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F I S C A L I M P A C T R E P O R T
SPONSOR Martinez
ORIGINAL DATE
LAST UPDATED
1/23/08
HB
SHORT TITLE Uranium Legacy Cleanup Act
SB 273
ANALYST Wilson
REVENUE (dollars in thousands)
Estimated Revenue
Recurring
or Non-Rec
Fund
Affected
FY08
FY09
FY10
Unknown
Unknown Recurring
Uranium
Legacy Cleanup
Fund
(Parenthesis ( ) Indicate Revenue Decreases)
ESTIMATED ADDITIONAL OPERATING BUDGET IMPACT (dollars in thousands)
FY08 FY09 Recurring or
Non-Rec
Fund Affected
ED $125.0* $125.0*
Recurring
Uranium Legacy Cleanup Fund
EMNRD $125.0* $125.0*
Recurring
Uranium Legacy Cleanup Fund
(Parenthesis ( ) Indicate Expenditure Decreases)
*one FTE with benefits, estimate
SOURCES OF INFORMATION
LFC Files
Responses Received From
Energy Minerals and Natural Resources Department (EMNRD)
Environment Department (ED)
Department of Health (DOH)
SUMMARY
Synopsis of Bill
Senate Bill 273 creates a new Uranium Legacy Act, an associated Uranium Legacy Cleanup
Board and a Uranium Legacy Cleanup Fund, all for the purpose of providing funding to clean up
sites contaminated by past historical uranium mining and milling activities.
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Senate Bill 273– Page
2
The new Uranium Legacy Cleanup Board will be administratively attached to EMNRD, which
will provide staff for the Uranium Legacy Cleanup Board. The Uranium Legacy Cleanup Board
will be comprised of seven voting and five nonvoting members. The seven voting members
include three ex-officio members, who are the secretaries or their designees, of the EMNRD,
DOH and ED and four other voting members comprised of a member of the Pueblo of Acoma or
Pueblo of Laguna, a member of the Navajo Nation, a resident of New Mexico with education and
experience in the primary health care or public health, and a resident of New Mexico with
education and experience in uranium mining and milling activities. The five nonvoting members
will be comprised of representatives of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) Region
6, EPA Region 9, Albuquerque Indian Health Service, Navajo Indian Health Service, and the
Navajo Nation Environmental Protection Agency.
The Uranium Legacy Cleanup Board will meet at least twice a year and will be tasked with
adopting rules governing the terms, conditions and priorities for funding uranium mining and
milling cleanup activities that occurred prior to July 1, 2008; providing financial assistance from
the Uranium Legacy Cleanup Fund to applicants for uranium cleanup projects on terms and
conditions established by the board; and authorizing funding for planning, designing,
constructing, inspecting and operating uranium site cleanups, as well as completing
environmental assessments, archaeological clearances, land acquisitions, and payment of legal
costs. Financial assistance provided will have the principal objective of eliminating or reducing
threats to public health through exposure to contamination. That funding could be provided to
state, federal and tribal governments, as well as, other public and private entities.
FISCAL IMPLICATIONS
The cleanup of legacy sites will be paid for by the imposition of a new uranium legacy cleanup
surtax on the production of future uranium resources at an amount equal to either a rate of two
percent on the taxable value of uranium severed or processed, or one dollar per pound of the
content of U308 contained in the severed and saved or processed uranium, whichever is greater.
The surtaxes received from this legislation will be placed in a non reverting Uranium Legacy
Cleanup Fund to be administered by EMNRD under procedures and rules established by
EMNRD for qualified projects approved by the board.
Under the Water Quality Act and WQCC regulations, ED is one of the regulatory agencies
responsible for assessing and overseeing the cleanup of all sites in New Mexico potentially
contaminated by uranium mining. SB 273 will require that ED review all abandoned uranium
site cleanup plans and work products for approval and consistency with existing applicable
statutes, rules, and regulations for cleanup of uranium contamination, and to ensure protection of
public health, water quality, and the environment. The task will require significant funding and
staff resources. At least one additional full time employee will be needed to manage this effort.
The appropriations of funds that will allow ED to implement the tasks required related to SB 273
are not included. Those tasks will be new duties for ED, which does not have existing resources
to accomplish those requirements unless additional funding is provided.
EMNRD has identified approximately 260 mines where uranium production occurred. Of these
mines, slightly less than half have been, or are being, reclaimed under state or federal regulatory
controls. In addition, EMNRD estimates there are another 400 to 500 sites with uranium mining
activity with no record of production. Most of the mines occurred in the area of the Grants
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Senate Bill 273– Page
3
uranium belt north of I-40, between Gallup and Grants. EMNRD estimates that there are
approximately 400 abandoned uranium mines that may have varying degrees of contamination.
EMNRD has just begun to conduct fieldwork to assess the amount of work necessary to reclaim
these sites.
The amount of funds generated by the proposed surtax is unknown. Currently, no new mine has
applied for a permit from EMNRD. However, with the significant increase in uranium prices
over the past four years, there have been a number of mining companies obtaining mineral rights,
leases or claims and conducting exploration for uranium in New Mexico. During the past
uranium boom, over 330 million pounds of uranium were produced in New Mexico with a peak
of 17 million pounds in one year. Uranium prices have ranged from $10 to $138 a pound over
the past five years with a current spot price of $90 a pound.
It is unknown when the first surtax will be paid, but it is likely to be at least 4 years from now.
Industry officials estimate that the need to obtain financing and permits and construct a new mill
and a mine could take at least 4 years.
This bill creates a new fund and provides for continuing appropriations. The LFC has concerns
with including continuing appropriation language in the statutory provisions for newly created
funds, as earmarking reduces the ability of the legislature to establish spending priorities.
SIGNIFICANT ISSUES
Uranium mining and processing was extensive in New Mexico from the 1950s to the 1970s.
Those operations were conducted primarily prior to the enactment of state and federal
regulations that protect human health and the environment. Therefore, many of those operations
resulted in significant environmental impacts, including water pollution.
Current state water quality regulations are designed to prevent future water pollution at any new
uranium mining and processing facilities that fall under the state’s jurisdiction. Since 1978,
pursuant to the Water Quality Act, operators have been required to obtain groundwater discharge
permits under New Mexico Water Quality Control Commission (WQCC) Regulations to prevent
groundwater contamination. Requirements for financial assurance are also in place to ensure
mine sites are adequately closed following the cessation of operations and to abate any soil,
groundwater, or surface water contamination that may occur. ED recently evaluated the
adequacy of the uranium standard for groundwater to protect public health. ED hired a
toxicologist in 1999 to study the effects of uranium in groundwater on public health. As a result
of that assessment, the standard for uranium changed from 5.0 mg/l to 0.03 mg/l and the state
now has a much higher level of groundwater and public health protection from uranium sites.
Since the late 1970s, a number of large sites with water pollution and human health impacts have
been cleaned up or are currently being remediated under WQCC regulations or federal
regulations such as the Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation and Liability
Act (CERCLA). However, there are abandoned uranium mines or so-called uranium legacy
mines without viable responsible parties in the northwestern portion of the state that could pose a
variety of health concerns including threats to public health from public exposure to windblown
uranium soils onto neighboring residential properties, and threats to ground water quality from
leaching of uranium contaminated soils into underlying underground sources of drinking water.
Abandoned uranium mines have caused soil and groundwater contamination at a number of sites
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Senate Bill 273– Page
4
in New Mexico. Funding the cleanup of those sites will help eliminate impacts to public health
from past uranium mining and milling activities, enhance overall environmental conditions in
those areas and protect water quality and prevent future threats to public health. However, the
Legislature should be aware that in 2005 the Navajo Nation banned uranium mining on Tribal
lands.
ADMINISTRATIVE IMPLICATIONS
SB 273 states that staff for the board shall be provided by the Mining and Minerals Division
(MMD). This bill will create a significant extra burden on staff in the especially in the
beginning stages of implementation of this act. EMNRD is also required to administer the fund,
establish procedures and to hold and disburse funds. The bill does not allow the fund to be used
for administrative costs.
ED also notes that there is no funding mechanism is included in SB 273 to pay for the addition of
staff and other costs necessary to implement tasks that will be required of ED. At least one
additional full time employee will be needed to manage that effort to ensure cleanups are
conducted in accordance with applicable statutes, rules and regulations to protect public health,
water quality, and the environment.
TECHNICAL ISSUES
ED provided the following:
In Section 2.D. on page 2, the definition of “qualified project" should be expanded to
clarify that the project is to be cleaned up in accordance with applicable state or federal
standards and in accordance with a cleanup work plan approved by the appropriate
regulatory agency responsible for environmental oversight. Those cleanups should be
done in a manner that protects public health, surface use, and groundwater and surface
water resources, etc. An agency with the technical expertise and regulatory authority to
approve work plans and actual cleanup actions should oversee that work. The ED is the
state regulatory authority responsible for those actions related to cleanups at uranium
sites pursuant to the Water Quality Act and WQCC regulations. ED is also responsible
for technical oversight of federal uranium cleanups. ED must ensure state requirements
are met at uranium cleanup sites under federal regulations such as the Comprehensive
Environmental Response, Compensation and Liability Act (CERCLA), and the Nuclear
Regulatory Commission.
SB 273 should exempt viable responsible parties from defining projects that should
receive funding for cleanup. Some former uranium mining sites may be found to have
viable responsible parties that are subject to state or federal laws and/or regulations for
cleanup actions. SB 273 should not allow viable responsible parties to receive a financial
bail out for cleaning up a contaminated site. Parties responsible for those sites should be
required to clean them up at their own cost.
EMNRD provided the following:
SB 273 has a broad, and somewhat vague, definition of how the funds can be expended.
Qualified project is defined in Section 2 to mean a project selected by the Board and,
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Senate Bill 273– Page
5
under Section 7, must have a principal objective of eliminating or reducing actual or
potential exposure of persons to contamination that may have resulted from uranium
mining or milling. Nothing in the Act limits the funding to traditional mine reclamation
projects. The Board could authorize community health projects, residential relocation
projects, etc.
Qualified projects are not limited to the reclamation of abandoned uranium mines, and
therefore funds could be used on mine sites where either a private party or the
government is already obligated to conduct the cleanup.
SB 273 creates several levels of bureaucracy which may slow the process of funding
projects. EMNRD is designated as the administrator of the fund and money is
appropriated to EMNRD which disburses funds. The Board must authorize all funding
for qualified projects. However, an interim legislative committee must also be briefed on
all proposals and provide review and advice on funding. Other existing laws on
abandoned mine funding provide for the funds to be appropriated to EMNRD which
makes the decisions on funding. See NMSA 1978, Sections 69-36-19.B and 69-25B-4.
The role of interim committees in the rulemaking and project funding process raises
several issues. Interim committees “shall review" both proposed rules and proposed
grants and loans. Since interim committees generally only meet during the summer and
fall, rulemaking or financial assistance may be delayed for significant if it doesn’t
coincide with the interim committee’s schedule. Also, if an interim committee fails to
review or rejects submitted proposals, the Board may be unable to act and there may be a
Constitutional separation of powers issue. One alternative will be to give the interim
committee a timeframe (e.g., 30 or 60 days) in which to submit comments. If no
comments are submitted, then the board may proceed.
POSSIBLE QUESTIONS
A number of the abandoned uranium sites are on Indian lands in the checkerboard area in
McKinley and Cibola Counties. Can state funds be used for projects on Indian lands that are not
subject to state regulatory authority for approval of cleanup actions.
The bill mandates that two EPA Regions participate on the Uranium Legacy Cleanup. Can state
legislation mandate participation on the board by a federal agency.
DW/nt