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Biden-Harris Administration Announces Nearly $4.9 Million to Address Legacy Pollution, Revitalize Communities in Kansas

 

 

November 20, 2024 - The Office of Surface Mining Reclamation and Enforcement (OSMRE) has announced nearly $4.9 million in fiscal year 2024 funding from President Biden’s Investing in America agenda for Kansas to address dangerous and polluting abandoned mine lands (AML), create good-paying, family-sustaining jobs and catalyze economic opportunity in coal communities.

Additionally, Kansas received nearly $300,000 to update its abandoned mine land inventory to support future remediation efforts. 

 

Funds are used for abandoned mine lands reclamation projects like this one at an abandoned mine in Cherokee County, Kansas, which addressed highwalls and spoil areas that posed a danger to the public. Photo courtesy of the Kansas Abandoned Mine Land Program.

 

Funds are used for abandoned mine lands reclamation projects like this one at an abandoned mine in Cherokee County, Kansas, which addressed highwalls and spoil areas that posed a danger to the public. 

Photo courtesy of the Kansas Abandoned Mine Land Program

 

Millions of Americans nationwide live less than a mile from an abandoned coal mine. The President’s Bipartisan Infrastructure Law provided a total of $16 billion to address legacy pollution, including nearly $11.3 billion in AML funding over 15 years, facilitated by OSMRE. This historic funding is expected to address nearly all of the currently inventoried abandoned coal mine lands in the nation, which will help communities address and eliminate dangerous conditions and pollution caused by historic coal mining.

“The Bipartisan Infrastructure Law infuses coal communities with the funding necessary to turn past pollution into future prosperity,” said Principal Deputy Director Sharon Buccino. “This historic funding is making people safer, cleaning up the environment, and creating jobs. Outcomes that these communities need and deserve.”

Today’s announcement builds on more than $9.7 million from President Biden’s Investing in America agenda allocated to Kansas for AML reclamation in fiscal years 2022 and 2023. Including today’s announcement, over $503 million in awards for fiscal year 2024 have been awarded. Funding will be awarded to additional eligible states on a rolling basis as they apply.

“The funds from the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law are essential for Kansas to address projects that could never be done with only the fee-based grant such as the Weir Subsidence Drilling and Grouting Project that is currently in engineering,” said Marlene Spence, administrator, Surface Mining Unit, Kansas Department of Health and Environment. “This project will tackle the potential for subsidence in a Justice 40 area that has been negatively impacted by the effects of past underground coal mining.”

AML reclamation supports jobs in coal communities by investing in projects that close dangerous mine shafts, reclaim unstable slopes, improve water quality by treating acid mine drainage, and restore water supplies damaged by mining. Awards can also enable economic revitalization by reclaiming hazardous land for recreational facilities and other redevelopment, such as advanced manufacturing and renewable energy deployment. As directed by the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law, funding will prioritize projects that employ current and former employees of the coal industry.

This funding is a part of the Biden-Harris administration’s unprecedented investments in communities and workers to support an equitable transition to a sustainable economy and healthier environment after the closure of mines or power plants. This effort also advances the President’s Justice40 Initiative that sets a goal to deliver 40 percent of the overall benefits of certain federal investments to disadvantaged communities that have been historically marginalized by underinvestment and overburdened by pollution. Additionally, reclaiming abandoned coal mines is a pillar of the Biden-Harris administration’s Methane Action Plan, which includes historic efforts to reduce methane emissions—one of the biggest drivers of climate change—while creating good-paying jobs and promoting American innovation.