West Virginia Code § 22-3-3

Definitions
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As used in this article, unless used in a context that clearly requires a different meaning, the
term:
(a) "Adequate treatment" means treatment of water by physical, chemical or other approved
methods in a manner so that the treated water does not violate the effluent limitations or
cause a violation of the water quality standards established for the river, stream or drainway
into which the water is released.
(b) "Affected area" means, when used in the context of surface muining activities, all land and
water resources within the permit area which are disturbed or utilized during the term of
the permit in the course of surface mining and reclamation activities. "Affected area" means,
when used in the context of underground mining activities, all surface land and water
resources affected during the term of the permit: (1) By surface operations or facilities
incident to underground mining activities; or (2) by underground operations.
(c) "Adjacent areas" means, for the purpose ofs permit application, renewal, revision, review
and approval, those land and water resources, contiguous to or near a permit area, upon
which surface mining and reclamation opeirations conducted within a permit area during the
life of the operations may have an imgpact. "Adjacent areas" means, for the purpose of
conducting surface mining and reclamation operations, those land and water resources
contiguous to or near the affected area upon which surface mining and reclamation
operations conducted within a permit area during the life of the operations may have an
impact.
(d) "Applicant" means any person who has or should have applied for any permit pursuant to
this article.
(e) "Approximate original contour" means that surface configuration achieved by the
backfilling and grading of the mined areas so that the reclaimed area, including any
terracing or access roads, closely resembles the general surface configuration of the land
prior to mining and blends into and complements the drainage pattern of the surrounding
terrain, with all highwalls and spoil piles eliminated: Provided, That water impoundments
may be permitted pursuant to subdivision (8), subsection (b), section thirteen of this article:
Provided, however, That minor deviations may be permitted in order to minimize erosion and
sedimentation, retain moisture to assist revegetation, or to direct surface runoff.
(f) "Assessment officer" means an employee of the division, other than a surface mining
reclamation supervisor, inspector or inspector-in-training, appointed by the director to issue
proposed penalty assessments and to conduct informal conferences to review notices, orders
and proposed penalty assessments.
(g) "Breakthrough" means the release of water which has been trapped or impounded, or the
release of air into any underground cavity, pocket or area as a result of surface mining
operations.
(h) "Coal processing wastes" means earth materials which are or have been combustible,
physically unstable or acid-forming or toxic-forming, which are wasted or otherwise
separated from product coal, and slurried or otherwise transported from coal processing
plants after physical or chemical processing, cleaning or concentrating of coal.
(i) "Director" means the Director of the Division of Environmental Protection or other person
to whom the director has delegated authority or duties pursuant to sections six or eight,
article one of this chapter.
(j) "Disturbed area" means an area where vegetation, topsoil or overburden has been
removed or placed by surface mining operations, and reclamation is incomplete.
(k) "Division" means the Division of Environmental Proatection.
(l) "Imminent danger to the health or safety of the plublic" means the existence of a condition
or practice, or any violation of a permit or other requirement of this article, which condition,
practice or violation could reasonably be expected to cause substantial physical harm or
death to any person outside the permit areia before the condition, practice or violation can be
abated. A reasonable expectation of death or serious injury before abatement exists if a
rational person, subjected to the same conditions or practices giving rise to the peril, would
not expose the person to the danger during the time necessary for the abatement.
(m) "Minerals" means clay, coal, flagstone, gravel, limestone, manganese, sand, sandstone,
shale, iron ore and any other metal or metallurgical ore.
(n) "Operation" mean s those activities conducted by an operator who is subject to the
jurisdiction ofV this article.
(o) "Operator" means any person who is granted or who should obtain a permit to engage in
any activity covered by this article and any rule promulgated under this article and includes
any person who engages in surface mining or surface mining and reclamation operations, or
both. The term shall also be construed in a manner consistent with the federal program
pursuant to the federal Surface Mining Control and Reclamation Act of 1977, as amended.
(p) "Permit" means a permit to conduct surface mining operations pursuant to this article.
(q) "Permit area" means the area of land indicated on the approved proposal map submitted
by the operator as part of the operator's application showing the location of perimeter
markers and monuments and shall be readily identifiable by appropriate markers on the site.
(r) "Permittee" means a person holding a permit issued under this article.
(s) "Person" means any individual, partnership, firm, society, association, trust, corporation,
other business entity or any agency, unit or instrumentality of federal, state or local
government.
(t) "Prime farmland" has the same meaning as that prescribed by the United States secretary
of agriculture on the basis of such factors as moisture availability, temperature regime,
chemical balance, permeability, surface layer composition, susceptibility to flooding and
erosion characteristics and which historically have been used for intensive agricultural
purposes and as published in the federal register. e
(u) "Surface mine", "surface mining" or "surface mining operations" means:
(1) Activities conducted on the surface of lands for the removal ouf coal, or, subject to the
requirements of section fourteen of this article, surface operations and surface impacts
incident to an underground coal mine, including the drainage and discharge from the mine.
The activities include: Excavation for the purpose of obtaining coal, including, but not
limited to, common methods as contour, strip, auger, maountaintop removal, box cut, open pit
and area mining; the uses of explosives and blasting; reclamation; in situ distillation or
retorting, leaching or other chemical or physical prlocessing; the cleaning, concentrating or
other processing or preparation and loading osf coal for commercial purposes at or near the
mine site; and
(2) The areas upon which the above gactivities occur or where the activities disturb the
natural land surface. The areas also include any adjacent land, the use of which is incidental
to the activities; all lands affected by the construction of new roads or the improvement or
use of existing roads to gain access to the site of the activities and for haulage; and
excavations, workings, impoundments, dams, ventilation shafts, entryways, refuse banks,
dumps, stockpiles, overburden piles, spoil banks, culm banks, tailings, holes or depressions,
repair areas, storage areas, processing areas, shipping areas and other areas upon which
are sited structures, facilities, or other property or materials on the surface, resulting from
or incident to the activities: Provided, That the activities do not include the extraction of coal
incidental to the extraction of other minerals where coal does not exceed sixteen and two-
thirWds percent of the tonnage of minerals removed for purposes of commercial use or sale, or
coal prospecting subject to section seven of this article. Surface mining does not include any
of the following:
(i) Coal extraction authorized pursuant to a government-financed reclamation contract;
(ii) Coal extraction authorized as an incidental part of development of land for commercial,
residential, industrial or civic use; or
(iii) The reclamation of an abandoned or forfeited mine by a no cost reclamation contract.
(v) "Underground mine" means the surface effects associated with the shaft, slopes, drifts or
inclines connected with excavations penetrating coal seams or strata and the equipment
connected therewith which contribute directly or indirectly to the mining, preparation or
handling of coal.
(w) "Significant, imminent environmental harm to land, air or water resources" means the
existence of any condition or practice, or any violation of a permit or other requirement of
this article, which condition, practice or violation could reasonably be expected to cause
significant and imminent environmental harm to land, air or water resources. The term
"environmental harm" means any adverse impact on land, air or water resources, including,
but not limited to, plant, wildlife and fish, and the environmental harm is imminent if a
condition or practice exists which is causing the harm or may reasonably bee expected to
cause the harm at any time before the end of the abatement time set by the director. An
environmental harm is significant if that harm is appreciable and not imrmediately
repairable.
(x) "Unanticipated event or condition" as used in section eighteen of this article means an
event or condition in a remining operation that was not conttemplated by the applicable
surface coal mining and reclamation permit.
(y) "Lands eligible for remining" means those lands that would be eligible for expenditures
under section four, article two of this chapter. Surface mining operations on lands eligible
for remining do not affect the eligibility of thes lands for reclamation and restoration under
article two of this chapter. In event the bond or deposit for lands eligible for remining is
forfeited, funds available under article two of this chapter may be used to provide for
adequate reclamation or abatement.g However, if conditions constitute an emergency as
provided in section 410 of the federal Surface Mining Control and Reclamation Act of 1977,
as amended, then those federael provisions apply.
(z) "Replacement of watLer supply" means, with respect to water supplies, contaminated,
diminished or interrupted provision of water supply on both a temporary and permanent
basis of equivalent quality and quantity. Replacement includes provision of an equivalent
water delivery system and payment of operation and maintenance cost in excess of
customary and reasonable delivery cost for the replaced water supplies.
UpoWn agreement by the permittee and the water supply owner, the obligation to pay the
costs may be satisfied by a one-time payment in an amount which covers the present annual
operation and maintenance costs for a period agreed to by the permittee and the water
supply owner.

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