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Panel Approves First Step in Pit-to-Pier Plan
Aug 1, 2004 12:00 PM
by Charlotte Garvey
washington correspondent for
Rock Products
A proposal by Fred Hill Materials Inc. to
designate a 690-acre plot as a mineral resource
land overlay was approved by the Jefferson
County Board of Commissioners in Port Townsend,
Wash., approximately 40 miles north of Seattle,
says Greg Ballard. Ballard is a staff member
with the county board and worked on the
proposal's environmental assessment. The
approval is the first in a series of steps that
are expected to lead to an expansion of Hill's
gravel mining operations in the area and
development of a new plan to ship gravel from
the Hood Canal area. The material could
potentially be delivered to the booming Puget
Sound area, as well as parts of California,
Oregon, Washington and Vancouver, Canada. The
plan is opposed by area environmental groups and
by U.S. Rep. Norm Dicks (D-Wash.), who
represents the area impacted by the proposed
operation. In a letter, Dicks urged the board of
commissioners to deny Hill's request. The
company is pursuing what has been termed a
“pit-to-pier” project, which would involve
barging gravel to a pier in the Hood Canal. “I
fear that the project would unalterably change
the character of Hood Canal, potentially leading
to its industrialization,” Dicks writes in a
letter to the county commissioners. The
commissioners' decision will be reviewed by a
state hearings board, Ballard says. But he
expressed confidence that the review panel would
validate the county commissioners' decision due
to the extensive nature of the environmental
impact statement prepared by the county. “We
went way beyond the call of duty,” Ballard says.
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