule is to ensure that those conducting 
    mineral development activities in the SRNRA have established that they 
    possess valid existing rights. The Department does not believe that a 
    system, requiring that the party asserting valid existing rights 
    produce whatever evidence is in its possession to substantiate its 
    claim, is either onerous or time consuming. It is not the intent of the 
    Department to eliminate mining in the SRNRA in those instances where 
    valid existing rights have been established.
        Finally, the Department disagrees with the assertion that holders 
    of valid existing rights are not to be disturbed by the Forest 
    Service's administration of the SRNRA. Although the reviewer refers to 
    ``Congress'' specific instructions,'' no citation to the Act is 
    supplied. The Department believes that the reviewer may be relying on 
    Section 8(c) of the Act for this proposition. However, Section 8(c) 
    prohibits mineral development activity on federally owned land in the 
    SRNRA subject to valid existing rights. 16 U.S.C. 460bbb-6(c). Section 
    8(c) does not address under what circumstances mineral development 
    activities may be conducted in the SRNRA where valid existing rights 
    have been established. That direction is set forth in Section 8(d) of 
    the Act which provides for the issuance of supplementary mining 
    regulations. Id. at section 460bbb-6(d). Unlike Section 8(c), Section 
    8(d) does not include a ``subject to valid existing rights'' proviso. 
    Id. Thus, all mining activities in the SRNRA are subject to
    
    [[Page 15051]]
    
    the supplementary regulations, a view corroborated by legislative 
    history. The original version of the SRNRA legislation would have 
    prohibited all mineral development activities. As a result of concerns 
    for the potential takings liability associated with a blanket 
    prohibition on all mining activities, the legislation was subsequently 
    amended to prohibit mining subject to valid existing rights and to 
    authorize supplementary regulations governing all mining operations for 
    which valid existing rights were established. The chief sponsor of the 
    Act commented,
    
        With regard to mining, the amendments would give explicit 
    recognition to the rights associated with valid existing claims, and 
    direct the Secretary to issue supplementary regulations designed to 
    `promote and protect' the purposes for which the recreation area is 
    created. Although I remain concerned about the potential for 
    destructive mining, I am hopeful that the supplemental regulations 
    will address these concerns.
    
    136 Cong. Rec. H13045, 13046 (Oct. 26, 1990) (Statement of Rep. Bosco). 
    The Act and the legislative history are clear that only those operators 
    who have established valid existing rights may conduct mineral 
    development activities in the SRNRA and, where allowed, those 
    activities must be conducted in conformance with the provisions of this 
    rule.
        Alternatively, the reviewer may be contending that the Department 
    lacks authority to require a mining claimant to establish that a mining 
    claim constitutes a valid existing right which survived the withdrawal 
    and that the only means for the Government to consider the valid 
    existing rights issue is in connection with a mineral contest 
    proceeding before the Bureau of Land Management. If that is the 
    reviewer's contention, it is plainly inconsistent with the Department 
    of the Interior's administrative interpretations of the United States 
    mining laws.
        As discussed previously, there is nothing in the Act to suggest 
    that persons with valid mining claims predating the establishment of 
    the SRNRA were not to be disturbed by the Department's management of 
    the SRNRA. Rather, Congress merely withdrew the SRNRA from the 
    operation of the United States mining laws ``subject to valid existing 
    rights'' just as it has done many times with respect to other federally 
    owned lands. In discussing a situation where mining operations could 
    only be conducted as an incident of a valid existing right, the 
    Interior Board of Land Appeals observed that ``(a)ny inference * * * 
    that the mere location of a mining claim raises a presumption of 
    validity, vis-a-vis the United States is plainly wrong. The mere 
    assertion of a claim to land is simply that.'' Southern Utah Wilderness 
    Alliance, 125 IBLA 175, 188 n.7 (1993). The Board also observed that 
    even in a contest proceeding brought by the government ``it is the 
    claimant who must establish the validity of the claim.'' Id. The Board 
    then recited its holding in Havlah Group, 60 IBLA 349, 361 (1981) that 
    ``it is not unreasonable to require a claimant to make a preliminary 
    showing of facts which support a valid existing right.'' Id. at 188. In 
    Havlah Group, where a proposed plan of operations had been submitted 
    for lands on which all actions of the Secretary of the Interior under 
    the statute were ``subject to valid existing rights,'' the Board noted 
    that once the claimant had submitted a preliminary showing, the Bureau 
    of Land Management could either bring a mineral contest challenging the 
    validity of the claim or permit the operations to go forward. 60 IBLA 
    at 361. See also, Richard C. Swainbank, 141 IBLA 37, 44 (1997); Richard 
    C. Behnke, 122 IBLA 131, 140 n.13 (1992). Thus, persons holding mining 
    claims in the SRNRA are not entitled to any presumption that those 
    claims constitute valid existing rights. It is fully consistent with 
    the Act and the United States mining laws for the Department, which 
    operates under a mandate to minimize surface disturbance caused by 
    mining operations, to require claimants ``to affirmatively establish 
    the existence of a valid existing right * * *.'' Richard C. Swainbank, 
    141 IBLA at 44. For these reasons, no changes have been made in the 
    final rule in response to these comments.
        Comment: There was no explanation of what might constitute ``good 
    cause'' so as to justify an extension of time beyond 2 years for the 
    Forest Service to complete a valid existing rights determination. One 
    reviewer objected to Sec. 292.64(a)(1) and asserted that the proposed 
    rule failed to explain ``good cause'' or otherwise justify why it might 
    take longer than 2 years to complete a valid existing rights 
    determination given that, among other things, Sec. 292.63(b) requires 
    the operator to provide all of the information necessary to make a 
    valid existing rights determination. With respect to the examples of 
    good cause mentioned in the preamble to the proposed rule, the reviewer 
    argued that matters such as budget and manpower availability are within 
    the control of the Forest Service and that weather considerations are 
    unimportant because there is little need for a site visit to determine 
    the validity of the type of mining claims occurring in the SRNRA.
        Response: The Department disagrees to the extent that the 
    respondent suggests that the Forest Service only needs the information 
    submitted by a claimant in order to make a valid existing rights 
    determination. The Government has a responsibility to insure that valid 
    mining claims are recognized, invalid mining claims are eliminated, and 
    the rights of the public are preserved. Cameron v. United States, 252 
    U.S. 450, 460 (1920). This responsibility is significant because as the 
    Supreme Court recognized in that case, invalid mining claims unlawfully 
    appropriate public lands to private use contrary to the rights of the 
    public. The Government's independent responsibility to determine the 
    validity of a mining claim cannot be discharged merely by accepting at 
    face value whatever information is supplied by the claimant, who is the 
    proponent of the allegedly valid mining claims. In all cases, the 
    Government must perform its own field examination of the mining claim 
    which allegedly constitutes a valid existing right to confirm the 
    information submitted by the operator.
        As explained in great detail in the preamble to the proposed rule, 
    the field examination of a mining claim and the preparation of a 
    written mineral report by a certified mineral examiner is a complicated 
    and lengthy process. While the Department will use its best efforts to 
    complete the valid existing rights determination within 2 years, many 
    factors acting singly, or in combination, may make it impossible. Among 
    those factors are the inaccessibility of field sites due to flooding, 
    landslides, or fires; the unavailability of qualified personnel due to 
    reassignments for fire fighting or other emergencies, protracted 
    medical leave, unanticipated retirements, other previously scheduled 
    validity, or valid existing rights determinations; the time necessary 
    to prepare environmental documents required for sampling on the claim; 
    or the unique technical issues presented by a mining proposal. It is 
    not possible to identify all of the events and contingencies that could 
    cause a justifiable delay in a valid existing rights determination. For 
    these reasons, no change was made in Sec. 292.64(a)(1) in the final 
    rule.
        Comment: The number of mineral examiners in the Pacific Southwest 
    Region of the Forest Service is unclear. One reviewer noted that there 
    appeared to be a discrepancy in the second proposed rule regarding the 
    number of Forest Service mineral examiners in the Pacific Southwest 
    Region.
    
    [[Page 15052]]
    
        Response: There was no discrepancy. To clarify what was stated in 
    the second proposed rule, there are five certified mineral examiners in 
    the region. Two of the five are also certified review mineral examiners 
    and, therefore, are qualified to conduct mineral examinations and to 
    serve as reviewers who approve mineral reports prepared by other 
    mineral examiners. No change was made in the final rule based upon this 
    comment.
        Comment: The FS has adequate staffing to handle the anticipated two 
    plans per year in less than 2 years. Two reviewers asserted that the 
    existing cadre of certified mineral examiners in the Pacific Southwest 
    region should be able to complete valid existing rights determinations 
    for claims in the SRNRA in less than 2 years since only two plans of 
    operations are estimated to be submitted per year. One reviewer also 
    asserted that the Department can allocate its financial and human 
    resources as it deems appropriate and that it would be improper for the 
    Department to deploy its manpower in a fashion which precludes 
    completion of the required examinations in less than 2 years.
        Response: An employee who is not certified as a review mineral 
    examiner or as a mineral examiner, may only work on a valid existing 
    rights determination under the direct supervision of someone who is 
    certified. Only certified Forest Service mineral examiners or review 
    mineral examiners are allowed to conduct valid existing rights 
    determinations. There are only five such employees in the Pacific 
    Southwest Region of the Forest Service. These five individuals are 
    responsible for conducting valid existing rights determinations in all 
    withdrawn areas in the Pacific Southwest Region, not just the SRNRA. It 
    would be unfair to individuals whose claims lie outside the SRNRA if 
    the Forest Service redirected the focus and energy of the five Pacific 
    Southwest Region examiners so that valid existing rights determinations 
    in the SRNRA would be completed first. There is no reason that mining 
    claimants in the SRNRA should be afforded preference over others whose 
    mining claims are located elsewhere in the region. Accordingly, even 
    though it is estimated that only two plans of operations will be 
    submitted annually for mining claims in the SRNRA, those plans must be 
    reviewed, along with other plans submitted in the region, in the order 
    that they were received.
        The Department agrees that, in theory, it is possible to reassign 
    Forest Service personnel from other regions to complete priority work 
    assignments in the Pacific Southwest Region. However, agency staffing 
    levels are at a significantly lower level than a decade ago due to 
    reduced congressional appropriations. Current staffing levels do not 
    permit reassignment of certified mineral examiners without creating 
    substantial delays in the completion of work which those examiners are 
    responsible to perform in their regularly assigned region. The work 
    that would not be completed in the originating region includes the same 
    type of work; that is, valid existing rights determinations required 
    before operations are authorized in the many National Forest System 
    areas that have been withdrawn from the operation of the United States 
    mining laws subject to valid existing rights. Thus, this comment also 
    fails to recognize that prioritizing valid existing rights 
    determinations for claimants in the SRNRA will prejudice similarly 
    situated claimants in other withdrawn areas.
        Furthermore, as discussed in connection with the preceding comment, 
    it is not just personnel limitations which may result in a valid 
    existing rights determination taking 2 or more years to complete. Other 
    factors, which may lengthen the time to make a determination, include: 
    The short field season in the SRNRA; the time needed to prepare 
    environmental documents required for surface disturbing sampling 
    operations; or the inaccessibility of the mining claims due to 
    flooding, fire conditions, landslides, or other natural conditions. For 
    these reasons, no change has been made in Sec. 292.64(a)(1) of the 
    final rule in response to these comments.
        Comment: The rule should include a provision requiring ``prompt'' 
    notification of BLM of any adverse valid existing rights determination. 
    One reviewer observed that the proposed rule properly required that 
    notice of an adverse valid existing rights determination be given to an 
    operator that states, among other things, that the Forest Service will 
    promptly notify the Bureau of Land Management of its determination and 
    request initiation of a mineral contest. However, the reviewer faulted 
    the proposed rule for not containing a separate requirement that the 
    authorized officer promptly notify the Bureau of Land Management of an 
    adverse determination and request initiation of a mineral contest.
        Response: Section 292.64(b) of the proposed regulation required the 
    Forest Service to notify the operator of a determination that there is 
    not sufficient evidence of valid existing rights. That paragraph also 
    required the notice to the operator to state that the Forest Service 
    will ``promptly'' notify the Bureau of Land Management of its 
    determination and request the initiation of a mineral contest action. 
    The Department believed that this provision would insure quick Forest 
    Service action on the notification to the Bureau of Land Management. 
    However, to make it perfectly clear that this is also an affirmative 
    requirement, paragraph (b) has been broken down into paragraphs (b)(1) 
    and (b)(2). Paragraph (2) contains this affirmative requirement to 
    notify the Bureau of Land Management of the Forest Service's 
    determination and to request the initiation of a mineral contest.
        Comment: The Forest Service lacks authority to treat an authorized 
    officer's decision that there is not sufficient evidence of valid 
    existing rights as final agency action. One reviewer contended that 
    Sec. 292.64(c), which stated that an authorized officer's decision that 
    there is not sufficient evidence of valid existing rights was final 
    agency action, rendered the BLM mining claim contest action process 
    meaningless. The reviewer also alleged that this provision conflicts 
    with the March 14, 1997, decision in California Nickel Corporation v. 
    Glickman, No. C94-3904-DLJ, slip op. (N.D. Cal.). The reviewer 
    recommended that the final rule include a provision stating that the 
    Forest Service must change its position concerning valid existing 
    rights if the Department of the Interior rules in favor of the operator 
    on a Forest Service's mineral contest. The reviewer also recommended 
    that the Department make clear in the final rule that referral of the 
    Department's preliminary adverse valid existing rights determination to 
    the Department of the Interior is the appropriate administrative 
    process rather than appeal through the Forest Service or the Department 
    of Agriculture. Finally, the reviewer recommended that the final rule 
    state that there is no final determination of valid existing rights 
    until the Department of the Interior administrative process has been 
    exhausted.
        Response: The term ``final agency action'' in Sec. 292.64(c) 
    resulted in unintended confusion. This term was used merely to clarify 
    that an authorized officer's determination would not be subject to 
    appeal within the Department because the previous paragraph requires 
    the issue to be referred to the Bureau of Land Management. In response 
    to this comment and to avoid misinterpretation of the provision, the 
    term ``final agency action'' has been omitted from Sec. 292.64(c) in 
    the final rule.
        Other changes have been made to this section in the final rule to 
    make it clear that resorting to the BLM contest
    
    [[Page 15053]]
    
    proceeding is not meaningless and to emphasize that the Forest Service 
    will recognize that a claimant has valid existing rights if that is the 
    final determination of the Department of the Interior or of a court 
    reviewing the Department of the Interior's decision in the contest 
    action. Specifically, Sec. 292.64(b)(1) has been revised to clarify 
    that the effect of the authorized officer's determination that there is 
    insufficient evidence of valid existing rights is to stay further 
    consideration of the proposed plan of operations pending final action 
    on the valid existing rights issue by the Department of the Interior or 
    by final judicial review. Also, Sec. 292.64(d) has been revised to 
    require the authorized officer to resume consideration of the plan of 
    operations if the final agency action by the Department of the Interior 
    or final judicial review of the Department of the Interior decision 
    determines that valid existing rights exist.
        Finally, to address the reviewer's concerns, the remainder of the 
    language in Sec. 292.64(c) has been retained to make it clear that a 
    decision finding insufficient evidence of valid existing rights is not 
    subject to appeal in this Department.
        Comment: Once a valid existing rights determination is made in 
    favor of the operator, the rule should make the authorized officer's 
    review of the plan of operations subject to the Forest Service's 
    general mining regulations set forth at 36 CFR 228.5. The proposed rule 
    provides an unlimited amount of time to complete the review of the 
    operational aspects of the mineral operation. One reviewer contended 
    that there is no reason why the applicable time limitations in the 
    Forest Service's general mining regulations should not apply to 
    consideration of the operational aspect of a proposed plan of 
    operations for the SRNRA. With regard to one of the reasons given by 
    the Department in the second proposed rule for the absence of definite 
    time limitations for reviewing a plan of operations (the need to comply 
    with the National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA) for approval of 
    large-scale operations), the reviewer noted that general regulations 
    provide that the authorized officer must notify the operator no later 
    than 30, or at times 90, days after the filing of a plan of operations 
    that it cannot be approved until completion of NEPA compliance. The 
    operator contended that this feature of the general mining regulations 
    keeps the process moving while the proposed SRNRA regulations 
    institutionalize delay.
        Response: The reviewer may have overlooked several reasons, in 
    addition to NEPA compliance, given by the Department for the absence of 
    definite time limitations for reviewing proposed plans of operations. 
    As was stated in the preamble to the second proposed rule, NEPA is just 
    one of the statutes with which the Forest Service must comply in 
    reviewing a proposed plan of operations. Compliance with the 
    requirements of the Endangered Species Act (ESA) can take several 
    years, and, in contrast to NEPA where the Forest Service is usually in 
    charge of the compliance process, the priorities and resources of the 
    National Marine Fisheries Service or the United States Fish and 
    Wildlife Service often determine the pace of compliance with the ESA.
        The reviewer also may be implying that Sec. 228.5 of this chapter 
    adequately reflects the requirements of NEPA by providing more than 90 
    days for NEPA compliance. That is not necessarily correct. While 36 CFR 
    228.5 provides for more than 90 days for review of a plan of operations 
    when NEPA requires the preparation of an environmental impact 
    statement, the regulations do not provide more than 90 days for review 
    of a plan of operations when NEPA requires the preparation of an 
    environmental assessment. However, the preparation of environmental 
    assessments usually requires substantially more time than 90 days.
        In relying on 36 CFR 228.5, the reviewer overlooks the fact, 
    recognized in Baker v. United States Department of Agriculture, 928 F. 
    Supp. 1513, 1519 (D.Idaho 1996), that a ``conspicuous conflict[] occurs 
    between 36 CFR 228.5 and the requirements of the NEPA and the ESA.'' In 
    Baker, the court found that the conflict arose because 36 CFR 228.5 was 
    promulgated in 1974, before the 1978 promulgation of regulations 
    concerning environmental assessments and before the 1986 promulgation 
    of regulations under the Endangered Species Act. The Baker court held 
    that the 90-day time limit in Sec. 228.5 and the regulatory 
    requirements of the NEPA and the ESA are in ``irreconcilable 
    conflict.'' Therefore, the court held that ``the 90-day limit must give 
    way'' due to the conflict with the more recent NEPA and ESA 
    regulations. Id. at 1520. However, as the court held, this result does 
    not mean that the ``Forest Service is unencumbered by time limitations 
    in examining [plans of operations]'' because there are other time 
    limits in the NEPA and ESA process as well as ``a general rule 
    prohibiting unreasonable delays.'' Id. Consequently, even if the 
    requirements of Sec. 228.5 of this chapter are not applicable, Forest 
    Service review of a proposed plan of operations ``remains subject to 
    time constraints * * * '' and the SRNRA regulations will not 
    institutionalize delay. Id.
        For these reasons, the Department believes that it would be 
    senseless and misleading to persons asserting that they possess valid 
    existing rights to conduct locatable mineral operations in the SRNRA, 
    to adopt supplementary regulations which rely on the time limitations 
    for reviewing a plan of operations set forth in the Forest Service's 
    general mining regulations as requested by the reviewer. While the 
    Forest Service will make every effort to process plans of operations as 
    expeditiously as possible, the Department has made no changes to the 
    text of this section in the final rule.
        Comment: The rejection of a plan of operations by the Forest 
    Service is unlawful and would constitute a taking. One reviewer 
    asserted that the Forest Service cannot simply refuse to approve a plan 
    of operations as suggested in paragraphs 292.64(e) and (f). The 
    reviewer alleged that a refusal to approve a plan of operations would 
    preclude a claimant from working his claim and constitute a taking of 
    the claimant's property. The reviewer argued that there was no 
    comparable provision in the Department's general mining regulations at 
    part 228, subpart A, of this title and no administrative basis for 
    departing from those regulations. However, the reviewer also argued 
    that Sec. 228.5(a)(3) of this title, at least requires the authorized 
    officer to ``[n]otify the operator of any changes in, or additions to, 
    the plan of operations to meet the purpose of the regulations in this 
    part.''
        Response: The Department agrees that it does not have the authority 
    to refuse to approve a reasonable plan of operations which is not 
    otherwise prohibited by law. However, the Department is not obligated 
    to allow unreasonable mining operations to be conducted on National 
    Forest System lands. Thus, even with respect to mining operations which 
    were being conducted before the promulgation of 36 CFR part 228, 
    subpart A, it was held that the Department could prohibit unreasonable 
    mining operations pursuant to the Surface Resources Act of 1955, 30 
    U.S.C. 611-14. United States v. Richardson, 599 F.2d 290, 291, 294-95 
    (9th Cir. 1979). The reason for the court's conclusion was that this 
    statute ``supersede(d) and modif[ied] the pre-existing recognition of 
    broad rights under 30 U.S.C. 26 * * *.'' Id. at 295.
        This authority did not change with the promulgation of 36 CFR part 
    228,
    
    [[Page 15054]]
    
    subpart A. While the reviewer may argue that 36 CFR part 228, subpart 
    A, does not allow the Forest Service to refuse to approve a plan of 
    operations, that argument is inconsistent with 36 CFR 228.5(a)(3), a 
    provision cited by the reviewer, which is only relevant when the Forest 
    Service has refused to approve a proposed plan of operations. Indeed, 
    in cases involving mining operations subject to 36 CFR part 228, 
    subpart A, courts have found that Forest Service may refuse to approve 
    an unreasonable plan of operations or a plan otherwise prohibited by a 
    law such as the Endangered Species Act. ``(T)he Forest Service clearly 
    has the power to reject an unreasonable plan (of operations).'' Baker 
    v. United States Department of Agriculture, 928 F. Supp. 1513, 1518 (D. 
    Idaho 1996). ``Of course, the Forest Service would have the authority 
    to deny an unreasonable plan of operations or a plan otherwise 
    prohibited by law. E.q. 16 U.S.C. 1538 (endangered species located at 
    the mine site.).'' Havasupai Tribe v. United States, 752 F. Supp. 1471, 
    1492 (D. Ariz. 1990), aff'd sub nom. Havasupai Tribe v. Robertson, 943 
    F.2d 32 (9th Cir. 1991).
        The second proposed rule did not embody a meaningful departure from 
    36 CFR 228.5(a). Proposed Sec. 292.64(e) and (f) each specifically 
    provided that disapproval of a plan of operations is an option 
    available to the authorized officer. Similarly, when 36 CFR 228.5(a)(1) 
    and (a)(3) are read together there is no doubt that disapproval of a 
    plan of operations is also an option available to the Forest Service 
    under the Department's general mining regulations. Also, while 36 CFR 
    228.5(a)(3) requires the authorized officer to ``(n)otify the operator 
    of any changes in, or additions to, the plan of operations to meet the 
    purpose of the regulations in this part,'' proposed Sec. 292.64(f) 
    requires the authorized officer to ``explain why the proposed plan of 
    operations cannot be approved.'' The variation between 36 CFR 228.5 and 
    292.64(e) and (f) of this rule appears to be a distinction without a 
    difference. At most, the difference is that under these final 
    regulations, the Department gives the operator the discretion to 
    propose an alternative plan of operations which, while addressing the 
    authorized officer's concerns, also best meets the operator's 
    objectives instead of prescribing the approach that the operator must 
    adopt.
        To avoid any confusion, it should be understood that the Forest 
    Service will, where necessary, make every effort to resolve differences 
    and to negotiate plans of operations that are acceptable to the 
    operator and to the Forest Service before exercising the authority to 
    refuse to approve a plan of operations. However, as a last resort, the 
    Forest Service may in certain circumstances, be left no alternative 
    except to refuse a plan of operations. Whether refusing to approve a 
    plan of operations would constitute a taking cannot be ascertained at 
    this juncture. However, to the extent that one of the factors 
    considered in any regulatory takings claim is the reasonable, 
    investment backed expectations of the property owner, it may be 
    difficult for an operator to demonstrate that the agency's refusal to 
    approve an unreasonable plan of operations requires payment of just 
    compensation under the Fifth Amendment. For these reasons, no changes 
    were made to the final rule in response to this comment.
        Comment: The proposed time period for the mineral operations fails 
    to give recognition to the operator's rights under the United States 
    mining laws and provides another opportunity to delay mining. One 
    reviewer argued that Sec. 292.64(g) of the second proposed rule, which 
    would establish a time period for the mineral operations authorized by 
    an approved plan of operations equal to the minimum amount of time 
    reasonably necessary for a prudent operator to complete the mineral 
    development activities covered by the plan, would limit the length of 
    time that the operator may engage in mining operations on a mining 
    claim and consequently nullify the operator's rights under the United 
    States mining laws, which do not include such a restriction. The 
    reviewer contended that recognition of valid existing rights means that 
    the Government must give respect and effect to the entirety of an 
    operator's rights under the mining laws. The reviewer also contended 
    that proposed Sec. 292.64(g) provides another opportunity for the 
    Forest Service to delay mining while the operator challenges the Forest 
    Service's determination of the amount of time that would be reasonably 
    necessary for a prudent operator to complete the mineral activities. 
    Finally, the reviewer asserted that there is no reason why the final 
    rule should not emulate the Forest Service's general mining regulations 
    by merely requiring that the plan of operations describe the duration 
    of the expected operations.
        Two other reviewers also objected to the proposal to set the 
    operating timeframe for the minimum amount of time necessary, arguing 
    that unforeseen events, such as changes in market conditions, severe 
    weather, strikes, acts of God, or force-majeure can delay start-up and 
    completion timeframes. Both reviewers also noted that additional 
    mineral reserves may be identified after production begins so that 
    additional time is required to mine the deposit. One reviewer 
    recommended that the timeframe be left open ended or at the very least 
    set for 300 percent of the minimum amount of time anticipated. That 
    reviewer also stated that a guaranteed right to extend the operating 
    timeframe must be provided. Finally, that reviewer contended that 
    Sec. 292.64(g) could cause a takings by making financing unavailable 
    and stated that a takings impact analysis had not been prepared for 
    this provision. The other reviewer recommended that the timeframe be 
    left open ended or set by the miner.
        Response: Several reviewers appear to have assumed that it was not 
    possible to obtain an extension of the time period provided in an 
    approved plan of operations to conduct authorized operations. This 
    interpretation was not the Department's intent. Accordingly, a new 
    Sec. 292.64(h)(4), is included in the final rule. This new paragraph 
    makes it clear that a plan of operations may be modified to extend its 
    term or scope when the criteria set forth in Sec. 292.64(i) for 
    submission of a supplemental plan of operations or a modification of 
    the plan of operations pursuant to 36 CFR 228.5, are not triggered. The 
    final rule consequently cannot be construed as preventing an operator 
    from fully mining a valuable locatable mineral deposit in the SRNRA on 
    a mining claim which continues to constitute a valid existing right.
        The other comments concern the standard included in proposed 
    Sec. 292.64(g) for establishing the term of approval for a plan of 
    operations. The United States mining laws do not address the question 
    of the duration of mining operations. However, judicial and 
    administrative interpretations of the mining laws have long made it 
    clear that ``(u)nder the mining laws Congress has made public lands 
    available to people for the purpose of mining valuable mineral deposits 
    and not for other purposes.'' United States v. Coleman, 390 U.S. 599, 
    602 (1968). Indeed, the ``all-pervading purpose of the mining laws is 
    to further the speedy and orderly development of the mineral resources 
    of our country.'' United States v. Nogueira, 403 F.2d 816, 823 (9th 
    Cir. 1968)(citation omitted). Mining claims which do not ``conform to 
    the law under which they are initiated * * * work an unlawful private 
    appropriation in derogation of the rights of the public.'' Cameron v. 
    United States, 252 U.S. 450, 460 (1920). Thus it is beyond dispute
    
    [[Page 15055]]
    
    that the Government has a definite interest in seeing that operations 
    on mining claims are diligently pursued to a conclusion, that the lands 
    are reclaimed, and that the reclaimed lands are restored to other 
    public uses, particularly where Congress has given the lands a special 
    designation and management emphasis such as in the case of the SRNRA. 
    These interests are all fostered by requiring the completion of mining 
    operations within the time provided for in proposed Sec. 292.64(g) of 
    this part. Therefore, this provision does not conflict with the United 
    States mining laws. For the same reasons, it would be inappropriate to 
    adopt a final rule which provides that the term of approval of a plan 
    of operations is open-ended, is 300 percent of the minimum amount of 
    time reasonably necessary for a prudent operator to complete the 
    authorized operations, or is unilaterally established by the operator.
        Limiting the period of approval of a plan of operations, as 
    provided in the second proposed rule, does not conflict with a 
    determination that an operator has valid existing rights because that 
    determination is time dependent and not conclusive of present 
    conditions and rights. It is beyond dispute that a mining claim, which 
    constituted a valid existing right at one time, may lose that status. A 
    claim can become invalid due to a change in markets which results in a 
    loss of the discovery or due to failure to make certain filings or 
    payments. Even if a discovery can be shown to exist on a mining claim, 
    the claim can be invalidated upon a showing that it was not located or 
    held in good faith for mining purposes. In re Pacific Coast Molybdenum 
    Co., 75 IBLA 16, 35 (1983). Moreover, where valid existing rights 
    continue to be maintained and an operator requires additional time to 
    complete operations, such time can be provided pursuant to either 
    Sec. 292.64(h)(4) or Sec. 292.64(i) of the final rule. These final 
    rules appropriately consider and recognize valid existing rights. 
    Therefore, no change was made to the rule in response to these 
    comments.
        The Department agrees that severe weather, strikes, acts of God, 
    and force-majeure situations can delay start-up and completion of 
    mineral operations. However, delays occur regardless of what criteria 
    the Government selects to determine the time period for approval of a 
    plan of operations. Rather than adjusting the final rule to provide 
    additional time for the conduct of operations, which in many cases 
    might be unnecessary, the Department believes that the course of action 
    consistent with the long-standing interpretations of the United States 
    mining laws is to approve operations for the minimum amount of time 
    reasonably necessary for a prudent operator to complete the operations 
    and to provide for an extension if, and when, there is a delay in the 
    start-up or completion of the approved operations. However, the 
    Department cautions that changes in market conditions, in and of 
    itself, would not necessarily warrant an extension in the approval 
    period since it might actually result in the loss of a discovery and of 
    the valid existing right. Similarly, the suggestion that an operator is 
    entitled to an extension of the term of approval for a plan of 
    operations where operations have not been completed overlooks the fact 
    that a variety of circumstances can result in the loss of a valid 
    existing right to conduct operations on a mining claim after the 
    initial approval of a plan of operations. Therefore, it might be 
    inconsistent with the United States mining laws to extend the term of 
    approval of the plan of operations in some circumstances where the 
    suggested criteria are met. Accordingly, the final rule was not changed 
    in response to these suggestions.
        The Department agrees that more time in addition to that authorized 
    by a plan of operations may be required to mine additional mineral 
    reserves identified after mineral production begins pursuant to the 
    approved plan. However, this fact does not justify the suggestion that 
    the original term of approval of a plan should be inflated to cover 
    such a contingency. It is well established that mining activities are 
    subject to regulation to protect the environment. Congress also has 
    specifically declared that the policy of the Federal Government is to 
    encourage private enterprise in ``the reclamation of mined land, so as 
    to lessen any adverse impact of mineral extraction and processing upon 
    the physical environment * * *.'' 30 U.S.C. 21a. The environmental 
    impacts of mining mineral reserves that are identified after approval 
    of a plan obviously could not have been adequately considered or 
    mitigated by the authorized officer in reviewing the proposed plan. 
    Thus, it would be inconsistent with 30 U.S.C. 21a and probably other 
    environmental statutes, for the Forest Service to permit the mining of 
    reserves identified after mineral production begins without review of 
    those operations pursuant to Sec. 292.64(h)(4) or Sec. 292.64(i) of 
    this final rule, as applicable. Consequently, the possibility that 
    additional reserves might be identified after mineral production begins 
    does not justify the suggestion that the period of approval for a plan 
    of operations should be longer than the minimum amount of time 
    reasonably necessary for a prudent operator to complete the approved 
    mineral development activities. The final rule has not been changed in 
    response to this comment.
        The Department agrees that mining operations might be delayed as a 
    consequence of an operator's decision to challenge the Forest Service's 
    determination of the amount of time that would be reasonably necessary 
    for a prudent operator to complete the approved mineral operations. The 
    same is true with respect to all requirements included in an approved 
    plan of operations and, for that matter, in all authorizations issued 
    by the Government. The only way to eliminate this risk would be to 
    permit mining claimants to engage in unrestricted and unregulated 
    mining on National Forest System lands. Congress rejected that option 
    in 1897 when it enacted the Organic Administration Act which authorized 
    the Department of Agriculture to promulgate reasonable rules and 
    regulations to protect the surface of National Forest System lands from 
    the adverse impacts of locatable mineral operations. 16 U.S.C. 551. In 
    enacting 30 U.S.C. 21a, Congress restated that the policy of the 
    Federal Government is to encourage private enterprise in ``the 
    reclamation of mined land so as to lessen any adverse impact of mineral 
    extraction and processing upon the physical environment * * *.'' Thus, 
    the fact that an operator's challenge that the term of approval of a 
    plan of operations might delay the commencement of the approved 
    operations does not warrant a change in Sec. 292.64(g). The likelihood 
    that a challenge to an approved plan of operations will delay the 
    start-up of such operations is a risk that the operator must evaluate 
    and assume in deciding whether to bring the challenge. No change to the 
    rule was made based upon these suggestions.
        From a legal standpoint, the Department disagrees with the 
    reviewer's contention that the inability to secure financing, in and of 
    itself, may result in a taking and we are unaware of any case which 
    supports such a proposition. As described in some detail previously, 
    takings cases are highly fact specific inquiries which generally 
    require a court to consider the following factors: the character of the 
    governmental action, the economic impact of that action, and the 
    reasonable investment-backed expectations of the property owner. The 
    inability to obtain financing may have some bearing on
    
    [[Page 15056]]
    
    one or more of the aforementioned factors, but it is not dispositive.
        From a practical standpoint, however, it seems somewhat counter 
    intuitive to contend that an operator would be unable to obtain 
    financing based on the establishment of an approval period that was 
    calculated to be sufficient for a prudent operator to complete the 
    mining operations as documented in the plan of operations. However, in 
    light of the change made to the final rule which expressly allows for 
    extensions in the approval period, the Department believes that this 
    reviewer's concern about the potential takings implications of this 
    provision has been resolved.
        For these reasons, Sec. 292.64(g) of this part is reasonable and 
    within the authority of the agency. This provision is preferable to the 
    agency's general mining regulations which do not specifically address 
    the issue of the term of approval of a plan of operations other than to 
    require that the proposed plan of operations submitted by the operator 
    must describe the period during which the proposed activity will take 
    place.
        The Department believes that adopting the requirement in 
    Sec. 292.64(g) of this subpart may result in the following benefits. 
    Specifying the term of approval of a plan of operations should result 
    in increasing the promptness with which mining operations are pursued 
    to a conclusion, and the promptness with which the lands are reclaimed 
    and restored to other public uses. Regrettably, past experience 
    suggests that, on occasion, operators behave less diligently once the 
    mining phase ceases and the reclamation phase begins because 
    reclamation operations are costly rather than profitable. Where the 
    term of a plan of operations is fixed rather than open-ended, sanctions 
    can be imposed for failure to complete the reclamation activities by 
    the plan's termination date. This fosters the well recognized purposes 
    of the United States' laws of furthering the speedy and orderly 
    development of the nation's mineral resources and insuring that federal 
    lands are not in an unreclaimed state, or reclaimed at public expense, 
    to the detriment of the right of the American people to use public 
    lands. These goals are particularly important where, as in the case of 
    the SRNRA, Congress has withdrawn lands from the operation of the 
    United States mining laws subject to valid existing rights and 
    specified special purposes for which the lands are to be administered.
        Also knowing when mineral operations must be completed will improve 
    the agency's ability to evaluate the environmental impacts of those 
    activities because those impacts are dependent on the rate at which the 
    activities are conducted as well as the nature of the activities. 
    Better information regarding the likely impacts of mineral operations 
    should result in the preparation of better environmental documents 
    required by procedural statutes such as the National Environmental 
    Policy Act and better compliance with substantive environmental 
    statutes such as the Endangered Species Act. Better information about 
    the likely impacts of mining also will allow the Government to make 
    more accurate determinations regarding the amount of the bond that an 
    operator should be required to post.
        For these reasons, Sec. 292.64(g) of this part was not revised in 
    response to the comments. However, a new Sec. 292.64(h)(4), was 
    included in the final rule to clarify that it is possible to modify an 
    approved plan of operations to extend its term or scope.
        Comment: Section 292.64(i) of the proposed rule contains an 
    erroneous reference to Sec. 292.64. One reviewer detected that 
    Sec. 292.64(i) included a reference to Sec. 292.64 rather than 
    Sec. 292.63.
        Response: The Department recognizes the potential for confusion 
    resulting from including a reference to Sec. 292.64 in Sec. 292.64. To 
    rectify the matter, this final rule paragraph has been changed to 
    eliminate any reference to a section of the supplementary regulations. 
    It should be well understood that if a new or supplemental plan of 
    operations is necessary, it will be subject to the review and approval 
    provisions of these supplementary regulations.
    
    Section 292.65, Plan of Operations--Suspension
    
        This section of the second proposed rule authorized the Forest 
    Service to suspend mineral development activities if the operations are 
    being conducted in violation of applicable law, regulation, or the 
    terms and conditions of the operator's approved plan of operations. 
    Except in cases where the violations present an imminent threat of harm 
    to public health, safety, or the environment, this provision required 
    the Forest Service to give the operator 30 days advance notice of the 
    suspension. The 30-day notice should, in most instances, give the 
    operator sufficient time to correct the violations prior to the 
    suspension taking effect. In cases where mineral operations present an 
    imminent threat of harm to public health, safety, or the environment 
    (or where such harm is already occurring), regardless of whether the 
    operator is in violation of applicable laws, regulations, or the terms 
    and conditions of the plan of operations, the second proposed rule 
    authorized the Forest Service to take immediate action to suspend the 
    mineral development activity. In these cases, the rule directed the 
    Forest Service to notify the operator of the reason for the action as 
    soon as it is reasonably practicable after the suspension.
        Comment: Suspension authority is duplicative of existing authority 
    and may result in regulatory abuse. One reviewer noted that the Forest 
    Service already has broad enforcement authority to suspend mining 
    operations and that this provision in the rule is, therefore, 
    unnecessary and will lead to regulatory abuses by the Forest Service.
        Response: The current United States Department of Agriculture 
    regulations at 36 CFR part 228, subpart A, do not contain a provision 
    authorizing the Forest Service to suspend a mineral operation, in whole 
    or in part, if an operator is not in compliance with applicable 
    statutes, regulations or terms and conditions of the approved plan of 
    operations. Where there is an immediate threat to public health, 
    safety, or the environment, presented by the mining operation, this 
    provision allows the Forest Service to respond quickly. The potential 
    for regulatory abuse, if any, is significantly reduced by requiring 
    written notice to the operator which informs him or her of the basis 
    for the suspension.
        Where there is no threat to public health, safety or the 
    environment, there realistically is no potential for ``regulatory 
    abuse'' feared by this reviewer since the Forest Service must inform 
    the operator in writing of the proposed suspension 30 days before it 
    takes effect. Generally, it is presumed that 30 days should be 
    sufficient time for the operator to address the concern which led to 
    the issuance of the suspension notice. For these reasons, no change has 
    been made to the second final rule as a result of this comment.
    
    Section 292.69, Concurrent Reclamation.
    
        The second proposed rule stipulated that reclamation of National 
    Forest System lands and resources should occur concurrently with the 
    mineral operation ``to the maximum extent practicable.''
        Comment: The operator, not the Forest Service, should determine 
    what is reasonable and practicable reclamation. One reviewer 
    acknowledged that concurrent reclamation is a reasonable requirement to 
    protect the SRNRA so long as it is interpreted sensibly. However, the 
    reviewer asserted that
    
    [[Page 15057]]
    
    what is reasonable and practicable should be left to the judgment of 
    the operator, not the Forest Service.
        Response: The regulations being adopted to govern mineral 
    operations in the SRNRA provide the operator an opportunity to give 
    input concerning reclamation measures appropriate for lands disturbed 
    by the mining activities. Section 292.63(b) of this part requires the 
    operator to submit a proposed plan of operations. Section 292.63(c) 
    requires the proposed plan to address environmental protection 
    requirements, including reclamation. Presumably an operator would not 
    propose reclamation activities considered to be impracticable. Assuming 
    that the Forest Service agrees that the proposed plan of operations 
    provides, to the maximum extent possible, that reclamation shall 
    proceed concurrently with the mineral operations and satisfies the 
    other requirements of 36 CFR 228.8, the reclamation would be approved. 
    It is standard Forest Service practice to work with an operator to 
    fashion a mutually agreeable solution in cases where the Forest Service 
    concludes that the proposed reclamation is unreasonable.
        However, for a number of reasons, the Department cannot agree that 
    the operator should be given unilateral permission to determine how 
    reclamation of National Forest System lands should occur. Most 
    importantly, the statute, which extended the United States mining laws 
    to National Forest System lands reserved from the public domain, 
    charged the Department to ``insure the objects of such reservations, 
    namely, to regulate their occupancy and use and to preserve the forests 
    thereon from destruction * * *.'' 16 U.S.C. 551. Adopting the policy 
    advocated by the reviewer would effectively delegate the Department's 
    statutory duties to those whom the Department is required to regulate.
        The manner in which lands are reclaimed also has an enormous 
    bearing on their ability to be restored to other productive uses. The 
    Forest Service has the ultimate responsibility to specify the manner in 
    which mined lands are reclaimed so that the rights of the public in 
    those lands are preserved.
        Finally, there are great economic incentives for operators to 
    perform as little reclamation as possible, because reclamation 
    represents the most controllable cost of mineral operations. Letting 
    operators determine the type and scope of reclamation would likely 
    result in lesser protection being afforded the lands and resources 
    within the SRNRA than is provided outside the SRNRA. This practice 
    would be contrary to the statutory requirements to protect and preserve 
    the values of the SRNRA. For these reasons, no change has been made to 
    Sec. 292.69 as a result of the comment.
        Comment: The extreme requirements in the concurrent reclamation 
    provision are not justified. One reviewer objected to the requirement 
    in proposed Sec. 292.69 that plans of operations should provide, to the 
    maximum extent practicable, that reclamation proceed concurrently with 
    the mineral operation. The reviewer asserted that there is no 
    administrative justification for departure from the agency's general 
    mining regulations which provide that reclamation must occur upon the 
    exhaustion of the mineral deposit or at the earliest practicable time 
    during operations, or within 1 year of the completion of operations, 
    unless a longer time is allowed by the authorized officer. The reviewer 
    also asserted that there is no administrative justification for 
    departure from the reclamation provision of the first final rule which 
    called for concurrent reclamation when practicable, not to the maximum 
    extent practicable. The reviewer asserts that Sec. 292.69 provides 
    another opportunity for the Forest Service to impose unreasonable and 
    expensive procedures upon an operator and, thereby, deprive him of his 
    property rights.
        Response: As discussed previously, past experience demonstrates 
    that operators tend to be less diligent once mining ceases and 
    reclamation begins because reclamation of operations are costly rather 
    than profitable. The Department believes that requiring concurrent 
    reclamation to the maximum extent practicable will result in 
    reclamation being initiated and completed sooner than it would be under 
    the standards set forth in 36 CFR 228.8 of the Department's general 
    mining regulations or the April 3, 1996, final rule. This result is 
    important for a number of reasons.
        The first involves the purposes of the Act. Section 2 of the Act 
    specifically enumerated the features that led to the designation of the 
    SRNRA. Some of these features included: (1) It represents one of the 
    last wholly intact vestiges of an invaluable legacy of wild and scenic 
    rivers, (2) it exhibits a richness of ecological diversity unusual in a 
    basin of its size, and (3) it offers exceptional opportunities for a 
    wide range of recreational activities, including wilderness, water 
    sports, fishing, hunting, camping, and sightseeing. The purposes of the 
    Act are to ensure ``* * * the preservation, protection, enhancement, 
    and interpretation for present and future generations of the Smith 
    River watershed's outstanding wild and scenic rivers, ecological 
    diversity, and recreation opportunities while providing for the wise 
    use and sustained productivity of its natural resources * * *.'' 16 
    U.S.C. 460bbb-2(a).
        The SRNRA was recognized by Congress as a unique area to be 
    protected to the extent allowable by law. In addition, in Section 8 of 
    the Act entitled ``Minerals,'' Congress directed the Secretary of 
    Agriculture to promulgate supplementary regulations to promote and 
    protect the purposes for the recreation area is designated. 16 U.S.C. 
    460bbb-6(d). Therefore, this rule is specifically designed to 
    supplement the current locatable mineral regulations at 36 CFR part 
    228, subpart A, and thus provide a greater degree of protection for the 
    federal lands and resources in the SRNRA than may be available for 
    federal lands and resources administered elsewhere.
        One additional protective measure is the concurrent reclamation 
    requirement in Sec. 292.69. This requirement will ensure that mined 
    land is restored to another productive use in the shortest possible 
    time. Reclamation will be required to the fullest extent practicable. 
    This will fulfill the Department's statutory obligation under the Act 
    to promote and protect the values for which the SRNRA was designated.
        Secondly, requiring concurrent reclamation to the maximum extent 
    practicable will foster the Federal Government's policy to encourage 
    private enterprise in ``the reclamation of mined lands, so as to lessen 
    any adverse impact of mineral extraction and processing upon the 
    physical environment'' as established by Congress in 30 U.S.C. 21a. 
    Reclamation either eliminates or dramatically reduces the adverse 
    impacts of mineral extraction upon the environment. In most, if not all 
    cases, requiring more prompt reclamation will reduce the amount of 
    environmental impacts caused by mineral extraction.
        Finally, the benefits of requiring concurrent reclamation to the 
    maximum extent practicable--increasing the promptness with which mined 
    lands are returned to other productive uses and reducing the overall 
    quantum of adverse impacts of mineral extraction upon the environment--
    are consistent with the Department's charge to ``ensure the objects of 
    such reservations, namely to regulate their occupancy and use and to 
    preserve the forests thereon from destruction * * *.'' 16 U.S.C. 551. 
    Thus, the departure from the reclamation requirements in 36 CFR 228.8 
    and the April 3, 1996, final rule is reasonable and adequately 
    justified.
    
    [[Page 15058]]
    
        Mining claimants in the SRNRA have no right to conduct mineral 
    operations without adhering to reclamation requirements. The law, which 
    extended the United States mining laws to National Forest System lands 
    reserved from the public domain, specifically provides that persons 
    entering national forests for the purposes of prospecting, locating, 
    and developing the mineral resources thereof, ``must comply with the 
    rules and regulations covering such national forests.'' 16 U.S.C. 478. 
    Moreover, another section of that statute charged the Department to 
    ``insure the objects of such reservations, namely, to regulate their 
    occupancy and use and to preserve the forests thereon from destruction 
    * * *.'' 16 U.S.C. 551. Also, while the reclamation requirement in 
    Sec. 292.69 of the second proposed rule is admittedly stricter than the 
    reclamation requirements in 36 CFR part 228, subpart A, or the April 3, 
    1996, final rule, it only requires concurrent reclamation to the 
    ``maximum extent practicable,'' which is by definition, achievable. The 
    concurrent reclamation requirement by its own terms, therefore, does 
    not amount to a prohibition on a mining claimant's entitlement to 
    conduct mineral operations on a mining claim in which valid existing 
    rights have been established. Consequently, the assertion that the 
    concurrent reclamation requirement in Sec. 292.69 effects a taking of 
    the claimant's property rights is without merit.
        For these reasons, no change has been made in Sec. 292.69 as a 
    result of the comment.
    
    Section 292.70, Indemnification.
    
        The second proposed rule specified that the owners and/or operators 
    of mining claims and the owners and/or lessees of outstanding mineral 
    rights would be liable for the following: (1) Indemnifying the United 
    States for injury, loss, or damage which the United States incurs as a 
    result of any mining operation in the SRNRA; (2) payments made by the 
    United States in satisfaction of claims, demands, or judgments for such 
    injury, loss, or damage; and (3) costs incurred by the United States, 
    including attorney's fees and expenses, for any action involving 
    noncompliance with an approved plan of operations or activities outside 
    a mutually agreed to operating plan.
        Comment: The indemnification provision is vague and of questionable 
    legal authority. In addition to suggesting that this section was vague 
    and potentially over inclusive, one reviewer requested the agency to 
    specify the authority under which it may seek indemnification from 
    operators to recover costs associated with, among other things, injury, 
    loss, or damage to National Forest System lands and resources resulting 
    from mineral operations in the SRNRA. This reviewer concluded that 
    since this is a new provision for the SRNRA, there must be new 
    statutory authority or a recent change in the law from which it is 
    derived. If no such new authority exists, the reviewer argued that this 
    provision must be deleted.
        Response: The authority for the indemnification provision in the 
    supplementary regulations for mining in the SRNRA is derived from the 
    Organic Administration Act of 1897, 16 U.S.C. 551, which states in 
    relevant part that,
    
        The Secretary of Agriculture shall make provisions for the 
    protection against destruction by fire and depredations upon the 
    public forests and national forests which may have been set aside or 
    which may be hereafter set aside * * * and he may make such rules 
    and regulations and establish such service as will insure the 
    objects of such reservations, namely, to regulate their occupancy 
    and use and to preserve the forests thereon from destruction * * *.
    
    The reviewer's presumption that the Forest Service must be able to 
    point to a recent change in the law to support the inclusion of an 
    indemnification provision in this rule because it is ``new and unique'' 
    in the SRNRA is unfounded. The authority dates back to 1897 with the 
    enactment of the Organic Administration Act. Similar indemnification 
    provisions are incorporated into several other regulations which 
    prescribe the terms for various uses of National Forest System lands. 
    For example, the regulations governing issuance of special use 
    authorizations for uses such as rights-of-way, ski areas, and 
    communications facilities contain an indemnification provision (36 CFR 
    251.56(d)). The regulations governing the leasing and development of 
    oil and gas resources on National Forest System lands also includes an 
    indemnification provision (36 CFR 228.110).
        The Department does not find the indemnification provision 
    unconstitutionally vague or overly inclusive. In Village of Hoffman 
    Estates v. The Flipside, Hoffman Estates, Inc., 455 U.S. 489 (1982), 
    the Supreme Court enumerated a number of factors which affect the 
    degree of vagueness which the Constitution tolerates. For example, a 
    less strict vagueness test will apply if a regulation is economic in 
    nature, does not contain criminal sanctions, and does not implicate 
    constitutionally protected rights. In United States v. Doremus, 888 
    F.2d 630 (9th Cir. 1989), the United States Court of Appeals for the 
    Ninth Circuit rejected a vagueness challenge to a Forest Service 
    regulation prohibiting certain types of conduct related to mining 
    activities on National Forest System lands.
        This second final rule meets all the factors required by the 
    Supreme Court ruling. Consequently, there have been no changes made to 
    the text of the final rule based on this comment.
        Comment: The provision authorizing collection of attorneys' fees 
    and expenses is unlawful. One reviewer asserted that the Department 
    lacks the statutory authority to include attorneys' fees and expenses 
    in Sec. 292.70(c) as items for which the Government can be indemnified, 
    in the event an operator is found to be conducting mineral development 
    activities in the SRNRA where a plan of operations or operating plan 
    has not been approved or where the activities are not in compliance 
    with an approved plan of operations or an approved operating plan.
        Response: Although the Department does not agree that the authority 
    to recover attorneys' fees and expenses does not exist, the final rule 
    has been modified to eliminate these items from the rule. However, to 
    the extent independent authority exists to recover attorneys' fees and 
    expenses under statutes including, but not limited to, the 
    Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation, and Liability Act, 
    42 U.S.C. 9601 et seq. or the Federal Water Pollution Control Act, 33 
    U.S.C. 1251 et seq., the Department reserves the right to seek such a 
    recovery in the event unauthorized mineral operations in the SRNRA 
    result in violations of one or more of these authorities.
    
    Regulatory Impact
    
        This second final rule has been reviewed under USDA procedures and 
    Executive Order 12866 on Regulatory Planning and Review. It has been 
    determined that this regulation is not a significant rule. It will not 
    have an annual effect of $100 million or more on the economy and will 
    not adversely affect productivity, competition, jobs, the environment, 
    public health and safety, or State and local governments.
        This second final rule will not interfere with an action taken or 
    planned by another agency and it will not raise new legal or policy 
    issues. Finally, this action will not alter the budgetary impact of 
    entitlements, grants, user fees, or loan programs or the rights and 
    obligations of recipients of such programs. In short, little or no 
    effect on the National economy will result from this second final rule, 
    since it affects only mining activities on
    
    [[Page 15059]]
    
    National Forest System lands in the SRNRA. Accordingly, this final rule 
    is not subject to OMB review under Executive Order 12866.
        Moreover, this final rule has been considered in light of the 
    Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA)(5 U.S.C. 601 et seq.), and it has been 
    determined that this action will not have a significant economic impact 
    on a substantial number of small entities as defined by the RFA because 
    of its limited scope and application. Also, this second final rule does 
    not adversely affect competition, employment, investment, productivity, 
    innovation, or the ability of United States based enterprises to 
    compete in local or foreign markets.
    
    Environmental Impact
    
        An environmental assessment and a Finding of No Significant Impact 
    titled ``Regulation of Mineral Operations on National Forest System 
    Lands within the Smith River National Recreation Area'' have been 
    prepared and both documents are available upon request by calling the 
    contact listed earlier in this rulemaking under FOR FURTHER INFORMATION 
    CONTACT.
    
    Controlling Paperwork Burdens on the Public
    
        The second proposed rule modified a previously approved information 
    collection to include the requirement that a plan of operations include 
    additional information identifying hazardous or toxic materials used in 
    the operation, the mineral wastes that might be generated, and how 
    public health and safety are to be maintained.
        This information collection modification was discussed in the 
    preamble of the second proposed rule and comment was requested 
    specifically on the information collection. As discussed in the comment 
    and response section, the one comment received on the collection stated 
    that the time for collecting the additional information was not 
    sufficient. The agency has increased the estimate of burden hours from 
    2 hours to 20 hours in response to this comment.
        The final information collection package for this rulemaking has 
    been reviewed by the Office of Management and Budget according to the 
    provisions of the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 (44 U.S.C. 3501 et 
    seq.) and implementing regulations at 5 CFR part 1320. The information 
    requirements in this rule have been assigned control number 0596-0138 
    for use through September 30, 1998.
    
    No Takings Implications
    
        In compliance with Executive Order 12630 and the Attorney General's 
    Guidelines for the Evaluation of Risk and Avoidance of Unanticipated 
    Takings, the takings implications of the second final rule have been 
    reviewed and considered. It has been determined that there is no risk 
    of a taking.
    
    Civil Justice Reform Act
    
        This final rule has been reviewed under Executive Order 12778, 
    Civil Justice Reform. Upon adoption of this rule: (1) All State and 
    local laws and regulations that are in conflict with this final rule or 
    which would impede its full implementation would be preempted; (2) no 
    retroactive effect would be given to this final rule and; (3) it would 
    not require administrative proceedings before parties would file suit 
    in court challenging its provisions.
    
    Unfunded Mandates Reform
    
        Pursuant to Title II of the Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995 (2 
    U.S.C. 1531-1538), which the President signed into law on March 22, 
    1995, the Department has assessed the effects of this rule on state, 
    local, and tribal governments and the private sector. This rule does 
    not compel the expenditure of $100 million or more by any State, local, 
    or tribal governments or anyone in the private sector. Therefore, a 
    statement under section 202 of the Act is not required.
    
    List of Subjects in 36 CFR Part 292
    
        Administrative practice and procedure, Environmental protection, 
    Mineral resources, National forests, and National recreation areas.
        Therefore, for the reasons set forth in the preamble, part 292 of 
    Chapter II of Title 36 of the Code of Federal Regulations is amended by 
    adding a new subpart G to read as follows:
    
    PART 292--NATIONAL RECREATION AREAS
    
    Subpart G--Smith River National Recreation Area
    
    Sec.
    292.60  Purpose and scope.
    292.61  Definitions.
    292.62  Valid existing rights.
    
    Locatable Minerals
    
    292.63  Plan of operations--supplementary requirements.
    292.64  Plan of operations--approval.
    292.65  Plan of operations--suspension.
    
    Outstanding Mineral Rights
    
    292.66  Operating plan requirements--outstanding mineral rights.
    292.67  Operating plan approval--outstanding mineral rights.
    
    Mineral Materials
    
    292.68 Mineral material operations.
    
    Other Provisions
    
    292.69 Concurrent reclamation.
    292.70 Indemnification.Subpart G--Smith River National Recreation 
    Area
    
    Subpart G--Smith River National Recreation Area
    
        Authority: 16 U.S.C. 460bbb et seq.
    
    
    Sec. 292.60  Purpose and scope.
    
        (a) Purpose. The regulations of this subpart set forth the rules 
    and procedures by which the Forest Service regulates mineral operations 
    on National Forest System lands within the Smith River National 
    Recreation Area as established by Congress in the Smith River National 
    Recreation Area Act of 1990 (16 U.S.C. 460bbb et seq.).
        (b) Scope. The rules of this subpart apply only to mineral 
    operations on National Forest System lands within the Smith River 
    National Recreation Area.
        (c) Applicability of other rules. The rules of this subpart 
    supplement existing Forest Service regulations concerning the review, 
    approval, and administration of mineral operations on National Forest 
    System lands including, but not limited to, those set forth at parts 
    228, 251, and 261 of this chapter.
        (d) Conflicts. In the event of conflict or inconsistency between 
    the rules of this subpart and other parts of this chapter, the rules of 
    this subpart take precedence, to the extent allowable by law.
    
    
    Sec. 292.61  Definitions.
    
        The special terms used in this subpart have the following meaning:
        Act means the Smith River National Recreation Area Act of 1990 (16 
    U.S.C. 460bbb et seq.).
        Authorized officer means the Forest Service officer to whom 
    authority has been delegated to take actions pursuant to the provisions 
    of this subpart.
        Hazardous material means any hazardous substance, pollutant, 
    contaminant, hazardous waste, and oil or other petroleum products, as 
    those terms are defined under any Federal, State, or local law or 
    regulation.
        Outstanding mineral rights means the rights owned by a party other 
    than the surface owner at the time the surface was conveyed to the 
    United States.
        SRNRA is the abbreviation for the Smith River National Recreation 
    Area, located within the Six Rivers National Forest, California.
    
    
    Sec. 292.62  Valid existing rights.
    
        (a) Definition. For the purposes of this subpart, valid existing 
    rights are defined as follows:
    
    [[Page 15060]]
    
        (1) For certain ``Wild'' River segments. The rights associated with 
    all mining claims on National Forest System lands within the SRNRA in 
    ``wild'' segments of the Wild and Scenic Smith River, Middle Fork Smith 
    River, North Fork Smith River, Siskiyou Fork Smith River, South Fork 
    Smith River, and their designated tributaries, except Peridotite Creek, 
    Harrington Creek, and the lower 2.5 miles of Myrtle Creek, which:
        (i) Were properly located prior to January 19, 1981;
        (ii) Were properly maintained thereafter under the applicable law;
        (iii) Were supported by a discovery of a valuable mineral deposit 
    within the meaning of the United States mining laws prior to January 
    19, 1981, which discovery has been continuously maintained since that 
    date; and
        (iv) Continue to be valid.
        (2) For Siskiyou Wilderness. The rights associated with all mining 
    claims on National Forest System lands within the SRNRA in the Siskiyou 
    Wilderness except, those within the Gasquet-Orleans Corridor addition 
    or those rights covered by paragraph (a)(1) of this section which:
        (i) Were properly located prior to September 26, 1984;
        (ii) Were properly maintained thereafter under the applicable law;
        (iii) Were supported by a discovery of a valuable mineral deposit 
    within the meaning of the United States mining laws prior to September 
    26, 1984, which discovery has been continuously maintained since that 
    date; and
        (iv) Continue to be valid.
        (3) For all other lands. The rights associated with all mining 
    claims on National Forest System lands in that portion of the SRNRA not 
    covered by paragraph (a)(1) or (a)(2) of this section which:
        (i) Were properly located prior to November 16, 1990;
        (ii) Were properly maintained thereafter under the applicable law;
        (iii) Were supported by a discovery of a valuable mineral deposit 
    within the meaning of the United States mining laws prior to November 
    16, 1990, which discovery has been continuously maintained since that 
    date; and
        (iv) Continue to be valid.
        (b) Operations to confirm discovery. The authorized officer shall 
    authorize those mineral operations that may be necessary for the 
    purpose of gathering information to confirm or otherwise demonstrate 
    the discovery of a valuable mineral deposit consistent with the 
    definition in paragraph (a) of this section or to obtain evidence for a 
    contest hearing regarding the claim's validity, upon receipt of a 
    proposed plan of operations as defined in Sec. 292.63 of this subpart 
    to conduct such operations and of sufficient information from the 
    operator to show an exposure of valuable minerals on a claim that 
    predates the withdrawal of the federal land from the operation of the 
    United States mining laws. The authorized officer shall authorize only 
    those operations that may be necessary to confirm or demonstrate the 
    discovery of a valuable mineral deposit prior to the date of withdrawal 
    of the federal land on which the claim is situated. Pursuant to this 
    paragraph, the authorized officer shall not authorize any operations 
    which would constitute prospecting, exploration, or otherwise 
    uncovering or discovering a valuable mineral deposit.
    
    Locatable Minerals
    
    
    Sec. 292.63  Plan of operations--supplementary requirements.
    
        (a) Applicability. In addition to the activities for which a plan 
    of operations is required under Sec. 228.4 of this chapter, a plan of 
    operations is required when a proposed operation within the SRNRA 
    involves mechanical or motorized equipment, including a suction dredge 
    and/or sluice.
        (b) Information to support valid existing rights. A proposed plan 
    of operations within the SRNRA must include at least the following 
    information on the existence of valid existing rights:
        (1) The mining claim recordation serial number assigned by the 
    Bureau of Land Management;
        (2) A copy of the original location notice and conveyance deeds, if 
    ownership has changed since the date of location;
        (3) A copy of affidavits of assessment work or notices of intention 
    to hold the mining claim since the date of recordation with the Bureau 
    of Land Management;
        (4) Verification by the Bureau of Land Management that the holding 
    or maintenance fees have been paid or have been exempted;
        (5) Sketches or maps showing the location of past and present 
    mineral workings on the claims and information sufficient to locate and 
    define the mining claim corners and boundaries on the ground;
        (6) An identification of the valuable mineral that has been 
    discovered;
        (7) An identification of the site within the claims where the 
    deposit has been discovered and exposed;
        (8) Information on the quantity and quality of the deposit 
    including copies of assays or test reports, the width, locations of 
    veins, the size and extent of any deposit; and
        (9) Existing evidence of past and present sales of the valuable 
    mineral.
        (c) Minimum information on proposed operations. In addition to the 
    requirements of paragraph (b) of this section, a plan of operations 
    must include the information required at Secs. 228.4 (c)(1) through 
    (c)(3) of this chapter which includes information about the proponent 
    and a detailed description of the proposed operation. In addition, if 
    the operator and claim owner are different, the operator must submit a 
    copy of the authorization or agreement under which the proposed 
    operations are to be conducted. A plan of operations must also address 
    the environmental requirements of Sec. 228.8 of this chapter which 
    includes reclamation. In addition, a plan of operations also must 
    include the following:
        (1) An identification of the hazardous materials and any other 
    toxic materials, petroleum products, insecticides, pesticides, and 
    herbicides that will be used during the mineral operation, and the 
    proposed means for disposing of such substances;
        (2) An identification of the character and composition of the 
    mineral wastes that will be used or generated and a proposed method or 
    strategy for their placement, control, isolation, or removal; and
        (3) An identification of how public health and safety are to be 
    maintained.
    
    
    Sec. 292.64  Plan of operations--approval.
    
        (a) Timeframe for review. Except as provided in paragraph (b) of 
    Sec. 292.62 of this subpart, upon receipt of a plan of operations, the 
    authorized officer shall review the information related to valid 
    existing rights and notify the operator in writing within 60 days of 
    one of the following situations:
        (1) That sufficient information on valid existing rights has been 
    provided and the anticipated date by which the valid existing rights 
    determination will be completed, which shall not be more than 2 years 
    after the date of notification; unless the authorized officer, upon 
    finding of good cause with written notice and explanation to the 
    operator, extends the time period for completion of the valid existing 
    rights determination.
        (2) That the operator has failed to provide sufficient information 
    to review a claim of valid existing rights and, therefore, the 
    authorized officer has no obligation to evaluate whether the operator 
    has valid existing rights or to process the operator's proposed plan of 
    operations.
        (b)(1) If the authorized officer concludes that there is not 
    sufficient
    
    [[Page 15061]]
    
    evidence of valid existing rights, the officer shall so notify the 
    operator in writing of the reasons for the determination, inform the 
    operator that the proposed mineral operation cannot be conducted, 
    advise the operator that the Forest Service will promptly notify the 
    Bureau of Land Management of the determination and request the 
    initiation of a mineral contest action against the pertinent mining 
    claim, and advise the operator that further consideration of the 
    proposed plan of operations is suspended pending final action by the 
    Department of the Interior on the operator's claim of valid existing 
    rights and any final judicial review thereof.
        (2) If the authorized officer concludes that there is not 
    sufficient evidence of valid existing rights, the authorized officer 
    also shall notify promptly the Bureau of Land Management of the 
    determination and request the initiation of a mineral contest action 
    against the pertinent mining claims.
        (c) An authorized officer's decision pursuant to paragraph (b) of 
    this section that there is not sufficient evidence of valid existing 
    rights is not subject to further agency or Department of Agriculture 
    review or administrative appeal.
        (d) The authorized officer shall notify the operator in writing 
    that the review of the remainder of the proposed plan will proceed if:
        (1) The authorized officer concludes that there is sufficient 
    evidence of valid existing rights;
        (2) Final agency action by the Department of the Interior 
    determines that the applicable mining claim constitutes a valid 
    existing right; or
        (3) Final judicial review of final agency action by the Department 
    of the Interior finds that the applicable mining claim constitutes a 
    valid existing right.
        (e) Upon completion of the review of the plan of operations, the 
    authorized officer shall ensure that the minimum information required 
    by Sec. 292.63(c) of this subpart has been addressed and, pursuant to 
    Sec. 228.5(a) of this chapter, notify the operator in writing whether 
    or not the plan of operations is approved.
        (f) If the plan of operations is not approved, the authorized 
    officer shall explain in writing why the plan of operations cannot be 
    approved.
        (g) If the plan of operations is approved, the authorized officer 
    shall establish a time period for the proposed operations which shall 
    be for the minimum amount of time reasonably necessary for a prudent 
    operator to complete the mineral development activities covered by the 
    approved plan of operations.
        (h) An approved plan of operations is subject to review and 
    modification as follows:
        (1) To bring the plan into conformance with changes in applicable 
    federal law or regulation; or
        (2) To respond to new information not available at the time the 
    authorized officer approved the plan, for example, new listings of 
    threatened or endangered species; or
        (3) To correct errors or omissions made at the time the plan was 
    approved, for example, to ensure compliance with applicable federal law 
    or regulation; or
        (4) To permit operations requested by the operator that differ in 
    type, scope, or duration from those in an approved plan of operations 
    but that are not subject to paragraph (i) of this section.
        (i) If an operator desires to conduct operations that differ in 
    type, scope, or duration from those in an approved plan of operations, 
    and if those changes will result in resource impacts not anticipated 
    when the original plan was approved, the operator must submit a 
    supplemental plan or a modification of the plan for review and 
    approval.
    
    
    Sec. 292.65  Plan of operations--suspension.
    
        (a) The authorized officer may suspend mineral operations due to an 
    operator's noncompliance with applicable statutes, regulations, or 
    terms and conditions of the approved plan of operations.
        (1) In those cases that present a threat of imminent harm to public 
    health, safety, or the environment, or where such harm is already 
    occurring, the authorized officer may take immediate action to stop the 
    threat or damage without prior notice. In such case, written notice and 
    explanation of the action taken shall be given the operator as soon as 
    reasonably practicable following the suspension.
        (2) In those cases that do not present a threat of imminent harm to 
    public health, safety, or the environment, the authorized officer must 
    first notify the operator in writing of the basis for the suspension 
    and provide the operator with reasonably sufficient time to respond to 
    the notice of the authorized officer or to bring the mineral operations 
    into conformance with applicable laws, regulations, or the terms and 
    conditions of the approved plan of operations.
        (b) Except as otherwise provided in this section, the authorized 
    officer shall notify the operator not less than 30 days prior to the 
    date of the proposed suspension.
    
    Outstanding Mineral Rights
    
    
    Sec. 292.66  Operating plan requirements--outstanding mineral rights.
    
        (a) Proposals for mineral operations involving outstanding mineral 
    rights within the SRNRA must be documented in an operating plan and 
    submitted in writing to the authorized officer.
        (b) An operating plan for operations involving outstanding mineral 
    rights within the SRNRA must include the following:
        (1) The name and legal mailing address of the operator, owner, and 
    any lessees, assigns, and designees;
        (2) A copy of the deed or other legal instrument that conveyed the 
    outstanding mineral rights;
        (3) Sketches or maps showing the location of the outstanding 
    mineral rights, the proposed area of operations, including, but not 
    limited to, existing and/or proposed roads or access routes identified 
    for use, any new proposed road construction, and the approximate 
    location and size of the areas to be disturbed, including existing or 
    proposed structures, facilities, and other improvements to be used;
        (4) A description of the type of operations which includes, at a 
    minimum, a list of the type, size, location, and number of structures, 
    facilities, and other improvements to be used;
        (5) An identification of the hazardous materials and any other 
    toxic materials, petroleum products, insecticides, pesticides, and 
    herbicides that will be used during the mineral operation and the 
    proposed means for disposing of such substances;
        (6) An identification of the character and composition of the 
    mineral wastes that will be used or generated and a proposed method or 
    strategy for their placement, control, isolation, remediation, or 
    removal; and
        (7) A reclamation plan to reduce or control on-site and off-site 
    damage to natural resources resulting from mineral operations. The plan 
    must:
        (i) Provide reclamation to the extent practicable;
        (ii) Show how public health and safety are maintained;
        (iii) Identify and describe reclamation measures to include, but 
    not limited to, the following:
        (A) Reduction and/or control of erosion, landslides, and water 
    runoff;
        (B) Rehabilitation of wildlife and fisheries habitat to be 
    disturbed by the proposed mineral operation; and
        (C) Protection of water quality.
        (iv) Demonstrate how the area of surface disturbance will be 
    reclaimed to a condition or use that is consistent
    
    [[Page 15062]]
    
    with the Six Rivers National Forest Land and Resource Management Plan.
    
    
    Sec. 292.67  Operating plan approval--outstanding mineral rights.
    
        (a) Upon receipt of an operating plan, the authorized officer must 
    review the information related to the ownership of the outstanding 
    mineral rights and notify the operator that:
        (1) Sufficient information on ownership of the outstanding mineral 
    rights has been provided; or
        (2) Sufficient information on ownership of outstanding mineral 
    rights has not been provided, including an explanation of the specific 
    information that still needs to be provided, and that no further action 
    on the plan of operations will be taken until the authorized officer's 
    receipt of the specified information.
        (b) If the review shows outstanding mineral rights have not been 
    verified, the authorized officer must notify the operator in writing 
    that outstanding mineral rights have not been verified, explain the 
    reasons for such a finding, and that the proposed mineral operation 
    cannot be conducted.
        (c) If the review shows that outstanding mineral rights have been 
    verified, the authorized officer must notify the operator in writing 
    that outstanding mineral rights have been verified and that review of 
    the proposed operating plan will proceed.
        (d) The authorized officer shall review the operating plan to 
    determine if all of the following criteria are met:
        (1) The operating plan is consistent with the rights granted by the 
    deed;
        (2) The operating plan is consistent with the Six Rivers National 
    Forest Land and Resource Management Plan; and
        (3) The operating plan uses only so much of the surface as is 
    necessary for the proposed mineral operations.
        (e) Upon completion of the review of the operating plan, the 
    authorized officer shall notify the operator in writing of one of the 
    following:
        (1) The operating plan meets all of the criteria of paragraphs 
    (d)(1) through (d)(3) of this section and, therefore, is approved;
        (2) The operating plan does not meet one or more of the criteria in 
    paragraphs (d)(1) through (d)(3) of this section. Where feasible, the 
    authorized officer may indicate changes to the operating plan that 
    would satisfy the criteria in paragraphs (d)(1) through (d)(3) of this 
    section and, thus, if accepted by the operator, would result in 
    approval of the operating plan.
        (f) To conduct mineral operations beyond those described in an 
    approved operating plan, the owner or lessee must submit, in writing, 
    an amended operating plan to the authorized officer at the earliest 
    practicable date. New operations covered by the proposed amendment may 
    not begin until the authorized officer has reviewed and responded in 
    writing to the proposed amendment. The authorized officer shall review 
    a proposed amendment of an approved operating plan to determine that 
    the criteria in paragraphs (d)(1) through (d)(3) of this section are 
    met.
    
    Mineral Materials
    
    
    Sec. 292.68  Mineral material operations.
    
        Subject to the provisions of part 228, subpart C, and part 293 of 
    this chapter, the authorized officer may approve contracts and permits 
    for the sale or other disposal of mineral materials, including but not 
    limited to, common varieties of gravel, sand, or stone. However, such 
    contracts and permits may be approved only if the material is not 
    within a designated wilderness area and is to be used for the 
    construction and maintenance of roads and other facilities within the 
    SRNRA or the four excluded areas identified by the Act.
    
    Other Provisions
    
    
    Sec. 292.69  Concurrent reclamation.
    
        Plans of operations involving locatable minerals, operating plans 
    involving outstanding mineral rights, and contracts or permits for 
    mineral materials should all provide, to the maximum extent 
    practicable, that reclamation proceed concurrently with the mineral 
    operation.
    
    
    Sec. 292.70  Indemnification.
    
        The owner and/or operator of mining claims and the owner and/or 
    lessee of outstanding mineral rights are jointly and severally liable 
    in accordance with Federal and State laws for indemnifying the United 
    States for the following:
        (a) Costs, damages, claims, liabilities, judgments, injury and 
    loss, including those incurred from fire suppression efforts, and 
    environmental response actions and cleanup and abatement costs incurred 
    by the United States and arising from past, present, and future acts or 
    omissions of the owner, operator, or lessee in connection with the use 
    and occupancy of the unpatented mining claim and/or mineral operation. 
    This includes acts or omissions covered by Federal, State, and local 
    pollution control and environmental statutes and regulations.
        (b) Payments made by the United States in satisfaction of claims, 
    demands, or judgments for an injury, loss, damage, or costs, including 
    for fire suppression and environmental response action and cleanup and 
    abatement costs, which result from past, present, and future acts or 
    omissions of the owner, operator, or lessee in connection with the use 
    and occupancy of the unpatented mining claim and/or mineral operations.
        (c) Costs incurred by the United States for any action resulting 
    from noncompliance with an approved plan of operations or activities 
    outside an approved operating plan.
    
        Dated: March 12, 1998.
    Brian Eliot Burke,
    Deputy Under Secretary, NRE.
    [FR Doc. 98-7924 Filed 3-26-98; 8:45 am]
    BILLING CODE 3410-11-P
    
    
    

Document Information

Effective Date:
4/27/1998
Published:
03/27/1998
Department:
Forest Service
Entry Type:
Rule
Action:
Final rule.
Document Number:
98-7924
Dates:
This rule is effective April 27, 1998.
Pages:
15042-15062 (21 pages)
RINs:
0596-AB39: Smith River National Recreation Area
RIN Links:
https://www.federalregister.gov/regulations/0596-AB39/smith-river-national-recreation-area
PDF File:
98-7924.pdf
CFR: (16)
36 CFR 292.62(a)
36 CFR 228.5(a)
36 CFR 292.62(b)
36 CFR 292.64(c)
36 CFR 292.60
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