Current through Register Vol. 35, No. 18, September 24, 2024
A. General. All
disturbed areas shall be restored in a timely manner (1) to conditions that are
capable of supporting the uses which they were capable of supporting before any
mining, or (2) to higher or better uses achievable under criteria and
procedures of paragraph (d) of this Section [now Subsection D of 19.8.36.24
NMAC].
B. Determining premining
use of land. The premining uses of land to which the postmining land use is
compared shall be those uses which the land previously supported if the land
had not been previously mined and had been properly managed.
(1) The postmining land use for land that has
been previously mined and not reclaimed shall be judged on the basis of the
highest and best use that can be achieved and is compatible with surrounding
areas.
(2) The postmining land use
for land that has received improper management shall be judged on the basis of
the premining use of surrounding lands that have received proper
management.
(3) If the premining
use of the land was changed within five years of the beginning of mining, the
comparison of postmining use to premining use shall include a comparison with
the historic use of the land as well as its use immediately preceding
mining.
C. Land-use
categories. Land use is categorized in the following groups. Change from one to
another land use category in premining to postmining constitutes an alternate
land use and the permittee shall meet the requirements of paragraph (d) [now
Subsection D of 19.8.36.24 NMAC] of this Section and all other applicable
environmental protection performance standards of this chapter.
(1) Heavy industry. Manufacturing facilities,
powerplants, airports or similar facilities.
(2) Light industry and commercial services.
Office buildings, stores, parking facilities, apartment houses, motels, hotels
or similar facilities.
(3) Public
services. Schools, hospitals, churches, libraries, watet-treatment facilities,
solid-waste disposal facilities, public parks and recreation facilities, major
transmission lines, major pipelines, highways, underground and surface
utilities and other servicing structures and appurtenances.
(4) Residential. Single-and multiple-family
housing (other than apartment houses) with necessary support facilities.
Support facilities may include commercial services incorporated in and
comprising less than five percent of the total land area of housing capacity,
associated open space and minor vehicle parking and recreation facilities
supporting the housing.
(5)
Cropland. Land used primarily for the production of cultivated and
close-growing crops for harvest alone or in association with sod crops. Land
used for facilities in support of farming operations are included.
(6) Rangeland. Includes rangelands and forest
lands which support a cover of herbaceous or scrubby vegetation suitable for
grazing or browsing use.
(7)
Hayland or pasture. Land used primarily for the long-term production of
adapted, domesticated forage plants to be grazed by livestock or cut and cured
for livestock feed.
(8) Forest
land. Land with at least a 25 percent tree canopy or land at least ten percent
stocked by forest trees of any size, including land formerly having had such
tree cover and that will be naturally or artifically reforested.
(9) Impoundments of water. Land used for
storing water for beneficial uses such as stock ponds, irrigation, fire
protection, recreation or water supply.
(10) Fish and wildlife habitat and recreation
lands. Wetlands, fish and wildlife habitat, and areas managed primarily for
fish and wildlife or recreation.
(11) Combined uses. Any appropriate
combination of land uses where one land use is designated as the primary land
use and one or more other land uses are designated as secondary land
uses.
D. Criteria for
approving alternative postmining use of land. An alternative postmining land
use shall be approved by the regulatory authority, after consultation with the
landowner or the land-management agency having jurisdiction over state or
federal lands, if the following criteria are met. Proposals to remove an entire
coal seam running through the upper part of a mountain, ridge, or hill must
also meet these criteria in addition to the requirements of Section 716.3 of
this chapter.
(1) The proposed land use is
compatible with adjacent land use and, where applicable, with existing local,
state or federal land use policies and plans. A written statement of the views
of the authorities with statutory responsibilities for land use policies and
plans shall accompany the request for approval. The permittee shall obtain any
required approval of local, state or federal land management agencies,
including any necessary zoning or other changes necessarily required for the
final land use.
(2) Specific plans
have been prepared which show the feasibility of the proposed land use as
related to needs, projected land use trends and markets and that include a
schedule showing how the proposed use will be developed and achieved within a
reasonable time after mining and be sustained. The regulatory authority may
require appropriate demonstrations to show that the planned procedures are
feasible, reasonable and integrated with mining and reclamation, and that the
plans will result in successful reclamation.
(3) Provision of any necessary public
facilities is assured as evidenced by letters of commitment from parties other
than the permittee, as appropriate, to provide them in a manner compatible with
the permittee's plans.
(4) Specific
and feasible plans for financing attainment and maintenance of the postmining
land use including letters of commitment from parties other than the permittee
as appropriate, if the postmining land use is to be developed by such
parties.
(5) The plans are designed
under the general supervision of a professional engineer registered in the
state of New Mexico, or other appropriate professional, who will ensure that
the plans conform to applicable accepted standards for adequate land stability,
drainage, and vegetative cover, and aesthetic design appropriate for the
postmining use of the site.
(6) The
proposed use or uses will neither present actual or probable hazard to public
health or safety nor will they pose any actual or probable threat of water flow
diminution or pollution.
(7) The
use or uses will not involve unreasonable delays in reclamation.
(8) Necessary approval of measures to prevent
or mitigate adverse effects on fish and wildlife has been obtained from the
regulatory authority and appropriate state and federal fish and wildlife
management agencies.
(9) Proposals
to change premining land uses of range, fish and wildlife habitat, forest land,
hayland, or pasture to a postmining cropland use, where the cropland would
require continuous maintenance such as seeding, plowing, cultivation,
fertilization, or other similar practices to be practicable or to comply with
applicable Federal, State, and local laws, shall be reviewed by the regulatory
authority to assure that:
(a) There is a firm
written commitment by the permittee or by the landowner or land manager to
provide sufficient crop management after release of applicable performance
bonds to assure that the proposed postmining cropland use remains practical and
reasonable.
(b) There is sufficient
water available and committed to maintain crop production; and
(c) Topsoil quality and depth are shown to be
sufficient to support the proposed use.
(10) The regulatory authority has provided by
public notice not less than 45 days nor more than 60 days for interested
citizens and local, state and federal agencies to review and comment on the
proposed land use.