The state has approved an $11 million contract for a massive mine cleanup project designed to improve the West Branch Susquehanna Watershed.
The project, to be completed by June 2011, will reclaim 11.3 acres of abandoned mine lands and build a passive mine drainage treatment system for the discharge of 7.5 million gallons per day from the abandoned Lancashire No. 15 mine in Barr Township.
Also announced by the state Department of Environmental Protection are two cleanup projects in Somerset County: A $13,429 drainage treatment system to restore trout habitat in Elk Lick Township, and a $512,009 project at the abandoned Lion Mine in Jenner Township.
The contracts were unveiled as part of a nine-project plan for five counties. Cleaning up abandoned mines has been a DEP priority. The projects are funded mainly by the federal Abandoned Mine Lands Fund. Pennsylvania received $30 million from the fund this year and is projected to receive $1.1 billion by 2022.
The West Branch Susquehanna contract is considered especially important because its waters eventually empty into Chesapeake Bay, and the federal government has mandated improved water quality for the entire three-state Susquehanna Basin.
Local News
State OKs $11M mine reclamation
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Boil-water notice issued in Upper Yoder Township
A boil-water notice has been issued for a portion of Upper Yoder Township as crews work to repair a leak along Route 271. -
No NDIC jobs to stay in city
After years of political clashes and fiscal uncertainty, these are the facts of the National Drug Intelligence Center’s final days:
• 87: The number of employees losing their jobs as NDIC operations wind down this year.
• 57: The number of staffers, aside from those 87, who will be offered jobs in Washington, D.C.
• Zero: The number of NDIC-related jobs that will remain in Johnstown. -
Blogging with heart
I had a couple of interesting interviews over the past 24 hours. The first was with an ambitious Forest Hills High School junior who organized a Red Out across the district today in support of American Heart Association. Like many of those involved in Heart Association benefits, Spencer Ivock was inspired by his own family members' experience with heart disease.
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Forest Hills junior puts his heart into Red Out
Forest Hills junior Spencer Ivock is “redding out” the schools today for his senior project.
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Local pair accused of robbing home twice
A Johnstown couple has been charged with breaking into a Lower Yoder Township home twice in a four-month period – and then selling, for $103, some of the thousands of dollars in goods they alleged swiped.
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Steel firm considers coal mine near Que
Cambria Somerset Authority officials plan to meet this week with representatives of an Ohio-based steel company about a plan that could put a coal mine south of the Quemahoning Reservoir.
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In brief: Somerset motorist dies in crash
A 28-year-old Somerset man was killed Thursday morning when his vehicle left the road, hit a drainage ditch and rolled over.
- Births 02/03/2012
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[VIDEO] Party in Punxsutawney: Groundhog Day is about more than seeing shadows
For the thousands who show up at Gobbler's Knob as early as 8 p.m. on Feb. 1, Groundhog Day is about more than whether or not Punxsutawney Phil sees his shadow: It's an excuse to party.
The Tribune-Democrat's Justin Dennis spent the night among the masses and captured all of the festivities on film. -
[VIDEO] Punxsutawney Phil makes his prediction
More than 18,000 people – some representing states as far away as Arkansas and Oregon – crammed into the outdoor amphitheatre of Gobbler’s Knob on Thursday for the annual weather party known as Groundhog Day.
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Boil-water notice issued in Upper Yoder Township






