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 For Immediate Release,  October 5, 2010 
              
                | Contact: | Brad  Bartlett, Attorney, Energy   Minerals Law   Center, (970) 247-9334 Wahleah Johns, Black Mesa Water Coalition, (928)  213-5909
 Andy Bessler, Sierra Club, (928) 774-6103
 Taylor McKinnon, Center for Biological  Diversity, (928) 310-6713
 |  Lawsuit Seeks Release of Public Records  for Peabody Coal Operations on Tribal Lands in Arizona FLAGSTAFF, Ariz.— Native American and conservation groups sued  the U.S. Department of the Interior’s Office of Surface Mining (OSM) in federal  court in Colorado on Thursday for withholding  records relating to Peabody Energy’s coal-mining operations on tribal lands in  northeast Arizona.  To date, the agency has refused to publicly release records relating to Peabody’s coal-mining operations — including a copy of a  current, valid operating permit for Peabody’s  mining. The lawsuit was brought under the Freedom of Information Act.  “For decades, OSM has  quietly issued permits to Peabody in a way that has thwarted meaningful public  involvement and community understanding of Peabody’s mine operations,” said  Nikke Alex, executive director of the Black Mesa Water Coalition. “OSM’s  permitting actions have a direct and irreparable impact on our community. These  records must be released to the public.”  Peabody, the  largest coal-mine operator in the world, runs the 40,000-acre Kayenta Mine and  adjacent 18,000-acre Black Mesa Mine on Navajo Nation and Hopi tribal lands in northeastern  Arizona. On  April 9, citizens submitted a FOIA request to OSM for records related to the  agency’s renewal of Peabody’s  Kayenta Mine operating permit. On June 4, OSM’s office in Denver,  Colorado ended the public comment period for Peabody’s renewal permit without releasing the requested  records (including a copy of Peabody’s  operating permit).  “The records requested under FOIA are integral to public  understanding of OSM’s renewal of Peabody’s  operating permit,” said Brad Bartlett, an attorney with the Energy Minerals   Law Center.  “These records should be readily available for public release by the agency. Instead,  citizens are forced to take legal action to acquire Peabody’s permitting  records.”    “By denying and delaying public release of the  operating permit, OSM protects Peabody and unjustly shuts out impacted  communities and the public in Peabody’s permitting process,” said Cynthia Pardo  of the Sierra Club’s Plateau Group. “By filing this lawsuit with our tribal  partners, we are seeking greater transparency and accountability by the Obama administration  for Navajo and Hopi communities impacted by Peabody’s coal mining on Black  Mesa.”   Peabody's Black Mesa mine slurried coal via a 273-mile  pipeline to the Mohave Generating Station from 1970 to 2005. The company’s  Kayenta mine has supplied coal to the Navajo Generating Station since 1973. Both  mines have caused significant hydrological impacts due to massive groundwater  depletion from Peabody’s  historic coal-slurry and related mine operations.   “Peabody’s  coal-mining operations will contribute to global warming-related droughts and  exacerbate the drying effects of groundwater depletion on wells, springs and  creeks,” said Taylor McKinnon of the Center for Biological Diversity. “OSM’s  inability to produce a valid operating permit for Peabody raises a whole host of questions.  This lawsuit will force full disclosure.”  Plaintiffs in the lawsuit include Black Mesa  Water Coalition, Center for Biological Diversity, Dine Citizens Against Ruining  Our Environment (Dine CARE), Sierra Club and TO’ Nizhoni Ani. Plaintiffs are  being represented by attorneys Brad Bartlett and Travis Stills of the Energy Minerals  Law Center  in Durango, Colo.  To download a copy of the complaint, click  here.  For more background information please  visit: www.blackmesawatercoalition.org.             |