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Office of Surface Mining Reclamation and Enforcement Announces $122.5 million in Abandoned Mine Land Economic Revitalization Grants

Date

Date: May 17, 2022
  Contact: news@osmre.gov (202) 208-2565

Grants to fund projects with a nexus to economic development

WASHINGTON –The Office of Surface Mining Reclamation and Enforcement announced today $122.5 million in fiscal year 2022 funding for Abandoned Mine Land Economic Revitalization grants. The six Appalachian states with the highest number of unfunded high priority abandoned mine land problems and three Tribes with approved AML programs are eligible for the grants.

Established in 2016, the AMLER program funds projects that return legacy coal mining sites to productive uses through economic and community development. High priority abandoned mine land problems pose an immediate threat to health, safety, and the general welfare of communities. Abandoned mine land problems include clogged streams/stream lands, dangerous piles or embankments, dangerous highwall, underground mine fire and polluted water.

Abandoned Mine Land Economic Revitalization grants offer opportunities for economic revitalization, community development and the creation of good-paying jobs to some of the hardest hit communities across America,” said Principal Deputy Assistant Secretary for Land and Minerals Laura Daniel-Davis. “The grants address long-standing hazards and environmental degradation in coal communities to provide clean, livable surroundings to the families who have helped power our nation.”

The AMLER program is also a pilot program for the President’s Justice40 Initiative, which commits to delivering 40 percent of the benefits of certain climate and clean energy investments to disadvantaged communities.

In 2022, AMLER funds have been allocated to the states and Tribes as follows: Kentucky, Pennsylvania and West Virginia are each allocated $26.63 million; Alabama, Ohio and Virginia are each allocated $10.652 million; and the Crow Tribe, the Hopi Tribe, and the Navajo Nation are each allocated $3.551 million. States and Tribes will continue to work with local partners to identify projects that will bring the most environmental and economic benefits to their communities.

This year, nearly $1 billion has been invested in coal communities. AMLER funds supplement nearly $725 million in fiscal year 2022 funding available to 22 states and the Navajo Nation to reclaim abandoned mine lands as part of President Biden’s Bipartisan Infrastructure Law. In addition, $144 million in fiscal year 2022 funding was made available through the traditional AML grant program.

For more information about the AMLER Program and the grants process, please visit https://www.osmre.gov/programs/reclaiming-abandoned-mine-lands/amler.

OSMRE –

The OSMRE carries out the requirements of the Surface Mining Control and Reclamation Act of 1977 in cooperation with states and Tribes. OSMRE’s objectives are to ensure that coal mining activities are conducted in a manner that protects citizens and the environment during mining, to ensure that the land is restored to beneficial use after mining, and to mitigate the effects of past mining by aggressively pursuing reclamation of abandoned coal mines.