As the Appalachian region is experiencing intense rainfall this week, the federal Office of Surface Mining Reclamation and Enforcement is not processing state requests seeking approval for abandoned mine land reclamation projects according to state agency officials and congressional staff.
This is part of an ongoing federal funding freeze that is defying court orders.
State offices of mine reclamation are not able to access funds or get authorizations to proceed with reclamation projects because the funds were provided in the federal Bipartisan Infrastructure Law, and the federal agency is still freezing funds provided through the 2022 law.
Heavy rainfall and thawing ground as temperatures warm often lead to new or worsened AML problems, such as subsidence and landslides.
“Abandoned mine land projects are essential for improving community safety, creating jobs and addressing decades of pollution,” said Matt Hepler, Environmental Scientist for Appalachian Voices. “These efforts not only restore the environment but also provide critical economic support to affected areas. The decision to freeze funding at such a crucial time raises serious concerns, as it jeopardizes ongoing remediation work.”
“The Abandoned Mine Land Program has broad bipartisan support, with a decades-long record of creating jobs and improving safety for the millions of people who live near abandoned coal mines,” said Chelsea Barnes, Director of Government Affairs and Strategy. “We urge Secretary of the Interior Doug Burgum and the Office of Surface Mining Reclamation and Enforcement to restart the crucial Abandoned Mine Land Program immediately.”
Background
Abandoned mine lands are coal mining sites that were mined prior to Congress’ 1977 passage of the Surface Mining Control and Reclamation Act. Before that law, coal companies were not required to remediate damaged land and water after mining to protect nearby communities, a process known as reclamation.
To reclaim the thousands of pre-1977 mine sites, the law set up the Abandoned Mine Land Reclamation Program where current coal companies pay a fee per ton of coal mined to support cleanup of the industry’s decades-old abandoned sites.
The 2021 federal Bipartisan Infrastructure Law extended the AML fee on coal mined and also infused $11.2 billion in the fund to address a significant backlog of abandoned mine lands in need of reclamation. State and Tribal governments use this funding to hire local contractors to address environmental and safety hazards at abandoned mine land sites.
Pennsylvania
DEP now receives significant federal funding for state and local abandoned mine reclamation projects [$843.6 million] and conventional oil and gas well plugging [$197 million] under the federal Bipartisan Infrastructure Act (IIJA) and Inflation Reduction Act (IRA) and hundreds of millions of dollars of pass-through grant funding for various energy and climate programs authorized under the Inflation Reduction Act.
But, DEP also receives federal funding to support core environmental protection program staff and operational costs for programs it administers for the federal government, like Air Quality [$4.2 million], Water Quality [$5.5 million] , Mining [$6.5 million], Drinking Water [$7 million], Storage Tanks [$4.6 million], Coastal Zone [$4.7 million], in addition to federal pass-through grants in some of these programs.
During the previous federal Republican Administration, serious proposals were made to cut these grants to states, which would cripple these programs. Read more here.
NewsClips - Freeze:
-- AP: Federal Appeals Court Won’t Halt Judge’s Order Requiring President To Unfreeze All Federal Cash
-- CNN: Billions In Federal Funding Remain Frozen Despite Federal Court Orders To Keep The Taps Open
-- NYT: EPA Still Has Grants Frozen Despite 2 Federal Court Orders To End The Freeze
-- Grist: President’s Push For ‘Efficiency’ May Destroy The EPA; What Does That Mean For You?
-- Bloomberg: EPA Seeking To Claw Back $20 Billion In Awards From Federal Climate Law
-- WHYY: President’s Funding Freeze Could Leave Communities On Their Own As Climate Threats Grow
-- TribLive: Butler County Federal Storage Facility In An Old Mine In Spotlight After Musk Mention
Related Articles:
-- Gov. Shapiro Files Lawsuit Challenging President's Unconstitutional Federal Funding Freeze In Order to Protect PA Interests; Mine Reclamation, Conventional Well Plugging, Many Other Funds At Risk [PaEN]
-- Gov. Shapiro’s Budget Includes Energy Plan; Funding To Make-up Deficit In Oil & Gas Program; New State Park, Trail Initiative; Over $6.2 Billion In Federal Funding At Risk For DEP, DCNR, PennVEST [PaEN]
-- Appalachian Voices: Tell Congress To Preserve Federal Funding For Rural Communities [PaEN]
-- Appalachian Voices: Abandoned Mine Cleanup Disrupted By Ongoing Freeze In Federal Funding [Defying Court Orders] [PaEN]
-- National Sustainable Agriculture Coalition: Continuing Federal Funding Freeze Hurting Farmers-- Honor Legal Obligations [PaEN]
NewsClips:
-- LancasterOnline/WITF: President Freezes Rural Energy For America Grant Program Reimbursements, Farmers Hurt
[Posted: February 12, 2025] PA Environment Digest

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