Special Environmental Concerns:  Inactive or Abandoned Mining Areas


 

The following information should be reviewed for projects that involve inactive or abandoned mining areas.

 
  1. Cities and counties, especially those with a high occurrence of mining activities, are responsible for how development occurs in their jurisdictions and should take mining and mining waste issues into consideration when developing planning and zoning ordinances and/or promoting new development.
  2. Local governments are responsible for public safety, so risk-based management decisions should be used to minimize the human health and ecological risks associated with new development in inactive or abandoned mining areas.
  3. If cities or counties are purchasing or developing new property, it is important to conduct due diligence on the property to determine potential on-site contamination and the need for risk management.
 

The Voluntary Cleanup Program encourages innovation and cooperation among the state, communities, and private parties working to revitalize properties with hazardous substance or petroleum contamination.

Brownfields are abandoned or underutilized properties where the reuse is complicated by actual or perceived environmental contamination. The Brownfields Revitalization Program is a joint program between the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency and DEQ to help local governments redevelop brownfield sites in their communities by funding and conducting site assessments when a lack of environmental information is complicating site redevelopment or reuse.