[Code of Federal Regulations]
[Title 43, Volume 1]
[Revised as of October 1, 2002]
From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access
[CITE: 43CFR23.5]

[Page 438-440]
 
                    TITLE 43--PUBLIC LANDS: INTERIOR
 
PART 23--SURFACE EXPLORATION, MINING AND RECLAMATION OF LANDS--Table of Contents
 
Sec. 23.5  Technical examination of prospective surface exploration and mining operations.

    (a)(1) In connection with an application for a permit or lease under 
the mineral leasing acts, the district manager shall make, or cause to 
be made, a technical examination of the prospective effects of the 
proposed exploration or surface mining operations upon the environment. 
The technical examination shall take into consideration the need for the 
preservation and protection of other resources, including recreational, 
scenic, historic, and ecological values; the control of erosion, 
flooding, and pollution of water; the isolation of toxic materials; the 
prevention of air pollution; the reclamation by revegetation, 
replacement of soil, or by other means, of lands affected by the 
exploration or mining operations; the prevention of slides; the 
protection of fish and wildlife and their habitat; and the prevention of 
hazards to public health and safety.
    (2) A technical examination of an area should be made with the 
recognition that actual potential mining sites and mining operations 
vary widely with respect to topography, climate, surrounding land uses, 
proximity to densely used areas, and other environmental influences and 
that mining and

[[Page 439]]

reclamation requirements should provide sufficient flexibility to permit 
adjustment to local conditions.
    (b) Based upon the technical examination, the district manager shall 
formulate the general requirements which the applicant must meet for the 
protection of nonmineral resources during the conduct of exploration or 
mining operations and for the reclamation of lands or waters affected by 
exploration or mining operations. The general requirements shall be made 
known in writing to the applicant before the issuance of a permit or 
lease or the making of a contract, and upon acceptance thereof by the 
applicant, shall be incorporated in the permit, lease, or contract. If 
an application or offer is made under the Mineral Leasing Act for 
Acquired Lands and if the lands are under the jurisdiction of an agency 
other than the Department of the Interior, the requirements must 
incorporate provisions prescribed by that agency. If the application or 
offer is made under the Mineral Leasing Act of February 25, 1920, and if 
the lands are under the jurisdiction of an agency other than the 
Department of the Interior, the district manager shall consult 
representatives of the agency administering the land and obtain their 
recommendations for provisions to be incorporated in the general 
requirements. If the district manager does not concur in the 
recommendations, the issues shall be referred for resolution to the 
Under Secretary of the Department of the Interior and the comparable 
officer of the agency submitting the recommendations. In the case of 
disagreement on the issues which are so referred, the Secretary of the 
Interior shall make a determination on the recommendations which shall 
be final and binding.
    (c) In each instance in which an application or offer is made under 
the mineral leasing acts, the mining supervisor shall participate in the 
technical examination and in the formulation of the general 
requirements. If the lands covered by an application or offer are under 
the jurisdiction of a bureau of the Department of the Interior other 
than the Bureau of Land Management, the district manager shall consult 
representatives of the bureau administering the land. If the lands 
covered by the application or offer are under the jurisdiction of an 
agency other than the Department of the Interior and that agency makes a 
technical examination of the type provided for in paragraph (a) of this 
section, district managers and mining supervisors are authorized to 
participate in that examination.
    (d) Whenever it is determined that any part of the area described in 
an application or offer for a permit, lease, or contract is such that 
previous experience under similar conditions has shown that operations 
cannot feasibly be conducted by any known methods or measures to avoid--
    (1) Rock or landslides which would be a hazard to human lives or 
endanger or destroy private or public property; or
    (2) Substantial deposition of sediment and silt into streams, lakes, 
reservoirs; or
    (3) A lowering of water quality below standards established by the 
appropriate State water pollution control agency, or by the Secretary of 
the Interior; or
    (4) A lowering of the quality of waters whose quality exceeds that 
required by the established standards--unless and until it has been 
affirmatively demonstrated to the State water pollution control agency 
and to the Department of the Interior that such lowering of quality is 
necessary to economic and social development and will not preclude any 
assigned uses made of such waters; or
    (5) The destruction of key wildlife habitat or important scenic, 
historical, or other natural or cultural features; the district manager 
may prohibit or otherwise restrict operations on such part of an area.
    (e) If, on the basis of a technical examination, the district 
manager determines that there is a likelihood that there will be a 
lowering of water quality as described in paragraphs (d) (3) and (4) of 
this section caused by the operation, no lease or permit shall be issued 
or contract made until after consultation with the Federal Water 
Pollution Control Administration and a finding by the Administration 
that the proposed operation would not be in

[[Page 440]]

violation of the Federal Water Pollution Control Act, as amended (33 
U.S.C. section 466 et seq.) or of Executive Order No. 11288 (31 FR 
9261). Where a permit or lease is involved the district manager's 
determination shall be made in consultation with the mining supervisor.
    (f) Each notice of a proposed appropriation of a materials site 
filed by the Department of Transportation under 23 U.S.C. 317 shall be 
transmitted to the proper district manager. The district manager shall 
cause a technical examination to be made as provided in paragraph (a) of 
this section and shall formulate the requirements which the State 
highway department or its nominee must meet. If the land covered by the 
proposed appropriation is under the jurisdiction of a bureau of the 
Department other than the Bureau of Land Management, the district 
manager shall consult representatives of the bureau administering the 
land. If the district manager determines, or, in an instance in which 
the land is administered by another bureau, a representative of that 
bureau determines that the proposed appropriation is contrary to the 
public interest or is inconsistent with the purposes for which such land 
or materials are reserved, the district manager shall promptly submit 
the matter to the Secretary of the Interior for his decision. In other 
instances, the district manager shall notify the Department of 
Transportation of the requirements and conditions which the State 
highway department or its nominee must meet.

[34 FR 852, Jan. 18, 1969, as amended at 48 FR 27016, June 10, 1983]