17.24.325 COAL MINING OPERATIONS ON AREAS OR ADJACENT TO AREAS INCLUDING ALLUVIAL VALLEY FLOORS: SPECIAL APPLICATION REQUIREMENTS
(1) This rule applies to each applicant who conducts or intends to conduct
coal mining and reclamation operations in, adjacent to or under a valley
holding a stream in the arid or semi-arid regions.
(2)(a) Permit
applicants who propose to conduct coal mining and reclamation operations within
a valley holding a stream or in a location where the proposed permit area or
adjacent area includes any stream in the arid or semi-arid region of Montana,
may request the department to make an alluvial valley floor determination with
respect to that valley floor, as an initial step in the permit application
process. The applicant shall
demonstrate, and the department shall determine, based on available data, or
field studies submitted by the applicant, or a combination thereof, the
presence or absence of an alluvial valley floor. Studies must include sufficiently detailed geologic, hydrologic,
land use, soils, and vegetation data and data analyses to demonstrate the
presence or absence of an alluvial valley floor in the area. The department may require additional data
collection and analyses or other supporting documents, maps, and illustrations
in order to make the determination.
Studies performed during the investigation by the applicant or
subsequent studies as required of the applicant by the department, must include
an appropriate combination, adapted to site-specific conditions, of:
(i) mapping of unconsolidated streamlaid
deposits holding streams including, but not limited to, geologic maps of
unconsolidated deposits and streamlaid deposits, maps of streams, delineation
of surface watersheds and directions of shallow ground water flows through and
into the unconsolidated deposits, topography showing local and regional terrace
levels, and topography of terraces, flood plains and channels showing surface
drainage patterns;
(ii) mapping of all lands included in the area
in accordance with (2) of this rule and subject to agricultural activities,
showing the area in which different types of agricultural lands, such as flood
irrigated lands, croplands and undeveloped rangelands exist and accompanied by
measurements of vegetative productivity and type;
(iii) mapping
of all lands that are currently or were historically flood irrigated, showing
the location of each diversion structure, ditch, dam and related reservoir,
irrigated land, and topography of those lands;
(iv) documentation that areas identified in
this subsection are, or are not, subirrigated, based on ground water monitoring
data, representative water quality, soil moisture
measurements, and measurements of rooting depth, soil
mottling, and water requirements of vegetation;
(v) documentation, based on representative
sampling, that areas identified in (2) of this rule are, or are not, flood irrigable,
based on streamflow water quality, water yield, soils measurements, and
topographic characteristics;
(vi) analysis of a series of aerial
photographs, including color infrared imagery flown at a time of year to show
any late summer and fall differences between upland and valley floor vegetative
growth and of a scale adequate for reconnaissance identification of areas that
may be alluvial valley floors.
(b) Based on the investigations conducted under
(a) above, the department shall make a written determination of the extent of
any alluvial valley floors within the study area and whether any stream in the
study area may be excluded from further consideration as lying within an
alluvial valley floor. The department
shall determine that an alluvial valley floor exists if it finds that:
(i) unconsolidated streamlaid deposits
holding streams are present; and
(ii) there is sufficient water to support
agricultural activities as evidenced by:
(A) the existence of current flood
irrigation in the area in question;
(B) the capability of the area to be flood
irrigated, based on typical regional agricultural practices, historical flood
irrigation, stream-flow, water yield, soils, water quality, and topography; or
(C) subirrigation of the lands in question,
derived from the ground water system of the valley floor; and
(iii) the
valley does not meet the definition of upland areas in ARM 17.24.301.
(c) If the department determines in writing that
an alluvial valley does not exist pursuant to (b) above, no further
consideration of this rule is necessary;
(3)(a)(i) Whenever
an alluvial valley floor is identified pursuant to (2)(b) of this rule, and the
proposed coal mining operation may affect this alluvial valley floor or waters
that supply the alluvial valley floor, the applicant may request the
department, as a preliminary step in the permit application process, to
separately determine the applicability of the statutory exclusions set forth in
(ii) below. The department may make
such a determination based on the available data, may require additional data
collection and analyses in order to make the determination, or may require the
applicant to submit a complete permit application and not make the
determination until after the complete application is evaluated.
(ii) An applicant need not submit the
information required in (3)(c)(ii)(B) and (C) below, and the department is not
required to make the findings of (3)(f)(ii)(A) and (B) below when the department determines that 1 of the following circumstances,
heretofore called statutory exclusions, exist:
(A) the premining land type is undeveloped
rangeland that is not significant to farming;
(B) any farming on the alluvial valley floor
that would be affected by the coal mining operation is of such small acreage as
to be of negligible impact on the farm's agricultural production. Negligible impact of the proposed operation
on farming is based on the relative importance of the affected vegetation and
water of the developed grazed or hayed alluvial valley floor area to the farm's
production over the life of the mine; or
(C) the circumstances set forth in ARM 17.24.802(3) exist.
(iii) For
the purposes of this section, a "farm" is 1 or more land units on
which agricultural activities are conducted. Agricultural activities or farming
are generally considered to occur on a combination of land units with acreage
and boundaries in existence prior to August 3, 1977, or, if established after
August 3, 1977, with those boundaries based on enhancement of the farm's
agricultural productivity and not related to coal mining operations.
(b) If the department determines that the
statutory exclusions are not applicable and that any of the required findings
of (3)(f)(ii) below cannot be made, the department may, at the request of the
applicant:
(i) determine that mining is precluded on the
proposed permit area and deny the permit without the applicant filing any
additional information required by this section; or
(ii) prohibit coal mining and reclamation operations
in all or parts of the area to be affected by mining.
(c) (i) If
land within the permit area or adjacent area is identified as an alluvial
valley floor and the proposed coal mining and reclamation operation may affect
an alluvial valley floor or waters supplied to an alluvial valley floor, the
applicant shall submit a complete application for the proposed coal mining and
reclamation operation to be used by the department together with other relevant
information as a basis for approval or denial of the permit. If an exclusion in (3)(a)(ii) above applies,
then the applicant need not submit the information required in (3)(c)(ii)(B) and (C) below.
(ii) The complete application must include
detailed surveys and baseline data required by the department for a
determination of:
(A) the characteristics of the alluvial valley
floor that are necessary to preserve the essential hydrologic functions
throughout the mining and reclamation process;
(B) whether the operation will avoid during mining and reclamation
the interruption, discontinuance, or preclusion of farming on the alluvial
valley floor;
(C) whether the operation will cause material
damage to the quantity or quality of surface or ground waters that supply the
alluvial valley floor;
(D) whether the reclamation plan is in compliance
with requirements of the Act, this chapter, and regulatory program; and
(E) whether the proposed monitoring system will
provide sufficient information to measure compliance with ARM 17.24.801,
17.24.802, and 17.24.804 through 17.24.806, during and after mining and
reclamation operations.
(d) Information required under this section must
include, but not be limited to:
(i) geologic data, including geologic
structure, surficial geologic maps, and geologic cross-sections;
(ii) soils and vegetation data, including a
detailed soil survey and chemical and physical analyses of soils, a vegetation
map and narrative descriptions of quantitative and qualitative surveyors, and
land use data, including an evaluation of crop yields;
(iii) for
surveys and data required under this section (3) for areas designated as
alluvial valley floors because of their flood irrigation characteristics, at a
minimum, surface hydrologic data, including streamflow, runoff, sediment yield,
and water quality analyses describing seasonal variations over at least 1 full
year, field geomorphic surveys and other geomorphic studies;
(iv) for surveys and data required under this
section (3) for areas designated as alluvial valley floors because of their
subirrigation characteristics, at a minimum, geohydrologic data including
observation well establishment for purposes of water level measurements, ground
water contour maps, testing to determine aquifer characteristics that affect
waters supplying the alluvial valley floors, well and spring inventories, and
water quality analyses describing seasonal variations over at least 1 full
year, and physical and chemical analysis of overburden to determine the effect
of the proposed mining operations on water quality and quantity;
(v) plans showing how the operation will
avoid, during mining and reclamation, interruption, discontinuance or
preclusion of farming on the alluvial valley floors unless the premining land
type has been undeveloped rangeland which is not significant to farming and
will not materially damage the quantity or quality of water in surface and
ground water systems that supply alluvial valley floors;
(vi) maps showing farms and ranches that could
be affected by the mining and, if any farm or ranch includes an alluvial
valley floor, statements of the type and quantity of
agricultural activity performed on the alluvial valley floor and its
relationship to the farm or ranch's total agricultural activity including an
economic analysis; and
(vii) such
other data as the department may require.
(e) The surveys required by this section (3) must
identify those geologic, hydrologic, and biologic characteristics of the
alluvial valley floor necessary to support the essential hydrologic functions
of an alluvial valley floor.
Characteristics that support the essential hydrologic functions and that
must be evaluated in a complete application include, but are not limited to:
(i) characteristics supporting the function
of collecting water which include, but are not limited to:
(A) the amount and rate of runoff and a
water balance analysis, with respect to rainfall, evapotranspiration,
infiltration and ground water recharge;
(B) the relief, slope, and density of the
network of drainage channels;
(C) the infiltration, permeability, porosity
and transmissivity of unconsolidated deposits of the valley floor that either
constitute the aquifer that is hydraulically connected to the stream or the
unsaturated valley fill below the stream and above the alluvial aquifer; and
(D) other factors that affect the
interchange of water between surface streams and ground water systems,
including the depth to ground water, the direction of ground water flow, the
extent to which the stream and associated alluvial ground water aquifers
provide recharge to, or are recharged by bedrock aquifers;
(ii) characteristics supporting the function
of storing water which include, but are not limited to:
(A) slope, and vegetation of the channel,
flood plain, and low terraces that retard the flow of surface waters;
(B) porosity, permeability, waterholding
capacity, saturated thickness and volume of aquifers associated with streams,
including alluvial aquifers, perched aquifers, and other water bearing zones
found beneath the valley floor; and
(C) moisture held in soils or the plant
growth medium within the alluvial valley floor, and the physical and chemical
properties of the subsoil that provide for sustained vegetation growth or cover
during extended periods of low precipitation;
(iii) characteristics
supporting the function of regulating the flow of water which include, but are
not limited to:
(A) the geometry and physical character of
the valley, expressed in terms of the longitudinal profile and slope of the
valley and the channel, the sinuosity of the channel, the cross-section, slopes
and proportions of the channels, flood plains and low terraces, the nature and
stability of the streambanks
and the
vegetation established in the channels and along the streambanks and flood
plains;
(B) the nature of surface flows as shown by
the frequency and duration of flows of representative magnitude including low
flows and floods; and
(C) the nature of interchange of water
between streams, their associated alluvial aquifers and any bedrock aquifers as
shown by the rate and amount of water supplied by the stream to associated
alluvial and bedrock aquifers (i.e., recharge) and by the rates and amounts of
water supplied by aquifers to the stream (i.e., baseflow) ;
(iv) characteristics which make water
available and which include, but are not limited to the presence of land forms
including flood plains and terraces suitable for agricultural activities.
(f) (i) The
findings of (ii)(A) and (B) below are not required with regard to alluvial
valley floors which meet any of the exclusions of (3)(a)(ii) of this rule.
(ii) No
permit or permit revision application for coal mining and reclamation
operations may be approved by the department unless the application
demonstrates in compliance with ARM 17.24.801, 17.24.802, and 17.24.804 through
17.24.806, and all other applicable requirements of the Act and rules and the
department finds, in writing, on the basis of information set forth in the
application, that:
(A) the proposed operations will not interrupt,
discontinue, or preclude farming on an alluvial valley floor;
(B) the proposed operations will not materially
damage the quantity or quality of water in surface and underground water
systems that supply alluvial valley floors.
History: 82-4-205, MCA; IMP, 82-4-222, MCA; NEW, 1980 MAR p. 725, Eff. 4/1/80; AMD, 1989 MAR p. 30, Eff. 1/13/89; AMD, 1990 MAR p. 936, Eff. 5/18/90; TRANS, from DSL, 1996 MAR p. 3042; AMD, 2024 MAR p. 255, Eff. 2/10/24.