Or. Admin. R. 660-023-0180 - Mineral and Aggregate Resources
(1) For purposes of this rule, the following
definitions apply:
(a) "Aggregate resources"
are naturally occurring concentrations of stone, rock, sand gravel, decomposed
granite, limestone, pumice, cinders, and other naturally occurring solid
materials commonly used in road building or other construction.
(b) "Conflicting use" is a use or activity
that is subject to land use regulations and that would interfere with, or be
adversely affected by, mining or processing activities at a significant mineral
or aggregate resource site (as specified in subsection (5)(b) and section (7)
of this rule).
(c) "Existing site"
is an aggregate site that meets the requirements of subsection (3)(a) of this
rule and was lawfully operating, or was included on an inventory of significant
aggregate sites in an acknowledged plan, on September 1, 1996.
(d) "Expansion area" is an aggregate mining
area contiguous to an existing site.
(e) "Farmland" means land planned and zoned
for exclusive farm use pursuant to Goal 3 and OAR chapter 660, division
033.
(f) "Mineral resources" are
those materials and substances described in ORS
517.750(7)
but excluding materials and substances described as "aggregate resources" under
subsection (a) of this section.
(g)
"Minimize a conflict" means to reduce an identified conflict to a level that is
no longer significant. For those types of conflicts addressed by local, state,
or federal standards (such as the Department of Environmental Quality standards
for noise and dust levels), to "minimize a conflict" means to ensure
conformance to the applicable standard.
(h) "Mining" is the extraction and processing
of mineral or aggregate resources, as defined in ORS
215.298(1)(b)
for farmland, and in ORS
517.750
for land other than farmland.
(i)
"Mining area" is the area of a site within which mining is permitted or
proposed, excluding undisturbed buffer areas or areas on a parcel where mining
is not authorized.
(j) "Processing"
means the activities described in ORS
517.750(10).
(k) "Protect" means to adopt land use
regulations for a significant mineral or aggregate site in order to authorize
mining of the site. For purposes of subsection (2)(d) of this rule, "protect"
also means to limit or prohibit new conflicting uses within the impact area of
the site.
(l) "Thickness of the
aggregate layer" means the depth of the water-lain deposit of sand, stones, and
pebbles of sand-sized fraction or larger, minus the depth of the topsoil and
nonaggregate overburden.
(m)
"Willamette Valley" means Clackamas, Columbia, Linn, Marion, Multnomah, Polk,
Washington, and Yamhill counties and the portions of Lane and Benton Counties
east of the summit of the Coast Range.
(2) Local governments are not required to
amend acknowledged inventories or plans with regard to mineral and aggregate
resources except in response to an application for a post acknowledgement plan
amendment (PAPA) or at periodic review as specified in section (9) of this
rule. The requirements of this rule modify, supplement, or supersede the
requirements of the standard Goal 5 process in OAR 660-023-0030 through
660-023-0050, as follows:
(a) A local
government may inventory mineral and aggregate resources throughout its
jurisdiction, or in a portion of its jurisdiction. When a local government
conducts an inventory of mineral and aggregate sites in all or a portion of its
jurisdiction, it shall follow the requirements of OAR 660-023-0030 except as
modified by subsection (b) of this section with respect to aggregate sites.
When a local government is following the inventory process for a mineral or
aggregate resource site under a PAPA, it shall follow the applicable
requirements of OAR 660-023-0030, except where those requirements are expanded
or superceded for aggregate resources as provided in subsections (b) through
(d) of this section and sections (3), (4) and (8) of this rule;
(b) Local governments shall apply the
criteria in section (3) or (4) of this rule, whichever is applicable, rather
than OAR 660-023-0030(4), in determining whether an aggregate resource site is
significant;
(c) Local governments
shall follow the requirements of section (5) or (6) of this rule, whichever is
applicable, in deciding whether to authorize the mining of a significant
aggregate resource site, and OAR 660-023-0040 through 660-023-0050 in deciding
whether to authorize mining of a significant mineral resource; and
(d) For significant mineral and aggregate
sites where mining is allowed, except for aggregate sites that have been
determined to be significant under section (4) of this rule, local governments
shall decide on a program to protect the site from new off-site conflicting
uses by following the standard ESEE process in OAR 660-023-0040 and
660-023-0050 with regard to such uses.
(3) An aggregate resource site shall be
considered significant if adequate information regarding the quantity, quality,
and location of the resource demonstrates that the site meets any one of the
criteria in subsections (a) through (c) of this section, except as provided in
subsection (d) of this section:
(a) A
representative set of samples of aggregate material in the deposit on the site
meets applicable Oregon Department of Transportation (ODOT) specifications for
base rock for air degradation, abrasion, and soundness, and the estimated
amount of material is more than 2,000,000 tons in the Willamette Valley, or
more than 500,000 tons outside the Willamette Valley;
(b) The material meets local government
standards establishing a lower threshold for significance than subsection (a)
of this section; or
(c) The
aggregate site was on an inventory of significant aggregate sites in an
acknowledged plan on September 1, 1996.
(d) Notwithstanding subsections (a) and (b)
of this section, except for an expansion area of an existing site if the
operator of the existing site on March 1, 1996, had an enforceable property
interest in the expansion area on that date, an aggregate site is not
significant if the criteria in either paragraphs (A) or (B) of this subsection
apply:
(A) More than 35 percent of the
proposed mining area consists of soil classified as Class I on Natural Resource
and Conservation Service (NRCS) maps on June 11, 2004; or
(B) More than 35 percent of the proposed
mining area consists of soil classified as Class II, or of a combination of
Class II and Class I or Unique soil, on NRCS maps available on June 11, 2004,
unless the average thickness of the aggregate layer within the mining area
exceeds:
(i) 60 feet in Washington, Multnomah,
Marion, Columbia, and Lane counties;
(ii) 25 feet in Polk, Yamhill, and Clackamas
counties; or
(iii) 17 feet in Linn
and Benton counties.
(4) Notwithstanding section (3) of this rule,
a local government may also determine that an aggregate resource site on
farmland is significant if subsections (a) and (b) of this section apply or if
subsection (c) of this section applies:
(a)
The quantity of material proposed to be mined from the site is estimated to be
2,000,000 tons of aggregate material or less for a site in the Willamette
Valley, or 500,000 tons or less for a site outside the Willamette Valley;
and
(b) Not more than 35 percent of
the proposed mining area consists of soil:
(A)
Classified as Class I on Natural Resource and Conservation Service (NRCS) maps
available on June 11, 2004; or
(B)
Classified as Class II, or of a combination of Class II and Class I or Unique
soil, on NRCS maps on June 11, 2004, unless the average thickness of the
aggregate layer within the mining area exceeds the amounts specified in
paragraph (B) of subsection (3)(d) of this rule.
(c) A local land use permit that allows
mining on the site was issued prior to April 3, 2003, and the permit is in
effect at the time of the significance determination.
(5) For significant mineral and aggregate
sites, local governments shall decide whether mining is permitted. For a PAPA
application involving an aggregate site determined to be significant under
section (3) of this rule, the process for this decision is set out in
subsections (a) through (g) of this section. A local government must complete
the process within 180 days after receipt of a complete application that is
consistent with section (8) of this rule, or by the earliest date after 180
days allowed by local charter.
(a) The local
government shall determine an impact area for the purpose of identifying
conflicts with proposed mining and processing activities. The impact area shall
be large enough to include uses listed in subsection (b) of this section and
shall be limited to 1,500 feet from the boundaries of the mining area, except
where factual information indicates significant potential conflicts beyond this
distance. For a proposed expansion of an existing aggregate site, the impact
area shall be measured from the perimeter of the proposed expansion area rather
than the boundaries of the existing aggregate site and shall not include the
existing aggregate site.
(b) The
local government shall determine existing or approved land uses within the
impact area that will be adversely affected by proposed mining operations and
shall specify the predicted conflicts. For purposes of this section, "approved
land uses" are dwellings allowed by a residential zone on existing platted lots
and other uses for which conditional or final approvals have been granted by
the local government. For determination of conflicts from proposed mining of a
significant aggregate site, the local government shall limit its consideration
to the following:
(A) Conflicts due to noise,
dust, or other discharges with regard to those existing and approved uses and
associated activities (e.g., houses and schools) that are sensitive to such
discharges;
(B) Potential conflicts
to local roads used for access and egress to the mining site within one mile of
the entrance to the mining site unless a greater distance is necessary in order
to include the intersection with the nearest arterial identified in the local
transportation plan. Conflicts shall be determined based on clear and objective
standards regarding sight distances, road capacity, cross section elements,
horizontal and vertical alignment, and similar items in the transportation plan
and implementing ordinances. Such standards for trucks associated with the
mining operation shall be equivalent to standards for other trucks of
equivalent size, weight, and capacity that haul other materials;
(C) Safety conflicts with existing public
airports due to bird attractants, i.e., open water impoundments as specified
under OAR chapter 660, division 013;
(D) Conflicts with other Goal 5 resource
sites within the impact area that are shown on an acknowledged list of
significant resources and for which the requirements of Goal 5 have been
completed at the time the PAPA is initiated;
(E) Conflicts with agricultural practices;
and
(F) Other conflicts for which
consideration is necessary in order to carry out ordinances that supersede
Oregon Department of Geology and Mineral Industries (DOGAMI) regulations
pursuant to ORS
517.780.
(c) The local government shall
determine reasonable and practicable measures that would minimize the conflicts
identified under subsection (b) of this section. To determine whether proposed
measures would minimize conflicts to agricultural practices, the requirements
of ORS
215.296
shall be followed rather than the requirements of this section. If reasonable
and practicable measures are identified to minimize all identified conflicts,
mining shall be allowed at the site and subsection (d) of this section is not
applicable. If identified conflicts cannot be minimized, subsection (d) of this
section applies.
(d) The local
government shall determine any significant conflicts identified under the
requirements of subsection (c) of this section that cannot be minimized. Based
on these conflicts only, local government shall determine the ESEE consequences
of either allowing, limiting, or not allowing mining at the site. Local
governments shall reach this decision by weighing these ESEE consequences, with
consideration of the following:
(A) The
degree of adverse effect on existing land uses within the impact
area;
(B) Reasonable and
practicable measures that could be taken to reduce the identified adverse
effects; and
(C) The probable
duration of the mining operation and the proposed post-mining use of the
site.
(e) Where mining
is allowed, the plan and implementing ordinances shall be amended to allow such
mining. Any required measures to minimize conflicts, including special
conditions and procedures regulating mining, shall be clear and objective.
Additional land use review (e.g., site plan review), if required by the local
government, shall not exceed the minimum review necessary to assure compliance
with these requirements and shall not provide opportunities to deny mining for
reasons unrelated to these requirements, or to attach additional approval
requirements, except with regard to mining or processing activities:
(A) For which the PAPA application does not
provide information sufficient to determine clear and objective measures to
resolve identified conflicts;
(B)
Not requested in the PAPA application; or
(C) For which a significant change to the
type, location, or duration of the activity shown on the PAPA application is
proposed by the operator.
(f) Where mining is allowed, the local
government shall determine the post-mining use and provide for this use in the
comprehensive plan and land use regulations. For significant aggregate sites on
Class I, II and Unique farmland, local governments shall adopt plan and land
use regulations to limit post-mining use to farm uses under ORS
215.203,
uses listed under ORS
215.213(1)
or
215.283(1),
and fish and wildlife habitat uses, including wetland mitigation banking. Local
governments shall coordinate with DOGAMI regarding the regulation and
reclamation of mineral and aggregate sites, except where exempt under ORS
517.780.
(g) Local governments shall allow a currently
approved aggregate processing operation at an existing site to process material
from a new or expansion site without requiring a reauthorization of the
existing processing operation unless limits on such processing were established
at the time it was approved by the local government.
(6) For an aggregate site on farmland that is
determined to be significant under section (4) of this rule, the requirements
of section (5) of this rule are not applicable, except for subsection (5)(f),
and the requirements of OAR 660-023-0040 though 660-023-0050 are not
applicable. Instead, local governments shall decide whether mining is permitted
by applying subsections (a) through (d) of this section:
(a) The proposed aggregate mine shall satisfy
discretionary conditional use permit approval standards adopted by the local
government pursuant to applicable requirements of ORS
215.213(2)
or
215.283(2),
and the requirements of ORS
215.296
and
215.402
through
215.416;
(b) The local government shall determine the
post-mining use in accordance with subsection (5)(f) of this rule;
(c) The local government shall issue a permit
for mining aggregate only for a site included on an inventory of significant
aggregate sites in the comprehensive plan in accordance with ORS
215.298(2);
and
(d) The conditional use permit
shall not allow mining of more than the maximum amount of aggregate material
specified under subsection (4)(a) of this rule.
(7) Except for aggregate resource sites
determined to be significant under section (4) of this rule, local governments
shall follow the standard ESEE process in OAR 660-023-0040 and 660-023-0050 to
determine whether to allow, limit, or prevent new conflicting uses within the
impact area of a significant mineral and aggregate site. (This requirement does
not apply if, under section (5) of this rule, the local government decides that
mining will not be authorized at the site.)
(8) In order to determine whether information
in a PAPA submittal concerning an aggregate site is adequate, local government
shall follow the requirements of this section rather than OAR 660-023-0030(3).
An application for approval of an aggregate site following sections (4) and (6)
of this rule shall be adequate if it provides sufficient information to
determine whether the requirements in those sections are satisfied. An
application for a PAPA concerning a significant aggregate site following
sections (3) and (5) of this rule shall be adequate if it includes:
(a) Information regarding quantity, quality,
and location sufficient to determine whether the standards and conditions in
section (3) of this rule are satisfied;
(b) A conceptual site reclamation plan;
NOTE: Final approval of reclamation plans resides with DOGAMI rather than local governments, except as provided in ORS 517.780
(c) A traffic impact assessment
within one mile of the entrance to the mining area pursuant to section
(5)(b)(B) of this rule;
(d)
Proposals to minimize any conflicts with existing uses preliminarily identified
by the applicant within a 1,500 foot impact area; and
(e) A site plan indicating the location,
hours of operation, and other pertinent information for all proposed mining and
associated uses.
(9)
Local governments shall amend the comprehensive plan and land use regulations
to include procedures and requirements consistent with this rule for the
consideration of PAPAs concerning aggregate resources. Until such local
regulations are adopted, the procedures and requirements of this rule shall be
directly applied to local government consideration of a PAPA concerning mining
authorization, unless the local plan contains specific criteria regarding the
consideration of a PAPA proposing to add a site to the list of significant
aggregate sites, provided:
(a) Such
regulations were acknowledged subsequent to 1989; and
(b) Such regulations shall be amended to
conform to the requirements of this rule at the next scheduled periodic review
after September 1, 1996, except as provided under OAR
660-023-0250(7).
Notes
Statutory/Other Authority: ORS 183 & ORS 197
Statutes/Other Implemented: ORS 197.040 & ORS 197.225 - 197.245
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