Fred Hill gravel mine seeks expansion
Growing regional demand for
gravel and asphalt is behind a proposal to
expand the mining area at the Fred Hill
Materials gravel pit at Shine.
Under the proposal, the company seeks to expand
the mining area by 20 acres, bringing the total
size of the operation to about 191 acres.
Fred Mill Materials Project Manager Dan Baskins
said the expansion is necessary to keep up with
demand. With the only gravel pit in the region
from central Kitsap County north into Clallam
County, the company is busy providing materials
for summer road construction and repair
projects.
"We've running 24 hours a day, seven days a week
for months now, and we can barely keep up," he
said. "We're just expanding so we have material
readily available to get through the year and
next year."
The application for expansion was delivered to
Jefferson County Department of Community
Development officials last week. Public comment
on the proposal can be submitted through 4:30
p.m. Wednesday, Aug. 30.
If all goes well, mining in the area could begin
early next year, Baskins said.
The gravel could be mined to a maximum depth of
50 feet - at least 100 feet from the seasonal
high groundwater table. After the area is mined,
the company would "reclaim" the area by
spreading topsoil and a layer of forest debris,
which would eventually become a tree farm
planted with Douglas fir.
While the proposal is an expansion of existing
mining operations, Baskins said he expects some
opposition from people who have complained about
noise, the appearance of the pit and other
concerns.
"It's their way of getting publicity and raising
funds," he said. (Please see
But John Fabian of the Hood Canal Coalition said
his group isn't opposed to the expansion.
"We have never objected to the mining operation
where it's done responsibly," he said. "But we
do plan to make comments, as I think it's
appropriate to do, but at this time I don't see
that we'd object to it."
Jefferson County is the lead agency for
environmental review of the proposal. According
to a cover letter sent by Department of
Community Development Director Al Scalf to
agencies involved with reviewing the proposal,
the county expects to issue a determination of
non-significance under state environmental
policy requirements.
Information about the proposal is available
online at www.co.jefferson.wa.us/commdevelopment/FHMhome.htm,
or by calling Department of Community
Development Planner Greg Ballard at
385-379-4450
