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Gold/Mining/Energy : Medinah Mining Inc. (MDHM) -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: bully who wrote (19352)10/6/1999 1:12:00 AM
From: J. Nelson  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 25548
 
No more Mr. Uck!!! The good old Environmental Protection Agency on Toxics...

Washington, D.C. (June 28, 1999) — By July 1, 1999, mining facilities in
the
United States will provide to the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA),
and to
state and local agencies, data gathered through the Toxics Release
Inventory
(TRI) program of the Emergency Planning and Community Right-to-Know
Act
(Act). TRI is an annual report by private companies and government
facilities that
covers nearly 650 chemicals and substances listed by the EPA. This is
the first
year mining companies have been included in the reporting program,
which has
applied to other industries since 1986.

Individual facilities must report the amount of any release (above an
established
threshold level) of these substances to the air, to water or to the land as
defined
uniquely under the Act.

The reports for metals mines, including gold mines, will be unlike reports
filed by
other industries for three very important reasons:

Under provisions of the Community Right-to-Know Act, approximately 85
to 99 percent of what mining operations will include in their reports are
large volumes of naturally occurring metals that remain in unneeded rock
and processed rock materials that are moved, stored, processed and
managed at the mine site;
This material is safely contained in managed facilities at the site, e.g. rock

stockpiles, heap leach pads and tailing impoundments; and
Because these management activities are defined as “releases” and
metals
mines must move, store, process and manage substantial quantities of
rock,
the reports for gold mines will show very high quantities of naturally
occurring listed substances that remain in low concentrations in the
material
managed by the company. The mining process does not increase the
level
of naturally occurring listed substances in the rock around the mine. The
volumes reported under TRI may make some gold mines among the
highest
reporting facilities in the states where they operate, due to the way that
reporting requirements specifically apply to gold mining.

Gold mines will also report releases of cyanide from open tanks, heap
leach areas
and the surface of processed rock waste (tailing) impoundment facilities.
In
general, these releases are confined to the workplace environment, where

employees and facilities are monitored to ensure safe operations.
Cyanide is the
chemical of choice for the recovery of gold from ores. It has been used in
metal
extraction since 1887, and is safely used and managed in gold recovery
around
the world.

The gold industry supports the public's right-to-know information
contained in its
reports. Since its passage in 1986, the public has demonstrated that it
values the
information provided under the Community Right-to-Know Act, and gold
mining
companies will ensure that the public receives timely and comprehensive
information regarding their reports, including information on how they
safely and
effectively manage the reported materials.

The U.S. gold industry continually strives to operate in an environmentally
responsible manner - protecting wildlife, reclaiming land and exploring
new
technologies to make operations safer. Its voluntary actions coupled with
government requirements ensure environmentally responsible practices
which are
the highest in the global mining industry.

Gold is an important commodity for the United States. The United States
is the
2nd largest miner of gold in the world, producing nearly 12 million ounces
of gold
in 1998, or 14 percent of the world's total gold output. Today, the U.S. can
meet
all of its domestic gold needs while making over a third of U.S. production
available for export to our trading partners.

Gold plays a key role in a wide range of rapidly developing technologies
that are
important to the nation's economic health. Billions of gold-coated electrical

connectors are used throughout the computer, telecommunications and
home
appliance industries. Weather and communications satellites depend on
gold-plated shields and reflective apparatus for protection from solar heat
and
electrical interference while in space. Advanced lasers used in a variety of

industrial and medical applications employ interior gold coatings to
concentrate
powerful light energy. The automobile industry depends on gold coated
contacts
for sensors that activate automobile air bag systems. And modern
medicine relies
on gold in a wide variety of procedures ranging from the monitoring of
heart
functions to the chemistry related to diagnosis and treatment of cancer,
viral and
bacterial diseases and allergies.

For more information about the mining industry's Community
Right-to-Know
reports, visit the National Mining Association's website at www.nma.org.
For
information about a particular company's facility reports, please contact
the
company directly.

For Further Information Contact:

Mike DiRienzo
The Gold Institute
1112 16th Street, N.W., Suite 240
Wash