This is a pro-regulation blog. We are not anti-mining. This is not an anti-Mandalay Resources blog.

Thursday, 3 September 2015

of silver


nations blessed by ages long, for love of gold at last have fell
the seeds of self-deceit are sown with ploughs of golden metal cast
and fields of blood and woe are mown with swords forged in a golden blast
of all who seek to find the grail there is not one who’ll live to tell
from mountains pure of basest lead no precious speck of ore to sell
yet silver, sonorous and strong, peals long a bell of blameless past
and would that bonds of friendship were with strands of silver strong held fast
for silver as a mirror shined will secrets of betrayal tell
so give me not your yellow discs that usury and lies will varnish
hang not about my neck a chain that yokes me to a dray of fools
for gold is naught but evil magic, caster of deceitful spells
in silver’s truth I will be cloaked and wear with pride its tell-tale tarnish
a metal hard and pure I need not soft nor fickle for my tools
and all I ask as my reward: to hear the angels' silver bells



steve blackey                                                  







Friday, 7 August 2015

Sent from my iPhone... A Response from the Chair Chair Chair


Most of you will have seen the first email here... it's the most recent Update announcement... we post this email thread in the interests of openness and so that Cr Leach cannot claim that her 'correction' has been overlooked... and we post, too, for the benefit of the people of the City of Greater Bendigo so that they may see the calibre of Councillor they have elected...

On 7 Aug 2015, at 9:40 am, steve <costerfieldantimonyissues> wrote:


Good morning Costerfield Update Community!

And welcome to our new members... Apologies for this rather long Update (and the rather long post that it points to), but it has been some time and there's been a bit going on :)

A few months ago we put the Costerfield Update Community Updates :) on hold for a while in anticipation of some turn around of events in light of the appointment of the facilitator. Time has been ticking away and we are now approaching yet another ERC Meeting (13 August; come along!). A meeting to which some in the community (those most impacted by the Splitters Creek Facility) are still to be allowed access... Not too much seems to have changed from where we sit.

We are still dealing with organisational incompetence and ignorance at these meetings. From the mouth of the Chair:

"How can you have mud and dust in the same place?"
"Can't they just move to another tree?" [On being told that a tree with an occupied bird hollow in it had been cut down; as if there were a relocation scheme for affected birds]
"Particulate monitoring? What's that?" [Seriously!!! After all that's happened!]
"Oh, don't get all sciencey on us, Steve." [On being informed that temperature inversions can affect noise levels]

This aversion to science (and to the effort to edumacate herself on even the most basic scientific principles involved in mining) means that, in essence, discussion of geology, climatology, water, dust, zoology, chemistry and just about anything else, is off the table for the Environmental Review Committee... we can't be getting all "sciencey" and confuse the Chair, now, can we?

Recall too that the Chair wanted to bring in the police to control the Meeting! Incompetence. And she did nothing to correct the lie in the Bendigo Advertiser about the crusher roof.

The Wappentake Valley Community has no confidence in the Chair.

We have sat back and remained silent... in good faith. We do have confidence that things will change for the better. But we still wait and while we wait we still have to deal with the inadequacies of the status quo. And we don't want our silence to be mistaken as satisfaction... So...

We have assembled a new post that brings together and into context a few of the events that have been unfolding during our downtime. Just so you can see that the shenanigans haven't stopped. Brazen. And so we advise anyone considering such a course of action, Don't Bother Going to VCAT - CoGB and the Regulators Have Their Own Priorities...

We've actually been posting quietly in the background so here are links to some of the quiet additions to the database... Our Tin Pot Gully - February ERC Presentation is interesting, we think, in that it prompted Golder Associates to attend the subsequent ERC Meeting in May. Seems we had independently (and for free!) reached similar conclusions to those reached by the global consultancy firm regarding the possibility of legacy mining contamination being additional to the levels of contamination in the Costerfield area. Additional to...

And then there are a few informative definitions of hydrogeological terms from a pretty authoritative source - Unconfined, Semi-Confined and Confined Aquifers - National Water Commission... remember that the Wappentake Creek is not ephemeral.

For years water was sprayed around the Costerfield district, ostensibly as a "dust-suppression" measure on the dusty Costerfield Roads, even unused roads (!) - and that didn't count towards the extraction licence. How much water? Well G-MW issued a licence for the extraction of 179ML/annum. But we have assembled some documents that indicate a period when extraction Increased to 584ML Per Year Over The Last Two Years... you do the maths; SKM can't.

That's all for now, but there's always more to come in Costerfield... ;)

Have a great weekend!

Regards

Wappentake Valley Community

BTW
We should note that during this downtime costerfieldantimonyissues.blogspot.com's communications with the mining company have been cordial and even amicable. So, thanks to them for that. The company has been forthcoming with unpublished historical data that greatly informs some of the questions we have been asking. Informs some of them, not answers them all. We hope to have a synthesis/summary of some of these documents up for you soon.

***

A response was received from the Chair...


On 7/08/2015 11:23 AM, Helen Leach wrote:
Steve, Steve, Steve; after the obnoxious behaviour of a certain resident I decided if the meeting was to be held offsite. Then I would want to feel safe at said meeting. Didn't say the police had to be present- just available

Sent from my iPhone


(We were of the opinion that the police are always "available"... so what is she she she going on about?)

***

The response from costerfieldantimonyissues....


Subject: Re: Costerfield Update: Don't Bother Going to VCAT - CoGB and the Regulators Have Their Own Priorities
To: h.leach@bendigocouncillors.org.au
From: steve.blackey
Date: Fri, 7 Aug 2015 12:16:55 +1000

Helen Helen Helen,

Please do try to curb your patronising ways... this response is most unbecoming an elected official in reply to a ratepayer and landowner's detailed and documented concerns... this is community engagement CoGB style, is it? Not very impressed. Not surprised, but still, not impressed.

It is this that has, in no small part, contributed to the getting up of some residents' backs. This and the partisan position you loftily assume at meetings. The blind eye turned to patent untruths - lies - perpetrated on the people of Costerfield and Bendigo and the shareholders of Mandalay Resources through lies to the media that you have allowed to enter uncorrected into the Minutes... the ignorance displayed by your uninformed questions... the continued disallowing of a directly impacted resident to the meetings because you have decided that an apology is in order, but only from one side of the chain mesh fence... the refusal to fully support community calls for the Meeting to be held on neutral ground so that democracy can be exercised... Partisan. As if no one's mother had died and there was no dust and no noise and no contamination and everything was just peachy out there in Costerfield...

And your over-reactions! Do you really feel so threatened in and by Costerfield? That you or anyone else is potentially subject to physical harm? Really? Laughable. Perhaps it is time to hand the position of Chair over to someone else a little bit braver then... You'll have our full support in that!

Availability, presence... so now precise wording is of concern to you, is it, Helen, Helen, Helen?  Chain mesh fence, Madam Chair. Baseline figures, Madam Chair. Community engagement, Madam Chair. Conditions.

I note you do not address the other matters raised... the lie, for example. Plenty of time for that at the Meeting, I suppose. Please do read the blog post and try to get up to speed on the cumulative inadequacies displayed by the over-facilitating regulatory process that you have been involved in.

Regards Regards Regards

Steve Steve Steve


Oddly enough, we've had no response as yet...and the matters weren't raised at the ERC - which was poorly attended by the regulators. The Town Permitter, Mr Bryce Kilian managed to arrive late and remain silent. Even when prompted by the Chair for comment. We wonder why he even bothered to come. Bet he does too now.

Thursday, 6 August 2015

Don't Bother Going to VCAT - CoGB and the Regulators Have Their Own Priorities


The Victorian Civil and Administrative Tribunal (VCAT) specifically demanded a 'chain mesh' fence as a security measure at the Splitters Creek Facility. Council and the regulators have dismissed this Condition and allowed the mine to make its own decision as to the type of fence it will erect.

But this isn't the first time VCAT has been undermined and residents' concerns cast aside in order to over-facilitate this mine's construction over recent months and years.

Immediately below is the response Ms Pam King received from City of Greater Bendigo Senior Planner Mr Bryce Kilian when she raised her concern about the adequacy of this fence and Council's continuing flouting of conditions imposed by VCAT on behalf of objecting residents.

It's as if the VCAT Decision doesn't exist... most of the time... we'll get to that in a moment.

But first check out this vacillating drivel and inane rationalisation from the City of Greater Bendigo's Senior Planner, Mr Bryce Kilian.

(And please do take note of the disturbingly telling implications underlying Mr Kilian's instinctive use of the word "permitter" when he actually means "perimeter"...? You can can read what's going through his mind with a little piece of parapraxis like that. His priority is to "permit"... he is a "permitter" and he will twist logic and invent any reason to do so.

He's obviously got his rubber permitting stamp at the ready at all times.)

 ***

From: Bryce Kilian 
Sent: Wednesday, 20 May 2015 4:48 PM
To: Colin Leask
Cc: Prue Mansfield; Peter Cox
Subject: RE: Approved Work Plan reMIN 5567 re Perimeter Security Fence
Importance: High

Hi Pam,

I have investigated your complaint and wish to provide the following outcomes.

The VCAT imposed condition stated;

dimensions, specifications and location of a permitter chain mesh security fence to surround the evaporation terraces and storage dam’

You are correct in stating that the fencing is/has been constructed of ring lock rather than chain mesh.

The company has interpreted the condition as simply ‘security fencing’ with the primary purpose being to limit as much as possible animals entering the facility. The City agrees with this assertion and having re-read the VCAT Order, it does not discuss the fencing detail aside from the imposition of the above condition.

This detail (ring lock) has been approved by both the City through a document detailing the conditional requirements and on the plans which state ‘1.8m high stock fence with warning sign every 100m and also by DEDJTR through the Work Plan which states same.  

It is considered that the ring lock is also more in keeping with the general style of fencing present on the surrounding properties.

The City is of the opinion that the fence is fit for purpose and meets the intent of the condition.

Regards,
Bryce.


Bryce Kilian | Senior Planner
Statutory Planning | City of Greater Bendigo
T 03 5434 6353  E b.kilian@Bendigo.vic.gov.au



***

So there you have it.

VCAT "imposes" a "chain mesh security fence".

 CoGB and DEDJTR reinterpret this as a "1.8m stock fence". 

The "company" has been allowed to "interpret" and apply the condition all by itself...

And it has done so "simply" - what else can one expect? - as a "security fence"... and DEDJTR (the former DSDBI) agrees - except for them and Council it is a "stock fence" - so no one is getting it right - but what else can one expect from these people anymore

And when it all boils down to it, the priority seems to be that the fence be stylish... like wearing mirrored sunglasses used to be, I suppose...

There are no other 1.8m security fences within coo-ee of this particular fence so it is difficult to understand how the area's visual ambiance is to be complemented by this obviously fashionable piece of wirey fabrication. In any case, perhaps Mr Kilian should be informed that farm fences are constructed by the farmers in the area for their function not fashion. Amazing, no?

And the function of this fence is SECURITY.

And this is non-compliance with the VCAT condition. Mr Kilian even quotes the "VCAT imposed" Condition (well he tries to... "permitter"!! Ha!) 

"it does not discuss the fencing detail aside from the imposition of the above condition"... and the detail that it does discuss and IMPOSES, Mr Kilian, is the precise and very specific detail that the fence be "chain mesh." The very detail you have dismissed; not imposed.

In other words:

"It does not discuss the fencing detail except to be adamant and specific about imposing the one detail that I have decided to ignore because it's not stylish."

What the hell is going on here?

The mine is permitted (sorry, Bryce :) by the regulators and Responsible Authority to twist and interpret the wording of Permits and Work Plans and Regulations just as it sees fit - to hell with the actual intent - and according to its own convenience... who is actually in charge here?

And here's another recent instance that illustrates such inconsistencies in the application of supposed "conditions" by the regulators when things are found to be a little inconvenient for the mineral extraction industry.

Ms King and Mr Leask operate Glen Lea, a sheep farm - at one time attempting to be chemical-free... - directly across the road from the Splitters Creek Evaporation Facility. With the construction of the terraces at the site, the water that Glen Lea usually received as run-off from the opposite paddock would be affected. They would lose up to 6ML annually according to calculations.

Now a pipe has been put in place to carry water that falls or flows around the Facility onto the Glen Lea side of the road. To provide the farm with some of that water which has otherwise been lost.  

Sounds good. But, well, initially there was to be hydro-mulch around the site. Now there is to be crushed rock. Rock that potentially contains elevated levels of various metals that would be best not to let enter the environment. Moving rocks and soils around the area is a very efficient way of moving around the contamination that has been at the heart of community concerns for some time. Golder Associates, the consultancy firm brought in to examine this contamination says as much in its Report (emphasis added):

"the antimony concentrations at the soil surface may be associated with the redistribution of mine waste including mine rock and tailings"
and 
"Activities or processes which may increase the distribution of antimony include generation of dust, erosion of stock-piled materials (surface water run-off), surface water and groundwater extraction relocation."

In light of this Ms King asked that the potentially contaminated water that flows over this crushed rock be diverted elsewhere such that it does not access their property. And that she be provided with fresh water to replace it.

Oh but now the mine is permitted to become a stickler for VCAT conditions. In a reply to the Mining Warden's office, Mandalay Resources state

The design of the evaporation facility including the location of the storage dam spillway and where the external diversion drains run to has been extensively reviewed and critiqued on multiple occasions resulting in the current layout being the final approved design at a VCAT hearing last year. One of the main points of concern raised at the VCAT hearing by Colin & Pam was that they would lose runoff water as a result of the facility's construction and accordingly the diversion drain was re-designed to channel all the runoff back to the culvert beneath the South Costerfield-Graytown Rd to the Leask property to ensure no runoff was lost. Given that this was determined by VCAT and then signed off by the City of Greater Bendigo we are not able to simply change the direction of the runoff away from the approved location to the creek as it would be in contravention of the VCAT ruling. Even if we were in agreement with Colin and Pam in changing this drainage location, we're not able to without VCAT amending their final ruling and we will not be initiating that change.

According to the Mining Warden's Office 

The above information indicates that the run off pipe was the subject of consideration during the VCAT hearing and it may be presumed that the VCAT ruling and conditions were all made having regard to the information put to VCAT during that hearing. It is understandable, therefore that Mandalay would be apprehensive about making any change to proposals put before VCAT. 

Yes, that's right. Apprehensive. Oh dear. Sounds like someone needs a Bex and a good lie down.

But returning to the fencing for a moment and we find no such apprehensiveness evident when infrastructure that contravenes the VCAT decision is erected. And no problem running that by Council and DETJTR to have things "interpreted" in a manner that is most convenient for the mine. Seriously.

And ALL OF THE CONDITIONS were made "having regard to the information put to VCAT during that hearing". 

Even the fence!

But that hasn't stopped multiple breaches of the VCAT conditions as they are reflected in the CoGB Permit and the Endorsed Work Plan.


When a cheaper fence - a stock fence NOT a security fence - is erected by the mine, that's all okay because CoGB and DETJTR have no problem ignoring the specific wording of the Conditions; of actually allowing the mine to conveniently "interpret" the wording itself!!

But should residents in the immediate vicinity of the mine wish to decline the offer of potentially contaminated water coursing over their property then... well absolutely nothing can be done.

Can you spot the contradiction here? The inconsistency? 

But even that's not  the full story. The feigned indignation of the mine that it would be asked to diverge from VCAT conditions is matched only by the audacity of Mr Kilian deeming himself and his fellow Council employees (Public Servants is what you are supposed to be, Mr Kilian...) as adequately informed and authoritative enough to override VCAT decisions when the mine requires it...

Let's hear the story of the 29 conditions Mr Kilian and his cadre missed when they were asked by the community to consider the Splitters Creek development. And how they subsequently, for a consequent development (cumulative impact, Mr Kilian), adjudged themselves as so lacking in ability that they handed responsibility to VCAT without even deigning to offer a verdict on its acceptability.

Oh, but now, when it comes to fences, Mr Kilian is quite confident that he can interpret the intent of the VCAT Members!

But VCAT Conditions and Work Plan and Permit prescriptions are just as malleable as the Council Code of Conduct in the City of Greater Arrogance.

Here, then is a brief summation of the undermining of VCAT, Permit and Work Plan conditions and of extant regulations in the City of Greater Bendigo:


In late 2013, Costerfield residents concerned about the ramshackle approval process for the construction of further evaporative infrastructure by the regulatory authorities, objected to the City of Greater Bendigo. Council dismissed the concerns and gave the Splitters Creek Evaporative Facility the go ahead.

Council admitted that they had neglected to consider the Precautionary Principle mandated by Australia's international treaty obligations and had instead placed responsibility for its application squarely on the shoulders of EPA. And EPA didn't bother either.

Council's hands-off approach came as no surprise to residents who were already well aware of the patent ignorance displayed by the so-called Responsible Authority. When the then Mayor Lisa Rufell visited Costerfield Hall for a meeting to discuss  Splitters Creek, she had no idea what the Precautionary Principle was (or that it even existed) and had to be edumacated by residents in subsequent emails. These emails were forwarded to all Councillors.

They just did not know. Not a clue.

(And not much changed subsequently. When confronted with the possibility of light pollution emanating from the facility, current Mayor Peter Cox told residents whom he was visiting ostensibly to reassure them that he was on top of things and so could host a meeting with the mine, that "We'll wait and see what happens when it's finished". Lovely piece of precaution that, eh? 

Suck it and see planning from the Mayor. Ain't that wonderful?)

And so the "Responsible Authority" hand-balled the blame responsibility to EPA - who were MIA as per usual - and approved the application for development.

Not surprisingly, this was far from an ideal situation in the eyes of the concerned Costerfield community, and so an appeal to the decision was taken to the Victorian Civil and Administrative Tribunal (VCAT). That body reviewed the application and found cause to impose 29 further conditions on the CoGB-approved permit. Twenty-nine...

In their ruling the Members made specific and direct reference to the Precautionary Principle and attributed its application to the mandating of increased permeability requirements for the Splitters Creek Facility's clay liner; as well as the addition of an HDPE liner to further ameliorate the possibility of seepage of toxic groundwater.

By so doing, VCAT brought the Facility's permeability requirements (almost) into line with South Australian and Western Australian standards, thereby exceeding Victoria's outdated standards. The DPI standard originally applied to Splitters Creek dates from 2004, although this blog has shown that this standard was actually a downgrading of requirements from the 1996 permit for the mine's then owners.

Standards were 'restored' to those that had been extant nearly twenty years ago. Two decades of potentially dangerous under-regulation...

Residents were heartened by the seriousness with which their concerns were met and addressed by the VCAT Members. Residents were confident that, even if the facility were to proceed, it would now do so under much stricter and cautious (precautionary) conditions.

Twenty-nine conditions represent improvements that had been overlooked by Council and the Regulators because they were ignorant of their responsibilities. 

Council seemed to take its now manifestly laughable ignorance regarding mining regulations to heart and so when an application was received for the lifting of the walls of two further evaporative dams, it all but admitted its own inadequacy and sent the application to VCAT without making any decision at all. This, in effect took the right of immediate appeal out of residents' hands. A denial of the democratic process. VCAT is damned expensive.

But this hammered home the point to residents that the Councillors and Council of the City of Greater Bendigo are too ill-informed or deliberately un-informed to be charged with the responsibility for any decision-making regarding mining infrastructure. Any at all.

Twenty-nine extra conditions means twenty-nine important matters that improved on the 'work' of CoGB . 


But at least VCAT had noticed and, well, had made them conditions of the construction.

(condition, noun - a situation that must exist before something else is possible or permitted.)

***
Residents were hopeful that this was a sign that things were changing and that at last the rules were going to be followed. Hell, they'd had to do so much rule-following themselves that a number of community members are out of pocket by very substantial amounts of money. And time and effort don't come cheap for anyone either. These are farmers trying to make a living.

And then dust-generating work commenced on Lot 1 South Costerfield-Graytown Rd in contravention of the VCAT decision and without a single word of notice to any residents. And DSDBI's Ms Kylie White displayed a decided lack of knowledge of the situation in a reply to residents' concerns about this transgression.

And then work commenced on Lot 2 after just two days notice to residents, on a Public Holiday and the morning after the death of a long-time Costerfield resident that the "community engagement processes" of neither Council nor the mineral extractive industry had managed to pick up, and no one was available to address the noise and dust issues that ensued because they were getting pissed at the races in Bendigo... and the then Mayor Cr Barry Lyons visited the mine and then Splitters Creek and declared everything to be hunky dory - but he couldn't remember exactly which day he'd visited and he didn't bother travelling two hundred metres over the road to talk to the community members most directly affected. Marginalised.
 
And all this was done despite the fact that no one had bothered to get baseline figures from the neighbouring properties. A condition of the VCAT decision.

(condition, noun - a situation that must exist before something else is possible or permitted.)

Monitoring has never been declined by any residents. Never. They have demanded that it be done thoroughly and rigorously. And why wouldn't they? These are farmers, both professional and hobby, producing food for people, for themselves to eat. And this is their home for goodness' sake.

And it wouldn't appear, what with the Golder Desktop Report (see Appendix E) and its 12 Chemicals of Interest (CoI) for the 'next phase of works', which are now proposed to be analysed to varying degrees across six parameters, that they have been in the least misguided in the depth of their concerns:



Oooo look... is that Manganese in there...?

And they have actually been supported, too (! Well, to an extent) by Mr Colin Thornton who advised Mandalay Resources at the November ERC Meeting (from which residents, including Ms King, were ejected by the mine... no support from Council or anyone else) that the company may have to sample outside of the prescriptions of the Work Plan.

Still no baseline figures for water and soil testing were taken.

(It is not as if the testing and monitoring that takes place at the Costerfield Operations can be boasted about, or even deemed adequate, anyway. For example, it is only because residents demanded testing (we were being listened to at last because of issues raised on this blog... imagine that; listening to the locals) that anyone discovered that there is Manganese in the water that flows down the Wappentake Creek. No one - not EPA, not DSDBI, not Mandalay, not CoGB - had even bothered to look. (There's been so much not looking going on... and it's still going on... ) And lo and behold there it was.... and didn't that help explain a few things about the creek....

We feel justified in referring authoritatively to these results for Manganese as they align very well with the speculations of Golder Associates in its Desktop Review, provided for the regulators. Our identification of Tin Pot Gully as a potential source of legacy contamination was arrived at completely independently of Golder's research [see pp. 27-28 of the Golder document here... note the cheeky copyrighting of material produced by the Geological Survey of Victoria on behalf of the Victorian people and currently held in the National Library of Australia. Someone MS Painted some arrows and text on so Golder now own it!].


Such a convergence of opinion should provide some sort of reality check for the Regulators... the community has long been sidelined from participation in this and other projects, and yet the community's own research - should they have had to do this, really? - appears to be in many ways on a par with the 'desktop' investigations conducted by a multi-national consultancy firm of experts being paid... how much of our money?)

And then construction commenced at Splitters Creek and noise monitoring of a sort was undertaken... in a manner that contravened not only the endorsed Work Plan for the site, and the Permit, but also environmental noise monitoring standards required by the regulations. This breach was sanctioned and supervised - personally overseen - by DSDBI and its officers. (A year earlier DSDBI's Colin Thornton had all but admitted failure in the application of noise regulations in Costerfield and, at a community meeting at the Hall offered to hand over future noise monitoring to EPA. Didn't happen obviously... there are still some outstanding noise complaints to be dealt with by EPA. They know my email address...)


And then a pipeline for the transport of heavy metal-laden water through Crown Land and beside a public road reserve had to be sent under that road, so the road needed to be closed. And notice needed to be given to locals. And CoGB regulations governing this were breached.

And the Permit and Work Plan were so badly considered that these overly-pliable Public Servants whose names keep popping up again and again throughout this decade-long chronicle of incompetence, forgot about the dusty roads that they'd been permitting to be sprayed with contaminated water for years!!  

Which in and of itself goes a long way to confirming residents' suspicions that the road-watering initiatives in previous years were aimed wholly at assisting the mine in disposing of its excess groundwater rather than because of any concern for the dusty Costerfield roads and the health and well-being of Costerfield residents. That's why unused roads were watered up to three times a day.

And so back to the dust that was everywhere and the insane truck drivers hammering incessantly down the roads. And then they even forgot that it rains in Costerfield, too.

They forgot about the "irksome influx of meteoric water"!! 

And when the dust on the roads was brought to their attention, CoGB and DSDBI decided that it was okay for the mine to spray contaminated water about the district again (they'd been doing it for years in any case) and kill native vegetation. And Ms Prue Mansfield didn't even know where the water came from (but she did, really). And we haven't seen the EPA's test results on this water. Though they did manage to drive past the pollution and serve intimidatory notices on a farmer for composting. That Mr Leask is recovering well, is great news.

And still no baseline figures... and that's now impossible because the facility has been built. But monitoring has NEVER been declined. Don't let anyone - CoGB, DETJTR, EPA or anyone else - tell you otherwise. The document trail is decisive... come and get your samples when you decide to do it properly and thoroughly...to World's Best Practice.

The mine was advised it may have to sample outside the Work Plan remember. And they haven't... so whose fault is that, Colin?

It's almost as if all of the these transgressions are deliberate. A way to rile certain members of the community - piece by annoyingly encroaching piece - and get a reaction. An "unreasonable" reaction even...

(Unreasonable? No! The very residents who expended time and money to have themselves considered during all this mess? That couldn't happen, could it?)

And according to VCAT, the commissioning of the Splitters Creek Evaporative Facility cannot be completed without Council being "satisfied" with the testing and monitoring... and there's been precious little of that, has there Council? But the mine will want it commissioned... so...

Mr Kilian? Mayor Cox? Ms Mansfield? Mr Thornton?

How are you going to manipulate the system this time? 

How is the community to be run roughshod over this time?

Who's going to be cast as the villains in 2015?

Full and complete sampling and testing. That is what is required in Costerfield. The whole of Costerfield.

Everyone is watching you CoGB, DEDJTR, EPA... we're all watching. See if you can get together and do the right thing for a change. It's easy really. Just start following the instructions that are explicitly laid down in the VCAT Decision... to the letter... follow the regulations...

... apparently we have to.

Someone's going to have to make a decision and start sorting this mess out.  And how about soon... for a change?

A lot of people appear to be sitting on the fence regarding Costerfield... that's a precarious position... the fences out there aren't made to spec...






Thursday, 23 July 2015

Increased to 584ML Over the Last Two Years

On 18 November, 2011, long-time Costerfield landowner and farmer Mr Gilbert Cochrane wrote the following letter to his domestic water provider regarding excess water usage at his Heathcote home:

G. J. Cochrane,                                                                         

***********

Heathcote, 3523.




Re: Excessive water usage for the above residential property.            

To whom it may concern.

Dear Sir/Madam,


Regarding our water bill of 18 February, 2011, I wish to explain our increased consumption.


We were not at home for two weeks during the billing period as my wife was in hospital in Melbourne. During this time our home experienced significant rainfall which caused increased pressure on our pipes, resulting in one blowing apart at the join. (Indeed the level of the storage facility which supplies us had to be lowered because of this excessive rainfall.) When we arrived home I immediately had the join fixed and the stopcock turned to half to lessen the pressure.


I am writing this letter in response to a telephone call to your Office where it was suggested that a written explanation of the matter could possibly result in your lowering of the cost of our account. As we are old age pensioners, I trust that you will treat this request sympathetically.



Yours Sincerely,





G. J. Cochrane.
 


See if you can spot the inconsistencies in the manner in which an "irksome... influx of meteoric water" is dealt with, depending on whether you are a mineral extraction company or a ratepayer of the City of Greater Bendigo. 

 ***

From the Costerfield Operations NI43-101 Report prepared for the Toronto Stock Exchange - an explanation of the process and the status as at an effective date of 31 December 2012 (but dated as 28 March 2013) - at that time the licence allowed 179ML/annum of groundwater to be extracted:

 

So the mine needed to increase its dewatering allowance to cope with the irksome influx of meteoric water. An application was sent to Goulburn-Murray Water in November 2011 and by April 2013...

 Signed sealed and delivered... 

And here's the rub... the Costerfield PAN Risk Assessment dated October 2013:



So to the dates:

15 November 2011          - Application to G-MW for increase to Licence BEE006479  -
      28 March 2013          - Costerfield Operations NI43-101                                          -
         29 April 2013          - Goulburn-Murray Water approval signed                              -
         October 2013          - Costerfield PAN Risk Assessment                                         -


And so it would appear that here we have documentary confirmation that Goulburn-Murray Water allowed the extraction of up to 584ML/annum under an existing Licence BEE0066479 that allowed just 179ML/annum.

No one bothered to turn the stopcock to halfway.....

And that's actually an increase of 320% not the 220% that SKM figures it; but what do you expect from this mob?









Friday, 17 April 2015

Unconfined, Semi-confined and Confined Aquifers - National Water Commission

Remember... the Wappentake Creek is not ephemeral...and "the basement aquifer is at least partially confined"... let's see what that last bit - "at least partially confined" - actually means; besides, of course "at least partially unconfined"...

From Guidance for groundwater storage utilisation in water planning - Water Report Series No. 81, June 2012:
(A series of works commissioned by the National Water Commission on key water issues)

From section 2.3 Unconfined, semi-confined and confined aquifers (p. 6):

Whilst there is a significant distinction between completely confined and unconfined aquifers, there is a continuum of properties between them that is the domain of the more common ‘semi-confined’ (or ‘leaky’) aquifers. These are neither completely confined nor unconfined, but are generally fully saturated, and overlain by ‘leaky’ strata through which recharge and discharge can occur illustrates potential relationships between common aquifer types (SKM 2011) and the unconfined, semi-confined and confined classification.

 ***

From section 4.3.4 Setting quantitative objectives and targets:

environmental objectives for groundwater systems are likely to include: overall long-term system extraction limits to ensure water levels/pressures do not continue to decline (i.e. that there is no long-term ‘mining’ of the resource); water level/pressure thresholds that must be maintained (at all times or from time to time) to protect base flows and other dependent ecosystems (these will be particularly important in unconfined groundwater systems); possibly maximum or other rates of water level/pressure change to protect GDEs; and water quality objectives and associated water level targets that ensure the beneficial use of the resource is not compromised (this is also important for supply sustainability).

interception. Allowing utilisation of groundwater storage will result in greater groundwater extraction. In most confined systems, this water will come largely from elastic storage. Recharge from adjacent aquifers and/or surface water systems will occur, but is unlikely to be increased appreciably. Discharge will be reduced; however, in many of these deep confined systems this discharge is to more saline systems, which themselves may take hundreds, if not thousands, of years to reach surface water bodies as saline water. In many unconfined systems, however, taking from storage will result in both induced recharge from surface systems, and reduced discharge to adjacent groundwater systems and surface systems. This ‘interception’ may have impacts not only on environmental values, but also on the rights of existing water entitlement holders in those connected surface water or groundwater systems. This is particularly an issue for connected systems that are already fully committed, and even more so in the Murray-Darling Basin, where surface water use is capped.

In reality, most ‘confined’ systems are actually semi-confined, and to varying degrees are connected to aquifers above them. Changes in deeper aquifers will often manifest as declines in overlying unconfined aquifers, sometimes quickly and sometimes over several years. In such cases, the impact on objectives of overlying systems, and of surface systems connected to these, also must be taken into account.

 ***

From section 4.3.5 Developing groundwater management strategies and undertaking risk assessment (p. 40):

 Social risk assessment considerations might include:

·        the social impacts of the proposed options and alternatives for groundwater storage utilisation
·        the equity issues associated with the groundwater storage utilisation options and alternatives
·        the adjustment costs to satisfy the equity principles of reform.

Social and cultural values relating to water are often in conflict with economic values. For many people, water has special cultural and social values, and should not be treated solely as an economic good. That is, economic efficiency should not always be the prime determinant of water allocation. Utilisation of groundwater in storage can create greater groundwater level drawdown or pressure declines than would otherwise occur. This can create social impacts by limiting the access to groundwater by some users (e.g. for stock and domestic users), and compromising the water rights in connected systems or the enjoyment community groups derive from groundwater dependent ecosystems, including base flows in connected surface water systems.

***

Published by the National Water Commission
95 Northbourne Avenue
Canberra ACT 2600
Tel: 02 6102 6000
Email: enquiries@nwc.gov.au

Date of publication: May 2012