HomeMy WebLinkAbout20210208_H-Huang_SierraFrom: Sierra Club Capital Group
To: Wrenn, Brian L; contactaov; Childers. Darryl D; Miller. David; NCMininaProaram; Holman, Sheila; Sen. Wilev
Nickel; Sen. Jay Chaudhuri; Cynthia. Ball (abncleg.net; Joe.John(c ncleg.net; Strong. Brian; Letchworth, Scott
Subject: [External] Joint Resolution from the Sierra Club Capitol Group and The Umstead Coalition —deny permit and
restore undisturbed buffers and sunset clause
Date: Monday, February 8, 2021 2:38:25 PM
Attachments: Protect Umstead State Park Resolution from UC and Sierra Club, Feb 7"2021 - Joint resolution statement from
Sierra Club Capital Group and Umstead Coalition (1).pdf
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Dear Mr. Brian Wrenn, Director of Division of Energy, Mineral and Land Resources,
Department of Environmental Quality
On behalf of the Sierra Club Capital Group, with over 10,000 members and
supporters in Raleigh and beyond, and the Umstead Coalition, one of the oldest
organizations known to protect and advocate for the welfare of the William B.
Umstead State Park, we have jointly signed the resolution attached to urge the DEQ-
DEMLR to deny the mining permit 92-10, oppose the expansion of a quarry on the
Odd Fellows land tract near Umstead State Park, and restore the original language of
the Sunset Clause.
We have attached a statement of resolution, on the grounds that the property has
unique environmental and social value that would be damaged by the development
and pollution associated with expanding a quarry.
For the reasons listed in the resolution, we request the Division of Energy, Minerals,
and Land Resource, NC Department of Environmental Quality (NC DEQ-DEMLR):
• Deny the proposed Mining Permit for a new mine on the Odd Fellows Site
because "the proposed new quarry operations would have an significant
adverse effect upon the purposes of a publicly owned park, forest, or
recreational area" including William B. Umstead State Park and it's
connected recreational corridors (per G.S. Chapter 74-Article 7, 74-51(d) of
the 1971 Mining Act); and
• Reinstate the 2010 Mining Permit conditions on the existing quarry
operations to restore the committed undisturbed buffers, measured from top
of bank, along Crabtree Creek and William B. Umstead State Park; and
• Reinstate the 50-year sunset clause with "sooner" in the Reclamation
Conditions of the Mining Permit 92-10.
Please accept this joint resolution as part of the public comment, to be taken into
serious consideration by the DEMLR.
We ask that you preserve and protect this unique green space for our residents to
enjoy for generations to come.
Hwa Huang
Group Chair
Capital Group of the NC Sierra Club
Sierra Club Capital Group
Serving 11 Counties spanning North Carolina
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Protect William B. Umstead State Park
Deny Proposed New Quarry Pit,
Restore Undisturbed Buffers and Sunset Clause
February 8, 2021
Mr. Brian Wrenn, Director
Division of Energy, Mineral and Land Resources
N.C. Department of Environmental Quality
1612 Mail Service Center
Raleigh, N.C. 27699-1612
Subject: Joint Resolution from the Sierra Club Capitol Group and The Umstead Coalition — deny
permit and restore undisturbed buffers and sunset clause
Dear Mr. Brian Wrenn,
On behalf of the Sierra Club Capital Group, with over 10,000 members and supporters in
Raleigh and beyond, and the Umstead Coalition, one of the oldest organizations known to
protect and advocate for the welfare of the William B. Umstead State Park, we have jointly
signed the resolution attached to urge the DEQ-DEMLR to deny the mining permit 92-10,
oppose the expansion of a quarry on the Odd Fellows land tract near Umstead State Park, and
restore the original language of the Sunset Clause.
We have attached a statement of resolution, on the grounds that the property has unique
environmental and social value that would be damaged by the development and pollution
associated with expanding a quarry.
For the reasons listed in the resolution, we request the Division of Energy, Minerals, and Land
Resource, NC Department of Environmental Quality (NC DEQ-DEMLR):
• Deny the proposed Mining Permit for a new mine on the Odd Fellows Site because "the
proposed new quarry operations would have an significant adverse effect upon the
purposes of a publicly owned park, forest, or recreational area" including William B.
Umstead State Park and it's connected recreational corridors (per G.S. Chapter 74-
Article 7, 74-51(d) of the 1971 Mining Act); and
• Reinstate the 2010 Mining Permit conditions on the existing quarry operations to restore
the committed undisturbed buffers, measured from top of bank, along Crabtree Creek
and William B. Umstead State Park; and
• Reinstate the 50-year sunset clause with "sooner" in the Reclamation Conditions of the
Mining Permit 92-10.
Please accept this joint resolution as part of the public comment, to be taken into serious
consideration by the DEMLR.
We ask that you preserve and protect this unique green space for our residents to enjoy for
generations to come.
Hwa Huang
Group Chair
Capital Group of the NC Sierra Club
Page 1 of 6 (2/7/2021)
Protect William B. Umstead State Park
Deny Proposed New Quarry Pit, Restore Undisturbed Buffers and Sunset Clause
WHEREAS, On August 22, 1980. DEQ (then NRCD) denied an Application for a new Mining
Permit based upon "the proposed quarry operation would have an adverse effect upon the
purposes of a publically owned park, forest, or recreational area. The combined effects of noise,
sedimentation, dust, traffic and blasting vibration associated with the proposed quarry operation
would produce primary impacts on William B. Umstead State Park in the form of noise intrusion
and deterioration of visual resources."; and
WHEREAS, the industry -friendly Mining Commission overruled DEQ's Decision (January 27
and April 3, 1981) , ordering the permit be issued with protections for William B Umstead State
Park including "Permanent" buffers; and
WHEREAS, between January 27, 1981 and May 13, 1981, DEQ (NC Divisions of Land
Resources and Parks and Recreation) worked hard either increase protections for William B.
Umstead State Park or, if not obtained, planned to appeal the Mining Commission's overruling
of DEQ's decision to the Courts; and
WHEREAS, on May 13, 1981 after State Agencies worked hard to add permanent, undisturbed
buffer and a 50 year Sunset Clause conditions into the Permit, the first Mining Permit 92-10
(Triangle Quarry) was issued by DEQ; and
WHEREAS, the original Mining Permit was accepted without objection by Wake Stone, as were
its Renewals and Modifications issued on May 13, 1981; April 15, 1986; April 1, 1991; February
5, 1992; October 11, 1996; April 20, 2001; November 24, 2010; March 20, 2011 and December
1, 2017 all contained a 50-year Sunset Clause in the "Reclamation Conditions":
"5.B.If all quarryable stone is not removed, the right of the State to acquire the quarry
site shall accrue at the end of 50 years from the date quarrying commences or 10 years
after quarrying operations have ceased without having been resumed, whichever is
sooner, and notices shall be exchanged at that time in the same manner and with the
same time limitations as set forth in paragraph A above."; and
WHEREAS, the 50-year Sunset Clause served as a basis for the State Park planning for future
Park land acquisition for the purposes of conservation and recreation, key missions of the NC
Parks system; and
WHEREAS, 92-10 Mining permits through 2017 have all measured the stream buffer from top
of Crabtree Creek bank with undisturbed, forested buffers; and
WHEREAS, all of the nine Mining Permits issued during the almost 37 years from May 13, 1981
to December 1, 2017 were accepted by the private mining company without objection; and
Page 2 of 6 (2/7/2021)
WHEREAS, the buffers along the western quarry boundary along Crabtree Creek proved
insufficient and in 1992 the quarry operations blasting caused a massive streambank failure and
filled in 90 percent of Crabtree Creek. The streambank remains devoid of sufficient vegetation
through today; and
WHEREAS, on March 28, 2018 a permit Modification was issued to reduce the buffer widths
and expand the quarry area to be disturbed by shifting the protected buffers from top of bank to
center of the stream;
WHEREAS, William B. Umstead State Park visitors routinely observe sediment -laden discharge
from the existing quarry operations into the Park's forest and directly into Crabtree Creek; and
WHEREAS, since 1982, there have been numerous complaints about dust, noise, water quality,
dead trees, truck conflicts from NC Division of Parks and Recreation staff and the public. Many
ignored. The adverse impacts continue.
WHEREAS, from 1982 to the present, the current quarry operation has repeatedly violated the
protective buffers by unauthorized deforestation, massive streambank failure along Crabtree
Creek, diversion of sediment -laden waters into William B. Umstead State Park, changing water
hydrology within William B. Umstead State Park, and killing of Park trees.
WHEREAS, the March 28, 2018 Permit changes made at the request of the private mining
company including removal of the Sunset Clause by changing "sooner" to "later", which
completes the removal or reduction of all the hard won protections that Wake Stone agreed to
with the 1981 and subsequent permits; and
WHEREAS, the March 28, 2018 Permit changes substantially and dramatically reduced the
protective buffer widths by moving the buffers from the top -of -bank to the centerline of Crabtree
Creek. The same Permit Modification removed the protective language within the permit
narrative, instead shifting to the site plan supplied by the private company; and
WHEREAS, the affected State Agency of the NC Division of Parks and Recreation was not
informed or consulted of the requested changes that removed the Park protections of the
Sunset Clause and substantially decreased the protective buffers in the March 28, 2018 Permit
Modifications; and
WHEREAS, the Permit Modifications on March 28, 2018 removed almost all the hard-fought
protections for William B. Umstead State Park; and
WHEREAS, on April 7, 2020, the private mining company submitted a Mining Permit
Modification Application to increase the footprint of the existing quarry site by further reducing
the protective buffers by again decreasing their width and converted the buffers to
"unexcavated" buffers (which allow deforestation, fencing, pit perimeter roads, stockpiling,
crushers, conveyor systems, etc. — everything just short of excavating a mining pit); and
WHEREAS, the proposed Permit Modifications submitted on April 7, 2020 proposes to expand
the current pit perimeter and increase the depth of the current mine an additional 150 feet to a
total depth of-170MSL (170 feet below sea level); and
Page 3 of 6 (2/7/2021)
WHEREAS, on April 7, 2020, the private mining company submitted a Mining Permit
Modification Application to "expand" the quarry operations with a new rock mine on the other
side of Crabtree Creek on a 105 acres tract knows as the Odd Fellows Tract; and
WHEREAS, the proposed Permit Modifications submitted on April 7, 2020 proposes a new
massive 60ft wide (4-lane) bridge over Crabtree Creek just upstream of William B. Umstead
State Park to carry many noisy, dusty trucks from the proposed new pit to the processing area
of the existing quarry operations; and
WHEREAS, the proposed Permit Modifications only includes twenty (25) foot wide undisturbed
buffers along William B. Umstead State Park and the minimal Neuse Buffers along the steep
slopes of Crabtree Creek. The top of pit would be only 100 feet from William B. Umstead State
Park and Crabtree Creek. The pit perimeter road, sediment erosion control, grading would occur
as close as 25 feet of Umstead State Park - the public would not consider such a narrow slice
as any meaningful "buffer"; and
WHEREAS, the Mining Permit Modification Application is incomplete and asks the Agency
reviewers to ignore an adjacent 17.2 acre "Future Reserves" area, which elsewhere is included
in the submitted Reclamation Plan, the private companies web site and marketing information,
and other figures in the Application. Furthermore, the private company includes this area within
the requested permit "expansion" boundary — an obvious attempt to avoid the required agency
review and public comments; and
WHEREAS, the Odd Fellows tract is public property with vested, deeded ownership of the Cities
of Raleigh and Durham and Counties of Wake and Durham, managed by the Raleigh Durham
Airport Authority; and
WHEREAS, the Odd Fellows tract is bounded by William B. Umstead State Park, Crabtree
Creek, the Old Reedy Creek Road Recreational corridor and 1-40; and
WHEREAS, the Old Reedy Creek Road recreational corridor is heavily used by runners,
walkers, bikers, families, and nature lovers; and
WHEREAS, the Old Reedy Creek Road recreational corridor is a portion of Carolina Connection
Bikeway, East Coast Greenway, and extremely popular gateway between Cary's Black Creek
Greenway Trail (which connects to the American Tobacco Trail), Wake County's Lake Crabtree
County Park, and Cary's Black Creek Greenway trail head parking lot connection to William B.
Umstead State Park; and
WHEREAS, all of the drainage area from the Odd Fellows Tract flows into William B. Umstead
State Park directly or via Crabtree Creek; and
WHEREAS, on May 8, 2020, The, NC Department of Natural and Cultural Resources- NC
Division of Parks and Recreation (NCR DPR) submitted a letter to the NC Department of
Environmental Quality -NC Division of Energy, Minerals, and Land Resources (DEQ-DEMLR)
listing significant concerns regarding the proposed Mining Permit Application including: noise,
sedimentation and water quality, dust and air quality, traffic, habitat loss, blasting vibrations, and
loss of park expansion; and
Page 4 of 6 (2/7/2021)
WHEREAS, the Mission and Purpose of the NC Division of Parks and Recreation is
Conservation, Recreation, and Education; and
WHEREAS: the Odd Fellows Track is identified as "critical acres" in the Land Protection Plan of
William B. Umstead State Park; and
WHEREAS, on June and July, 2020 DEQ-DEMLR held two Virtual Public Hearing and received
approximately 2,000 public comments opposing the substantial reductions in Park protection on
the current quarry site and the proposed new quarry site on the other side of Crabtree Creek on
the Odd Fellows Tract; and
WHEREAS, the public comments indicated a massive outcry regarding the damaging issues
with the current quarry operations including: noise, conflict with the 500 plus quarry trucks/day
competing with Park visitors at our Park entrance, dust, air quality issues, water quality issues,
loss of protective buffers, buffer violations and the current flooding of park lands resulting in the
killing of Park trees; and
WHEREAS, a new rock mine pit on the Odd Fellows tract would start a bad precedent in North
Carolina allowing a private rock mine on public property in NC and this one adjacent to William
B. Umstead State Park; and
WHEREAS, a new rock mine pit on the Odd Fellows tract would only leave a narrow width of
the Neuse River buffers along the steep slopes of Crabtree Creek just upstream of William B.
Umstead State Park; and much of those buffers are proposed to be taken up with a fence,
deforestation, bridge, sediment control structures; and
WHEREAS, the proposed narrow riparian buffers on both sides of Crabtree Creek would leave
an artificially narrow "aqueduct" and elevated Crabtree Creek above two quarry pits, each
deeper than 400 feet. In exactly the same area Wake Stone already blew out a much larger
buffer in 1992, destroying all natural vegetation in the buffer and blocking 90% of the stream,
and
WHEREAS, there is no independent engineering analysis ensuring the future integrity of
Crabtree Creek with the proposed deep pits on both sides of Crabtree Creek and minimal
stream buffers; and
WHEREAS, a new rock mine pit on the Odd Fellows tract would sever the last remaining habitat
corridor connecting Jordan Lake to the east through William B. Umstead State Park; and
WHEREAS, a new rock mine pit on the Odd Fellows tract would eliminate a large forested
recharge area for Crabtree Creek and decrease base flow; and
WHEREAS, the Umstead Coalition's mission includes "preserving the natural integrity of William
B. Umstead State Park",- and
WHEREAS, the Sierra Club advocates for environmental protection; and was opposed to the
1980 request, and was assured by the promised protections of the original permit that have now
been violated or removed, and
Page 5 of 6 (2/7/2021)
WHEREAS, The existing Quarry has already had significant adverse effects on William B
Umstead State Park, and the proposed expansion will significantly reduce the protections on
both the existing and expanded pits, it is reasonable to conclude the additional significantly
adverse effects will grow due to the significantly fewer protections,
NOW, THEREFORE BE IT RESOLVED, that The Umstead Coalition and Sierra Club Capital
Group request DEQ-DEMLR DENY the proposed Mining Permit for a new mine on the Odd
Fellows Site because "the proposed new quarry operations would have an significant adverse
effect upon the purposes of a publically owned park, forest, or recreational area" including
William B. Umstead State Park and it's connected recreational corridors (per G.S. Chapter 74-
Article 7, 74-51(d) of the 1971 Mining Act); and
NOW, THEREFORE BE IT RESOLVED, that the The Umstead Coalition and Sierra Club
Capital Group request DEQ-DEMLR reinstate the 2010 Mining Permit conditions on the existing
quarry operations to restore the committed undisturbed buffers, measured from top of bank,
along Crabtree Creek and William B. Umstead State Park; and
NOW, THEREFORE BE IT RESOLVED, that The Umstead Coalition and Sierra Club Capital
Group request that DEQ-DEMLR reinstate the 50-year sunset clause with "sooner" in the
Reclamation Conditions of the Mining Permit 92-10.
Signed: February 7, 2021
Dr. Jean Spooner, Chair
The Umstead Coalition
Signed: February 7, 2021
Hwa Huang, Chair
Capital Group, Sierra Club
02/07i2nai
The Umstead Coalition
Umstead P.O. Box 10664
Raleigh, NC 27606-0654
Coalition (919) 852-2268
Page 6 of 6 (2/7/2021)
Protect William B. Umstead State Park
Deny Proposed New Quarry Pit,
Restore Undisturbed Buffers and Sunset Clause
February 8, 2021
Mr. Brian Wrenn, Director
Division of Energy, Mineral and Land Resources
N.C. Department of Environmental Quality
1612 Mail Service Center
Raleigh, N.C. 27699-1612
Subject: Joint Resolution from the Sierra Club Capitol Group and The Umstead Coalition — deny
permit and restore undisturbed buffers and sunset clause
Dear Mr. Brian Wrenn,
On behalf of the Sierra Club Capital Group, with over 10,000 members and supporters in
Raleigh and beyond, and the Umstead Coalition, one of the oldest organizations known to
protect and advocate for the welfare of the William B. Umstead State Park, we have jointly
signed the resolution attached to urge the DEQ-DEMLR to deny the mining permit 92-10,
oppose the expansion of a quarry on the Odd Fellows land tract near Umstead State Park, and
restore the original language of the Sunset Clause.
We have attached a statement of resolution, on the grounds that the property has unique
environmental and social value that would be damaged by the development and pollution
associated with expanding a quarry.
For the reasons listed in the resolution, we request the Division of Energy, Minerals, and Land
Resource, NC Department of Environmental Quality (NC DEQ-DEMLR):
• Deny the proposed Mining Permit for a new mine on the Odd Fellows Site because "the
proposed new quarry operations would have an significant adverse effect upon the
purposes of a publicly owned park, forest, or recreational area" including William B.
Umstead State Park and it's connected recreational corridors (per G.S. Chapter 74-
Article 7, 74-51(d) of the 1971 Mining Act); and
• Reinstate the 2010 Mining Permit conditions on the existing quarry operations to restore
the committed undisturbed buffers, measured from top of bank, along Crabtree Creek
and William B. Umstead State Park; and
• Reinstate the 50-year sunset clause with "sooner" in the Reclamation Conditions of the
Mining Permit 92-10.
Please accept this joint resolution as part of the public comment, to be taken into serious
consideration by the DEMLR.
We ask that you preserve and protect this unique green space for our residents to enjoy for
generations to come.
Hwa Huang
Group Chair
Capital Group of the NC Sierra Club
Page 1 of 6 (2/7/2021)
Protect William B. Umstead State Park
Deny Proposed New Quarry Pit, Restore Undisturbed Buffers and Sunset Clause
WHEREAS, On August 22, 1980. DEQ (then NRCD) denied an Application for a new Mining
Permit based upon "the proposed quarry operation would have an adverse effect upon the
purposes of a publically owned park, forest, or recreational area. The combined effects of noise,
sedimentation, dust, traffic and blasting vibration associated with the proposed quarry operation
would produce primary impacts on William B. Umstead State Park in the form of noise intrusion
and deterioration of visual resources."; and
WHEREAS, the industry -friendly Mining Commission overruled DEQ's Decision (January 27
and April 3, 1981) , ordering the permit be issued with protections for William B Umstead State
Park including "Permanent" buffers; and
WHEREAS, between January 27, 1981 and May 13, 1981, DEQ (NC Divisions of Land
Resources and Parks and Recreation) worked hard either increase protections for William B.
Umstead State Park or, if not obtained, planned to appeal the Mining Commission's overruling
of DEQ's decision to the Courts; and
WHEREAS, on May 13, 1981 after State Agencies worked hard to add permanent, undisturbed
buffer and a 50 year Sunset Clause conditions into the Permit, the first Mining Permit 92-10
(Triangle Quarry) was issued by DEQ; and
WHEREAS, the original Mining Permit was accepted without objection by Wake Stone, as were
its Renewals and Modifications issued on May 13, 1981; April 15, 1986; April 1, 1991; February
5, 1992; October 11, 1996; April 20, 2001; November 24, 2010; March 20, 2011 and December
1, 2017 all contained a 50-year Sunset Clause in the "Reclamation Conditions":
"5.B.If all quarryable stone is not removed, the right of the State to acquire the quarry
site shall accrue at the end of 50 years from the date quarrying commences or 10 years
after quarrying operations have ceased without having been resumed, whichever is
sooner, and notices shall be exchanged at that time in the same manner and with the
same time limitations as set forth in paragraph A above."; and
WHEREAS, the 50-year Sunset Clause served as a basis for the State Park planning for future
Park land acquisition for the purposes of conservation and recreation, key missions of the NC
Parks system; and
WHEREAS, 92-10 Mining permits through 2017 have all measured the stream buffer from top
of Crabtree Creek bank with undisturbed, forested buffers; and
WHEREAS, all of the nine Mining Permits issued during the almost 37 years from May 13, 1981
to December 1, 2017 were accepted by the private mining company without objection; and
Page 2 of 6 (2/7/2021)
WHEREAS, the buffers along the western quarry boundary along Crabtree Creek proved
insufficient and in 1992 the quarry operations blasting caused a massive streambank failure and
filled in 90 percent of Crabtree Creek. The streambank remains devoid of sufficient vegetation
through today; and
WHEREAS, on March 28, 2018 a permit Modification was issued to reduce the buffer widths
and expand the quarry area to be disturbed by shifting the protected buffers from top of bank to
center of the stream;
WHEREAS, William B. Umstead State Park visitors routinely observe sediment -laden discharge
from the existing quarry operations into the Park's forest and directly into Crabtree Creek; and
WHEREAS, since 1982, there have been numerous complaints about dust, noise, water quality,
dead trees, truck conflicts from NC Division of Parks and Recreation staff and the public. Many
ignored. The adverse impacts continue.
WHEREAS, from 1982 to the present, the current quarry operation has repeatedly violated the
protective buffers by unauthorized deforestation, massive streambank failure along Crabtree
Creek, diversion of sediment -laden waters into William B. Umstead State Park, changing water
hydrology within William B. Umstead State Park, and killing of Park trees.
WHEREAS, the March 28, 2018 Permit changes made at the request of the private mining
company including removal of the Sunset Clause by changing "sooner" to "later", which
completes the removal or reduction of all the hard won protections that Wake Stone agreed to
with the 1981 and subsequent permits; and
WHEREAS, the March 28, 2018 Permit changes substantially and dramatically reduced the
protective buffer widths by moving the buffers from the top -of -bank to the centerline of Crabtree
Creek. The same Permit Modification removed the protective language within the permit
narrative, instead shifting to the site plan supplied by the private company; and
WHEREAS, the affected State Agency of the NC Division of Parks and Recreation was not
informed or consulted of the requested changes that removed the Park protections of the
Sunset Clause and substantially decreased the protective buffers in the March 28, 2018 Permit
Modifications; and
WHEREAS, the Permit Modifications on March 28, 2018 removed almost all the hard-fought
protections for William B. Umstead State Park; and
WHEREAS, on April 7, 2020, the private mining company submitted a Mining Permit
Modification Application to increase the footprint of the existing quarry site by further reducing
the protective buffers by again decreasing their width and converted the buffers to
"unexcavated" buffers (which allow deforestation, fencing, pit perimeter roads, stockpiling,
crushers, conveyor systems, etc. — everything just short of excavating a mining pit); and
WHEREAS, the proposed Permit Modifications submitted on April 7, 2020 proposes to expand
the current pit perimeter and increase the depth of the current mine an additional 150 feet to a
total depth of-170MSL (170 feet below sea level); and
Page 3 of 6 (2/7/2021)
WHEREAS, on April 7, 2020, the private mining company submitted a Mining Permit
Modification Application to "expand" the quarry operations with a new rock mine on the other
side of Crabtree Creek on a 105 acres tract knows as the Odd Fellows Tract; and
WHEREAS, the proposed Permit Modifications submitted on April 7, 2020 proposes a new
massive 60ft wide (4-lane) bridge over Crabtree Creek just upstream of William B. Umstead
State Park to carry many noisy, dusty trucks from the proposed new pit to the processing area
of the existing quarry operations; and
WHEREAS, the proposed Permit Modifications only includes twenty (25) foot wide undisturbed
buffers along William B. Umstead State Park and the minimal Neuse Buffers along the steep
slopes of Crabtree Creek. The top of pit would be only 100 feet from William B. Umstead State
Park and Crabtree Creek. The pit perimeter road, sediment erosion control, grading would occur
as close as 25 feet of Umstead State Park - the public would not consider such a narrow slice
as any meaningful "buffer"; and
WHEREAS, the Mining Permit Modification Application is incomplete and asks the Agency
reviewers to ignore an adjacent 17.2 acre "Future Reserves" area, which elsewhere is included
in the submitted Reclamation Plan, the private companies web site and marketing information,
and other figures in the Application. Furthermore, the private company includes this area within
the requested permit "expansion" boundary — an obvious attempt to avoid the required agency
review and public comments; and
WHEREAS, the Odd Fellows tract is public property with vested, deeded ownership of the Cities
of Raleigh and Durham and Counties of Wake and Durham, managed by the Raleigh Durham
Airport Authority; and
WHEREAS, the Odd Fellows tract is bounded by William B. Umstead State Park, Crabtree
Creek, the Old Reedy Creek Road Recreational corridor and 1-40; and
WHEREAS, the Old Reedy Creek Road recreational corridor is heavily used by runners,
walkers, bikers, families, and nature lovers; and
WHEREAS, the Old Reedy Creek Road recreational corridor is a portion of Carolina Connection
Bikeway, East Coast Greenway, and extremely popular gateway between Cary's Black Creek
Greenway Trail (which connects to the American Tobacco Trail), Wake County's Lake Crabtree
County Park, and Cary's Black Creek Greenway trail head parking lot connection to William B.
Umstead State Park; and
WHEREAS, all of the drainage area from the Odd Fellows Tract flows into William B. Umstead
State Park directly or via Crabtree Creek; and
WHEREAS, on May 8, 2020, The, NC Department of Natural and Cultural Resources- NC
Division of Parks and Recreation (NCR DPR) submitted a letter to the NC Department of
Environmental Quality -NC Division of Energy, Minerals, and Land Resources (DEQ-DEMLR)
listing significant concerns regarding the proposed Mining Permit Application including: noise,
sedimentation and water quality, dust and air quality, traffic, habitat loss, blasting vibrations, and
loss of park expansion; and
Page 4 of 6 (2/7/2021)
WHEREAS, the Mission and Purpose of the NC Division of Parks and Recreation is
Conservation, Recreation, and Education; and
WHEREAS: the Odd Fellows Track is identified as "critical acres" in the Land Protection Plan of
William B. Umstead State Park; and
WHEREAS, on June and July, 2020 DEQ-DEMLR held two Virtual Public Hearing and received
approximately 2,000 public comments opposing the substantial reductions in Park protection on
the current quarry site and the proposed new quarry site on the other side of Crabtree Creek on
the Odd Fellows Tract; and
WHEREAS, the public comments indicated a massive outcry regarding the damaging issues
with the current quarry operations including: noise, conflict with the 500 plus quarry trucks/day
competing with Park visitors at our Park entrance, dust, air quality issues, water quality issues,
loss of protective buffers, buffer violations and the current flooding of park lands resulting in the
killing of Park trees; and
WHEREAS, a new rock mine pit on the Odd Fellows tract would start a bad precedent in North
Carolina allowing a private rock mine on public property in NC and this one adjacent to William
B. Umstead State Park; and
WHEREAS, a new rock mine pit on the Odd Fellows tract would only leave a narrow width of
the Neuse River buffers along the steep slopes of Crabtree Creek just upstream of William B.
Umstead State Park; and much of those buffers are proposed to be taken up with a fence,
deforestation, bridge, sediment control structures; and
WHEREAS, the proposed narrow riparian buffers on both sides of Crabtree Creek would leave
an artificially narrow "aqueduct" and elevated Crabtree Creek above two quarry pits, each
deeper than 400 feet. In exactly the same area Wake Stone already blew out a much larger
buffer in 1992, destroying all natural vegetation in the buffer and blocking 90% of the stream,
and
WHEREAS, there is no independent engineering analysis ensuring the future integrity of
Crabtree Creek with the proposed deep pits on both sides of Crabtree Creek and minimal
stream buffers; and
WHEREAS, a new rock mine pit on the Odd Fellows tract would sever the last remaining habitat
corridor connecting Jordan Lake to the east through William B. Umstead State Park; and
WHEREAS, a new rock mine pit on the Odd Fellows tract would eliminate a large forested
recharge area for Crabtree Creek and decrease base flow; and
WHEREAS, the Umstead Coalition's mission includes "preserving the natural integrity of William
B. Umstead State Park",- and
WHEREAS, the Sierra Club advocates for environmental protection; and was opposed to the
1980 request, and was assured by the promised protections of the original permit that have now
been violated or removed, and
Page 5 of 6 (2/7/2021)
WHEREAS, The existing Quarry has already had significant adverse effects on William B
Umstead State Park, and the proposed expansion will significantly reduce the protections on
both the existing and expanded pits, it is reasonable to conclude the additional significantly
adverse effects will grow due to the significantly fewer protections,
NOW, THEREFORE BE IT RESOLVED, that The Umstead Coalition and Sierra Club Capital
Group request DEQ-DEMLR DENY the proposed Mining Permit for a new mine on the Odd
Fellows Site because "the proposed new quarry operations would have an significant adverse
effect upon the purposes of a publically owned park, forest, or recreational area" including
William B. Umstead State Park and it's connected recreational corridors (per G.S. Chapter 74-
Article 7, 74-51(d) of the 1971 Mining Act); and
NOW, THEREFORE BE IT RESOLVED, that the The Umstead Coalition and Sierra Club
Capital Group request DEQ-DEMLR reinstate the 2010 Mining Permit conditions on the existing
quarry operations to restore the committed undisturbed buffers, measured from top of bank,
along Crabtree Creek and William B. Umstead State Park; and
NOW, THEREFORE BE IT RESOLVED, that The Umstead Coalition and Sierra Club Capital
Group request that DEQ-DEMLR reinstate the 50-year sunset clause with "sooner" in the
Reclamation Conditions of the Mining Permit 92-10.
Signed: February 7, 2021
Dr. Jean Spooner, Chair
The Umstead Coalition
Signed: February 7, 2021
Hwa Huang, Chair
Capital Group, Sierra Club
02/07i2nai
The Umstead Coalition
Umstead P.O. Box 10664
Raleigh, NC 27606-0654
Coalition (919) 852-2268
Page 6 of 6 (2/7/2021)