Flying over the affected area appears to have made at least one elected official think harder about whether the supposed titanium mining jobs could be more important than the effects on the Okefenokee National Wildlife Refuge, both its economic importance and the potential environmental detriments to the swamp, to the Suwannee and St. Mary’s Rivers, and to the Floridan Aquifer. You can still write to the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers asking for denial or at least an Environmental Impact Statement.
Gordon Jackson, The Brunswick News, 28 August 2019, Getting the aerial perspective on a titanium mining project,
Photo: Jim Tatum, of the Chemours North Maxville Mine, Baker County, Florida.
This is the mine pictured in the Brunswick News article.
…The mining company Twin Pines Minerals, LLC [(TPM)], said it plans to employ 150 people, but [Georgia State Representative John] Corbett acknowledged most of the employees will not come from Charlton County.
Corbett went on a two-hour flight Saturday Continue reading