For Immediate Release: Tuesday, July 26, 2022

Contacts: 

Josh Johnson, Senior Conservation Associate, Idaho Conservation League, (208) 345-6933 x 301

Abby Urbanek, Communications Manager, Idaho Conservation League, (208) 345-6933 x 214

Fred Coriell, Board Member, Save the South Fork Salmon, Inc., (208) 315-3630

Bryan Hurlbutt, Staff Attorney, Advocates for the West, (208) 342-7024 x 206

Conservation groups and the Nez Perce Tribe appeal air quality permit for Stibnite Gold Project

Despite health concerns over arsenic and particulate pollution from proposed mine, Idaho DEQ issues permit

BOISE, ID — On Friday, July 22, 2022, the Nez Perce Tribe, Idaho Conservation League (ICL), and Save the South Fork Salmon appealed an air quality Permit to Construct issued by the Idaho Department of Environmental Quality (IDEQ) to Perpetua Resources Idaho, Inc. for its proposed Stibnite Gold Project.

The Permit to Construct is the first major permit issued for the proposed open-pit mine east of McCall, Idaho, and is supposed to ensure the project meets federal Clean Air Act and state air quality requirements to protect public health and the environment.

The proposed mining activities would result in large quantities of dust or particulate matter being emitted into the air, which can cause serious health problems including premature death, heart attacks, aggravated asthma, and other respiratory issues. The rocks, soils, and dust at Stibnite are also known to be very high in arsenic, a human carcinogen known to cause developmental effects, diabetes, pulmonary disease, and cardiovascular disease. Controlling dust from mining operations is critical to protect public health, but the permit fails to include basic monitoring and other safeguards that ensure dust levels are kept to safe levels, according to the appeal. 

Over the past two years, the Nez Perce Tribe, ICL, and Save the South Fork Salmon raised repeated concerns during the permitting process about particulate and arsenic pollution that would result from the project. However, IDEQ failed to address these concerns when it issued the Permit to Construct last month. 

“Despite going through three rounds of public comment, this air quality permit still fails to address all of the health concerns the public raised, leading ICL and our partners to appeal this decision,” said Josh Johnson, ICL’s senior conservation associate.

The Stibnite Gold Project is a massive gold mine proposed in the headwaters of the East Fork of the South Fork Salmon River adjacent to the Frank Church River of No Return Wilderness Area. The area within and surrounding the proposed mine is part of the aboriginal homelands of the Nez Perce Tribe who have reserved the right to fish, hunt, gather, and pasture at traditional places in their 1855 Treaty with the United States. 

The Permit to Construct is just one of multiple permits Perpetua needs before the proposed mine could move forward. If approved, Perpetua plans to drill and blast three large, open-pit mines and conduct mining operations over the next 16 years. 

“People who work or recreate near the mine area could be exposed to dangerous levels of particulate and arsenic pollution,” said Bryan Hurlbutt, attorney with Advocates for the West, who represents the Nez Perce Tribe and ICL in the appeal. “Relying on assurances from a mining company, as DEQ did here, without setting important permit conditions fails to protect the public and fails to comply with the law.” 

“Throughout this lengthy permitting process we raised concerns that the assumptions and analyses relied upon to issue this permit are flawed and inadequate, placing the people who use the area around the proposed mine at risk of increased and serious health consequences,” said Julia Thrower, attorney for Save the South Fork Salmon. “Those concerns largely remain unaddressed in the current permit.” 

“The mishandling of this first permit for the Stibnite Gold Project raises concerns about how the 50 or so other regulatory permits required for this project are going to be handled,” said Josh Johnson with ICL. 

In the appeal, the Nez Perce Tribe, ICL, and Save the South Fork Salmon are asking for the permit to be invalidated and for any future permit to require additional safeguards for public health and real-time monitoring processes to ensure these safeguards are effective.

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