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Displaying results 1 - 25 of 49 for resolution copper. Subscribe to this search

  1. article Measure would let Arizona declare its sovereignty

    Tuesday, April 17, 2012 2:03 pm

    Arizona voters could get a chance this year to tell the federal government to butt out of what we do with our air, land, water and wildlife.

  • article McGee: World’s highest tax proposal on U.S. mining has negative economic consequences

    Monday, December 12, 2011 5:01 pm

    With Arizona’s unemployment rate topping the national rate at 9 percent, any plan to boost the economy and get Americans back to work must be on the table — especially if it involves a sector proven to generate economic growth and provide high-paying jobs. United States mineral mining is a vital contribution to our economy and recovery from the recession.

    1 image(s)

  • article House OKs massive copper-mining land swap in southeast Arizona

    Thursday, October 27, 2011 4:17 pm

    WASHINGTON – The House voted Wednesday to swap more than 2,400 acres of copper-rich federal land in Pinal County with a mining company that plans to develop the third-largest undeveloped copper resource in the world.

  • article Mine company funds rural schools to educate future hires with tech skills

    Saturday, October 1, 2011 9:00 am

    SUPERIOR – It’s hard to imagine that this sleepy town would produce engineers and robotics experts in great numbers. But before he left to major in computer science at Arizona State University, Christopher Floyd and high school classmates had already built two robots on a team sponsored by Resolution Copper Mining.

    2 image(s)

  • article Arizona lawmakers renew push for Resolution Copper deal

    Friday, September 9, 2011 12:45 pm

    WASHINGTON – Arizona lawmakers pushed Thursday for swift approval of a bill to open thousands of acres near Superior for copper mining, one of a package of job-creating bills promoted by the Western Caucus.

    1 image(s)

  • article Opponents vow not to back down from fight over land-exchange bill

    Wednesday, June 15, 2011 3:30 pm

    WASHINGTON • Government, tribal and environmental witnesses told a congressional committee Tuesday a controversial land swap bill needs a lot of work before they will drop their resistance to it.

    3 image(s) 1 article(s)

  • Land swap hearing

    Superior Mayor Michael Ong Hing tells a congressional committee that a land exchange between the government and Resolution Copper would mean jobs and income for his town and surrounding areas.

  • Land swap hearing

    From left, Superior Mayor Michael Ong Hing, Pinal County Supervisor Bryan Martyn and Resolution Copper Vice President Jon Cherry testify in favor of a land swap between the copper company and the government.

  • Land swap hearing

    From left, Forest Service Associate Chief Mary Wagner, Bureau of Land Management Deputy Director Marcilynn Burke, Superior Mayor Michael Ong Hing, Pinal County Supervisor Bryan Martyn and Resolution Copper Vice President Jon Cherry wait with others to testify Tuesday.

  • article Congress takes another run at long-delayed Resolution Copper land swap

    Saturday, June 11, 2011 9:15 pm

    WASHINGTON – A House subcommittee on Tuesday will take up the latest iteration of the embattled Southeast Arizona Land Exchange and Conservation Act — the 10th try in the last six years.

    Since 2005, five Arizona congressmen have introduced 10 versions of the proposal to swap thousands of acres of federal land in Pinal County for thousands more owned by Resolution Copper throughout southeastern Arizona.

    Eight bills died in committee. One made the Senate legislative calendar but never came up for a vote.

    “That bill probably would’ve been a landmark bill, setting precedents for land exchange,” said Superior, Ariz., Mayor Michael Ong Hing, who has twice testified in Washigton for the bills. “But they blew it.”

    Freshman Rep. Paul Gosar, R-Flagstaff, who introduced version No. 10 last month, said in a prepared statement that this one can pass.

    “This initiative has languished far too long,” he said. “I am confident I have put together legislation … that will pass through the House of Representatives quickly and efficiently.”

    Gosar calls it a jobs bill, saying the land exchange would create more than 1,000 jobs and have an estimated annual economic impact of $800 million.

    A report commissioned by Resolution Copper estimated the total economic impact of the mine they hope to open after the exchange to be $46.4 billion. It says the mine would be active for 66 years.

    Besides swapping 2,422 acres of the Oak Flat federal parcel in northeast Pinal County for 5,344 acres of land from the copper company, the bill gives Superior the option to buy up to three parcels of land from the government at market value.

    Those elements of the proposal have remained largely unchanged from the first version. Along the way, the bills have faced challenges on various fronts.

    The land that Resolution Copper would receive is important to Native American culture.

    Conservation groups worried that the mining project would cause severe environmental damage and that the land the government would get in exchange is not of much value.

    Rock climbers fought for concessions so they wouldn’t lose access to some of their favorite spots.

    Hing said environmental assessment restrictions called for by Rep. Raul Grijalva, D-Tucson, in the 2009 version of the bill killed it.

    Perhaps the worst blow was former Rep. Rick Renzi’s extortion indictment and charges related to the land exchange.

    The 1st District Republican introduced the first House version of the bill. Federal prosecutors allege he tried to force Resolution Copper to buy land from his business associate in exchange for his guarantee the bill would pass.

    The company balked, and Renzi was indicted in February 2008. The investigation seemed to cool interest in the land exchange until Gosar introduced the latest version.

    While the bill hasn’t changed drastically since 2005, there are some differences in Gosar’s version, the first in two years.

    The 2,422 acres Resolution Copper would get under Gosar’s version is 16 acres more than in the 2009 version. The government would get 5,344 acres to add to existing conservation areas, 222 acres less than before. And a three-tiered environmental assessment process is absent from Gosar’s bill.

    Although the bill is being heard just a month after its introduction, opponents aren’t impressed.

    “Paul Gosar’s bill has taken a huge turn for the worse,” said Roger Featherstone, director of the Arizona Mining Reform Coalition. He has been fighting what he calls “special interest legislation” since the first version and will testify Tuesday.

    Featherstone is concerned Gosar’s version eliminates the need for approval under the National Environmental Policy Act and doesn’t include funding to rebuild affected campgrounds.

    But Resolution Copper has slowly won over other opponents.

    The company has been working with Audubon Arizona for about five years on conservation issues related to land the government would get in the exchange. While not every concern has been addressed, Audubon Arizona is impressed.

    “They seem to have shown a willingness to be environmentally responsible, to the best a mining corporation can be,” said Tice Supplee, the organization’s director of bird conservation.

    Resolution Copper has also negotiated with rock-climbing groups, because concessions to climbers are no longer part of the legislation. The Queen Creek Coalition of rock-climbing groups has not come out in support of the land exchange, but it is not opposed to it anymore, either.

    “The way they’re going now, I think we’re going to end up with an equitable solution,” said Paul Dief, the coalition’s vice chair.

    For some, it simply comes down to economics.

    Hing has been waiting for the land exchange bill to revitalize Superior since the first version in May 2005.    

    “We’ve suffered since the (Magma) mine shut down, and we’re still waiting to recover,” said Hing.

  • article Many in Superior see town's future in copper mining proposal

    Thursday, October 7, 2010 1:30 pm

    SUPERIOR - Mining drove this town’s economy when Lynn Heglie decided to open a restaurant here in the early 1990s.

    1 image(s)

  • SUPERIOR HOPES

    Deteriorating storefronts speak to the hard economic times Superior has faced since mining fell off in the area. Many leaders and residents say they are hoping Resolution Copper Co.'s plan to open a mine in the mountains east of town will make Superior thrive again. (Cronkite News Service Photo by Jennifer A. Johnson)

  • article Judge blocks prosecutors from using information from Renzi wire tap

    Wednesday, June 9, 2010 5:37 pm

    A federal judge has blocked prosecutors from using what they learned from thousands of phone calls of then-Congressman Rick Renzi, potentially crippling the government's case against him.

  • article Freeport buys Twin Buttes Mine near Sahuarita

    Tuesday, January 26, 2010 1:07 pm

    TUCSON — Mining giant Freeport-McMoRan has bought the long-closed Twin Buttes Mine site near Sahuarita for $200 million and may mine it once again, company officials said.

  • article Senate panel OKs deal on mine land swap

    Wednesday, December 16, 2009 4:00 pm

    WASHINGTON — A Senate panel approved a compromise bill on Wednesday that gives the secretary of agriculture authority to approve a land exchange near Superior that could clear the way for North America's largest copper mine.

  • article Interior chief tours proposed mine site

    Friday, August 21, 2009 1:59 pm

    Compromise is possible on a proposed copper mine in southeastern Arizona that's thought to contain the largest undeveloped deposit of high-grade copper in the world, Interior Secretary Kenneth Salazar said after touring the site on Friday.

  • article Letters to the editor: March 29

    Sunday, March 29, 2009 10:27 pm

    We encourage readers to submit letters to the editor on issues of interest to East Valley residents. Submissions should be no longer than 300 words, factually accurate and original thoughts of the writer. Please be brief and include name, address, city and phone number for verification. Letters and comments may be edited for clarity and length.

  • article Pinal farms will get reused water from mine

    Saturday, March 14, 2009 7:41 pm

    The New Magma Irrigation and Drainage District, a 26,900-acre farming area in Pinal County between Queen Creek and Florence, is about to capture water from an unusual source.

    2 image(s)

  • article Miners, foes fight over project near Superior

    Sunday, December 7, 2008 12:49 am

     Hit by the declining price of copper and slowing demand for the metal, Resolution Copper Co. is throttling back development of a huge and controversial mine near Superior.

    2 image(s)

  • Miners, foes fight over project near Superior

    CONTROVERSIAL PROJECT: Tom Goodell talks about ongoing work at the Resolution Copper Mine in Superior.

  • article Prosecutors show their cards to Renzi defense lawyers

    Friday, August 29, 2008 8:13 pm

    TUCSON - Prosecutors in Arizona Rep. Rick Renzi’s corruption trial have handed over much of their evidence to defense attorneys so they can prepare for trial.

  • article ASU professor's neglect irks Superior officials

    Friday, August 8, 2008 8:46 pm

    Glenn A. Wilt Jr. has taught scores of Arizona State University students about finance and real estate investment during his 45 years as a business professor.

    1 image(s)

  • article Letters to the editor: April 19

    Saturday, April 19, 2008 12:19 am

    We encourage readers to submit letters to the editor on issues of interest to East Valley residents. Submissions should be no longer than 300 words, factually accurate and original thoughts of the writer. Please be brief and include name, address, city and phone number for verification. Letters and call-in comments may be edited for clarity and length.

  • article Lawmakers want Greenway statue replaced

    Monday, March 24, 2008 11:08 pm

    Mining magnate John Campbell Greenway helped found the city of Ajo and has a major road and high school in Phoenix named after him. His statue, sculpted by the man who designed Mount Rushmore, stands in a section of the U.S. Capitol that honors individuals chosen by their states.

  • article Arizona congressman Renzi indicted in fraud

    Friday, February 22, 2008 8:41 am

    Rep. Rick Renzi was charged with 35 counts of conspiracy, fraud, money laundering and extortion in an indictment announced Friday.

    1 image(s)

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