DNR Works To Wrap Up Scrapped GTAC Mine Project

State Has Sent Mining Company Final Bill For Review Costs

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A capped exploratory drill site at the proposed iron ore mine site
A capped exploratory drill site at the proposed iron ore mine site in northern Wisconsin.  Tegan Wendland / WisconsinWatch.org

The state has sent the final bill to a mining company for the cost of reviewing plans to construct a $1.5 billion iron mine in northwestern Wisconsin.

The final tally came in at $356,538. Ann Coakley, waste and materials management program director for the Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources, said that mining outfit Gogebic Taconite has already paid $350,000. Coakley said the next step is to close out stormwater permits and boreholes.

“If they are going to turn over the boreholes to the landowner, then the landowner will have to get a bond for those boreholes,” said Coakley.

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GTAC President Bill Williams said the landowner does plan to maintain them.

“What it does is it gives him a leverage in selling his mineral rights to someone else or renting them to somebody else, because they’ve already got holes that can do the hydrology work right on site,” Williams said.

RGGS Land and Minerals and La Pointe Iron Company own most of the mineral rights there. An RGGS spokesman declined to comment, and a representative with La Pointe Iron could not be immediately reached.

If the landowner plans to maintain the bore holes, Coakley said they would have to inform the DNR how they intend to use them. If the boreholes are abandoned, the landowner would have to do that work this summer and next winter.

Williams said GTAC’s parent company, the Cline Group, recently sold coal interests in Illinois to another company and purchased the Donkin coal mine in Canada.

“We were their attempt at capitalizing on their mining expertise, but their mining expertise was primarily coal,” Williams said. “This was their first shot outside the box, and it didn’t go favorably.”

GTAC announced it was closing its Hurley office in late February and withdrew its pre-application notice from the state in March.

Coakley said bulk sampling sites and one access road have been stabilized. She said DNR staff will make a site visit this month before moving to close out the permits.

“The stormwater staff has to do a detailed review to make sure that there’s no work remaining and that they can give them a notice of completion,” she said.