TECHNISANDS RECORD OF
VIOLATIONS AND POOR RECLAMATION
AT ITS SAND MINES
In the 9 years since it was formed, TechniSand
has developed a record of repeated failures to deliver on its
promises and commitments, poor reclamation practices, and violation
of the conditions of its permits. Many are documented on this
web site. For example see the summary
(988k Adobe Acrobat file) of our first years communications
with the DEQ regarding violations . . . Here we have listed some
of the more important violations in one place.
- TechniSand dredged a lake at the Nadeau Pit (see aerial photgraph) for over five years without
a permit from the Land and Water Management Division (LWMD) of
the Michigan Department of Environmental Quality (DEQ). It was
not until Preserve the Dunes notified the LWMD of this violation
that they began to correct this serious violation of the law
(Part 301 of the Natural Resources Environmental Protection Act).
- When a permit to dredge was issued, TechniSand was barred
from dredging closer than 500 feet from Rogers Creek and directed
to monitor water tables levels and the elevation of Rogers Creek.
Within less than six months TechniSand was mining within 460
feet as revealed by an aerial survey photograph made for Preserve
the Dunes. Our complaint to LWMD led to an order to fill in the
excessive excavation. When monitoring data was delivered to the
LWMD, it was clearly inaccurate or fabricated. The level of Rogers
Creek was reported to be constant within one-hundredth of a foot
for an entire year -- which residents of the area knew was a
false report -- Rogers Creek was at the lowest flow level that
anyone could remember.
- TechniSand mined the buffer area adjacent to Thunder Mountain
Heights Association property, removing a significant part of
a tall dune and all of the trees, shrubs and other flora. This
was done by mistake but was caught by Preserve the Dunes
just as the company was ready start mining Thunder Mountain Heights'
private property.
- The DEQ ordered TechniSand to develop and implement a restoration
plan. Preserve the Dunes and the adjacent land owners complained
that the restoration plan was inadequate. But the implementation does not even comply to the
plan. Smaller and fewer trees were planted than specified. Some
species were omitted altogether.
- Last fall TechniSand once again encroached on the buffer
-- this time above Rogers Creek. Since it did not immediately
abut private property, no special restoration was made. Sand
blew over the crest to be washed down into Rogers Creek - a natural
trout stream already being endangered by the mining operation.
- TechniSand has used cell
units that have never been placed in active status for uses
not allowed by law or the permit. They have used these cells
to haul sand and to move mining equipment in violation of the
law. They have stripped the plants from cells and then used the
land to stockpile what has been called topsoil.
- Even worse, TechniSand has mined cell units already in interim
reclamation status. This was documented in a aerial photograph taken six months after
interim status was achieved.
- The company has used reclaimed
land (cell unit 1) to store unused mining equipment until
Preserve the Dunes reported this violation.
- The mine was open to use by off-road vehicles and was accessible
by small children in violation of the conditions of the permit
and the special conditions of the mining permit. This creates
an unsafe condition and leads to damage of any reclaimed areas.
Fencing and signage were added after Preserve the Dunes complaints
to the DEQ.
- The company has failed to plant trees at the density specified
in the Progressive Cell Unit Mining and Reclamation Plan.
- TechniSand first applied for use of 14 acres of the mine
area as a Plant Site. In the next year they applied for and were
granted an additional 5 acres. Then within the next few years
they proceeded to use nearly 30 acres as Plant Site. Unlike cell
units, no conformance bond is required for the Plant Site. The
story of this illegal use of the land is told in detailed and
illustrated is told elsewhere
on this web site.
- TechniSand bought the Nadeau Site in 1991. At that time they
committed to implement the reclamation plan of the previous owner.
Instead they waited to do any restoration until an adjacent land
owner began complaining in 1998 despite being ordered to do so
by the DEQ several years earlier. They planted beach grass. Most
of it died. The reclamation plan also called for trees to be
planted. But no more work has been done. We are left with mostly dead beach grass on a
barren hillside.
- Technisand shows a photograph of the Nadeau Pit as an illustration
of their reclamation efforts. The photo shows an area reclaimed
by the previous operator. A ground
level panorama and other photographs
shows what we found at the site. Reclamation efforts actually
made by TechniSand have only been made after significant pressure
from Preserve the Dunes. Still none of the efforts approaches
compliance with the reclamation plan.
- The law requires that subsurface slopes be graded to a slope
of 1:6 to a depth of 10 feet. When the water table dropped due
to the proximity of the lake to Rogers Creek, it was revealed
that TechniSand had installed a slope of 1:6 at the very edge
of their lake, but within a few feet, it steeply dropped off
at a slope between 1:1 and 1:2.
- TechniSand reports their excllent reclamation at the Lost
Dunes Country Club in Bridgman. Yet the owner of the club who
bought the land from TechniSand was quoted in the Chicago Tribune
Magazine as saying "Some firm spends a couple of decades
operating a sand mine and what's left isn't pretty. I didn't
know what I was going to do with it. It was 252 acres and a mess,
overgrown, with two lakes." Not exactly a glowing report
of "excellent reclamation."
- TechniSand states that reclamation takes 2 to 3 years. They
have not mined the Busse
Site in Covert, MI for three years. The areas that the company
mined have been "reclaimed" by hydroseeding and planting
8 inch high white pine seedlings. The trees have died. The sand
is 50 percent bare. The Garlanger Property has not been mined
for over five years. Little if any reclamation has been done
there.
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