WASHINGTON, D.C. – Internal emails obtained by the House Natural Resources Committee raise significant
questions into the science used by the Obama Administration to justify a 20-year ban on uranium development on
one million acres of federal land in Arizona. In the emails, scientists within the National Park Service discuss how
the potential environmental impacts were “grossly overestimated” in the Administration’s Draft Environmental
Impact Statement (DEIS) and that the potential impacts are “very minor to negligible.”A National Park Service
wrote in an internal email, “The DEIS goes to great lengths in an attempt to establish impacts to water resources
from uranium mining. It fails to do so, but instead creates enough confusion and obfuscation of hydrologic
principles to create the illusion that there could be adverse impacts if uranium mining occurred.” He notes that
“previous studies have been unable to detect significant contamination downstream of current or past mining
operations” and that “adverse impacts to water resources” is not a reason to be concerned about potential uranium
mining operations.
Another employee with the National Park Service wrote that this is a case “where the hard science doesn’t strongly
support a policy position.”
“These emails raise serious concerns about whether the Obama Administration’s decision to block uranium
production in Arizona was based on politics rather than sound science,” said House Natural Resources
Committee Chairman Doc Hastings. “Developing uranium in the United States will create high-paying jobs,
boost the economy, lower our dependence on foreign countries, and support clean American energy. The
Administration’s unilateral action to block uranium development on this land threatens America’s energy security
and ignores numerous studies showing that it can be done safely in an environmentally conscious manner.”
In response to the emails, Chairman Hastings (WA-04) and Subcommittee on National Parks, Forests and Public
Lands Chairman Rob Bishop (UT-01) sent a letter today to the Department of the Interior Secretary Ken Salazar
asking for documents, including emails, notes, briefing papers and memoranda, concerning the Draft
Environmental Impact Statement, the Final Environmental Impact Statement, and the Record of Decision in
support of the Northern Arizona Proposed Withdrawal. Chairman Hastings also requested that the Department
of the Interior provide complete and unredacted copies of 399 pages previously concealed by the Obama
Administration in response to a document request in 2009.
Background:
On January 9, 2012, the Obama Administration announced a 20-year ban on uranium development on one million
acres of land in northern Arizona – one of the most uranium-rich areas in the United States. The Administration’s
decision to withdraw these areas from uranium mining terminates a long-standing agreement, forged through
compromise between mining interest and environmental groups, and carried out through bipartisan legislation
that became law in 1984. The agreement allowed certain areas in Arizona to be protected through Wilderness
designations, while others were to remain open for uranium production.
In April 2009, then Natural Resources Ranking Member Hastings and then Subcommittee Ranking Member
Bishop sent a letter to the Department of the Interior requesting all documents and correspondence from then
Superintendent of the Grand Canyon National Park and the Director of the Grand Canyon National Park Science
Center related to correspondence with the news media and several non-profit organizations regarding the
withdrawal. The Department’s September 2009 response handled the request as a Freedom of Information Act
(FOIA) request and thus the Department withheld 399 pages “under FOIA’s deliberative process exemption.”
However, FOIA law prohibits the Administration from using FOIA exemptions to withhold information from
Congress.
###
http://naturalresources.house.gov
|