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Spring Creek Mine Reopens After Montana, Navajo Company Reach Temporary Deal

A statue of a miner
Phil Guest
/
Flickr CC BY 2.0
Montana officials reached a temporary deal with Navajo Transitional Energy Company, reopening the Spring Creek mine after a legal dispute sent workers home last week.

Montana officials reached a temporary deal on Friday that will allow one of the largest coal mines in the U.S. to reopen amid a legal dispute with its new owners from the Navajo Nation.

The Navajo Transitional Energy Company shut down the Spring Creek mine Thursday after Montana regulators insisted the company waive its immunity as a tribal entity from future lawsuits.

The two sides temporarily resolved the dispute following two days of negotiations that yielded an agreement for a 75-day, limited waiver of immunity for the company, said Montana Department of Environmental Quality spokeswoman Rebecca Harbage.

The waiver allows the state to enforce environmental laws at the mine, located near the town of Decker along the Montana-Wyoming border. It allows the company to be sued over future environmental violations or mine reclamation costs.

Negotiations will continue over the state's request for a permanent waiver and unresolved questions about reclamation bonds for the mine, Harbage said.

"We expect NTEC to continue to come to the table to talk about a long-term solution," she said.

Spring Creek is Montana's largest coal mine. It produced almost 14 million tons of the fuel last year.

Company representatives have said they won't agree to a full waiver of their treaty rights.

CEO Clark Moseley said in a statement that the company appreciated efforts by the state to keep Spring Creek working.

"We are thankful that we were able to reach a mutually agreeable position and look forward to continuing to build on a strong partnership with the state of Montana," he said.

Department of Environmental Quality Director Shaun McGrath said "better planning and coordination" by the company could have prevented the shutdown.

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