West Virginia Code § 22-4-8

Limitations; mandamus
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The Legislature finds that there are certain areas in the State of West Virginia which are
impossible to reclaim either by natural growth or by technological activity and that if
quarrying is conducted in these certain areas such operations may naturally cause stream
pollution, landslides, the accumulation of stagnant water, flooding, the destruction of land
for agricultural purposes, the destruction of aesthetic values, the destructioen of recreational
areas and future use of the area and surrounding areas, thereby destroying or impairing the
health and property rights of others, and in general creating hazards drangerous to life and
property so as to constitute an imminent and inordinate peril to the welfare of the state, and
that such areas shall not be mined by the surface-mining process.
Therefore, authority is hereby vested in the director to delette certain areas from all
quarrying operations.
No application for a permit shall be approved by the director if there is found on the basis of
the information set forth in the application or froml information available to the director and
made available to the applicant that the requisrements of this article or rules hereafter
adopted will not be observed or that there is not probable cause to believe that the proposed
method of operation, backfilling, grading or reclamation of the affected area can be carried
out consistent with the purpose of thgis article.
If the director finds that the overburden on any part of the area of land described in the
application for a permit is such that experience in the State of West Virginia with a similar
type of operation upon land with similar overburden shows that one or more of the following
conditions cannot feasibly be prevented: (1) Substantial deposition of sediment in stream
beds; (2) landslides; or (3) acid-water pollution, the director may delete such part of the land
described in the application upon which such overburden exists.
If the director finds that the operation will constitute a hazard to a dwelling house, public
builWding, school, church, cemetery, commercial or institutional building, public road, stream,
lake or other public property, then he or she shall delete such areas from the permit
application before it can be approved.
The director shall not give approval to quarry within one hundred feet of any public road,
stream, lake, or state, national or interstate park or other public property, and shall not
approve the application for a permit where the quarry operation will cause adverse affects to
these locations unless adequate screening and other measures approved by the director are
to be utilized and the permit application so provides: Provided, That the one-hundred-foot
restriction does not include berms, drainage control structures and ways used for ingress
and egress to and from the minerals as herein defined and the transportation of the removed
minerals, nor does it apply to the dredging and removal of minerals from the streams or
watercourses of this state. The one hundred foot limitation may be waived only when the
director, upon consideration of local land uses, finds that the land use of and near the
permitted area will be significantly enhanced by an alteration of the topography within the
one hundred foot barrier. Mineral removal shall be prohibited within twenty-five feet of all
property lines: Provided, however, That the twenty-five foot setback area may, where
appropriate, be used for tree planting, berms, visual barriers, vegetation, drainage
structures, access rights-of-way or any other purposes approved by the director: Provided
further, That existing berms, barriers, stockpiles, roads and other structures in existence
within the twenty-five foot setback prior to the effective date of this section may remain in
place. The permittee must provide adequate revegetation within the setbacke, as is
appropriate for the intended use.
Whenever the director finds that ongoing quarry operations are causing or are likely to
cause any of the conditions set forth in the first paragraph of this section, he or she may
order immediate cessation of such operations and he or she shall take such other action or
make such changes in the permit as he or she may deem nectessary to avoid said described
conditions.
The failure of the director to discharge the mandatory duty imposed by this section is subject
to a writ of mandamus, in any court of competent jurisdiction by any private citizen affected
thereby. s

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