HomeMy WebLinkAbout20080868 Ver 2_PCS Phosphate drama continues_20090408PCS Phosphate drama continues
Subject: PCS Phosphate drama continues
From: Susan Massengale <Susan. Massengale@ncmail. net>
Date: Wed, 08 Apr 2009 10:36:35 -0400
To: DWQ Clips <DENR.DWQ.Clips@lists.ncmail.net>
*PCS Phosphate drama continues*
And so the drama continues.
The decision by the Environmental Protection Agency on Monday to require additional
review of a PCS Phosphate permit once again delays the company's long-term planning.
The Aurora facility needs a permit to expand its mining for high-grade phosphate
ore from areas that include thousands of acres of wetlands. The permitting process
has taken more than eight years, during which time the company has slowly used up
what area it has for mining.
Considering PCS Phosphate's significance as Beaufort County's largest employer, the
continuing controversy has stoked anger and fear among some county residents who
resent what they see as unfair treatment to the company.
It certainly didn't help soothe the tension when a consortium of environmental
groups recently appealed a key state permit, saying the company's insatiable
appetite would cause the largest permitted destruction of wetlands ever in North
Carolina.
The groups contend the company isn't being selective enough in where it mines, thus
tearing up wetlands it could afford to avoid.
The accusations have flown back and forth particularly in the past few months, and
the matter has ended up in the hands of the assistant secretary of the Army at the
Army Corps of Engineers' Washington, D.C., office.
Though the matter is exceedingly complex, in most people's minds, it seems, there's
a clear choice: jobs or the environment.
PCS Phosphate points to its need to mine land that affords it a legitimate chance to
make a living. It also touts its well-documented wetlands-restoration efforts that
have helped mitigate environmental damage while allowing the company to continue
digging.
Environmentalists charge that no amount of mitigation following wetlands'
destruction will ever fully restore the land to its original health.
The truth, as in most cases, is probably somewhere in the middle.
PCS Phosphate needs a fair and unbiased chance to stay in business, but it must do
its best to protect the area's treasured wetlands. That may mean tightening its belt
as have so many other businesses in this country.
We hope, though, that a compromise can be fashioned that will keep people employed
and diminish potential environmental damage.
E-mail correspondence to and from this address may be subject to the North Carolina
Public Records Law and may be disclosed to third parties.
1 of 2 4/9/2009 8:44 AM
PCS Phosphate drama continues
DENR.DWQ.CLIPS mailing list
DENR.DWQ.CLIPS@lists.ncmail.net
Part 1.3 Content-Type: text/plain
Content-Encoding: 7bit
2 of 2 4/9/2009 8:44 AM