Show new navigation
On
Columbia Basin Fish and Wildlife Program Columbia Basin Fish and Wildlife Program

Implementation Metrics

Work Element 52: Remove Mine Tailings - Published
Viewing 144 of 144 Implementation Metrics
Project Number
Project Title
Contract Number
Sort Order
WE ID
Work Element Name
Title
Description
Metric ID
Metric
End Fiscal Year
Planned
Actual
Contractor Comments
1984-021-00John Day Habitat Enhancement21625K52Remove Mine TailingsMine Tailing RemovalRe-establish floodplain connectivity on RM 57.0 on the Middle Fork of the John Day River by re-contouring remnant landscape affects from old mine operations. The property is owned and operated by the Confederated Tribe of the Warm Springs Indian Reservation on the Oxbow property.1403# of riparian acres treated2006 33.0
1984-021-00John Day Habitat Enhancement21625K52Remove Mine TailingsMine Tailing RemovalRe-establish floodplain connectivity on RM 57.0 on the Middle Fork of the John Day River by re-contouring remnant landscape affects from old mine operations. The property is owned and operated by the Confederated Tribe of the Warm Springs Indian Reservation on the Oxbow property.1404# of upland acres treated2006 0.0
1984-021-00John Day Habitat Enhancement21625K52Remove Mine TailingsMine Tailing RemovalRe-establish floodplain connectivity on RM 57.0 on the Middle Fork of the John Day River by re-contouring remnant landscape affects from old mine operations. The property is owned and operated by the Confederated Tribe of the Warm Springs Indian Reservation on the Oxbow property.1405# of wetland acres treated2006 0.0
1984-021-00John Day Habitat Enhancement21625K52Remove Mine TailingsMine Tailing RemovalRe-establish floodplain connectivity on RM 57.0 on the Middle Fork of the John Day River by re-contouring remnant landscape affects from old mine operations. The property is owned and operated by the Confederated Tribe of the Warm Springs Indian Reservation on the Oxbow property.1407Was barrier Full or Partial?2006 n/a
1984-021-00John Day Habitat Enhancement21625K52Remove Mine TailingsMine Tailing RemovalRe-establish floodplain connectivity on RM 57.0 on the Middle Fork of the John Day River by re-contouring remnant landscape affects from old mine operations. The property is owned and operated by the Confederated Tribe of the Warm Springs Indian Reservation on the Oxbow property.1408Did the tailings create a fish passage barrier?2006 No
1984-021-00John Day Habitat Enhancement21625K52Remove Mine TailingsMine Tailing RemovalRe-establish floodplain connectivity on RM 57.0 on the Middle Fork of the John Day River by re-contouring remnant landscape affects from old mine operations. The property is owned and operated by the Confederated Tribe of the Warm Springs Indian Reservation on the Oxbow property.1409# of miles of habitat accessed2006 0.75
1984-021-00John Day Habitat Enhancement21625K52Remove Mine TailingsMine Tailing RemovalRe-establish floodplain connectivity on RM 57.0 on the Middle Fork of the John Day River by re-contouring remnant landscape affects from old mine operations. The property is owned and operated by the Confederated Tribe of the Warm Springs Indian Reservation on the Oxbow property.1403# of riparian acres treated2006 33.0
1984-021-00John Day Habitat Enhancement21625K52Remove Mine TailingsMine Tailing RemovalRe-establish floodplain connectivity on RM 57.0 on the Middle Fork of the John Day River by re-contouring remnant landscape affects from old mine operations. The property is owned and operated by the Confederated Tribe of the Warm Springs Indian Reservation on the Oxbow property.1404# of upland acres treated2006 0.0
1984-021-00John Day Habitat Enhancement21625K52Remove Mine TailingsMine Tailing RemovalRe-establish floodplain connectivity on RM 57.0 on the Middle Fork of the John Day River by re-contouring remnant landscape affects from old mine operations. The property is owned and operated by the Confederated Tribe of the Warm Springs Indian Reservation on the Oxbow property.1405# of wetland acres treated2006 0.0
1984-021-00John Day Habitat Enhancement21625K52Remove Mine TailingsMine Tailing RemovalRe-establish floodplain connectivity on RM 57.0 on the Middle Fork of the John Day River by re-contouring remnant landscape affects from old mine operations. The property is owned and operated by the Confederated Tribe of the Warm Springs Indian Reservation on the Oxbow property.1407Was barrier Full or Partial?2006 n/a
1984-021-00John Day Habitat Enhancement21625K52Remove Mine TailingsMine Tailing RemovalRe-establish floodplain connectivity on RM 57.0 on the Middle Fork of the John Day River by re-contouring remnant landscape affects from old mine operations. The property is owned and operated by the Confederated Tribe of the Warm Springs Indian Reservation on the Oxbow property.1408Did the tailings create a fish passage barrier?2006 No
1984-021-00John Day Habitat Enhancement21625K52Remove Mine TailingsMine Tailing RemovalRe-establish floodplain connectivity on RM 57.0 on the Middle Fork of the John Day River by re-contouring remnant landscape affects from old mine operations. The property is owned and operated by the Confederated Tribe of the Warm Springs Indian Reservation on the Oxbow property.1409# of miles of habitat accessed2006 0.75
1992-026-01Grande Ronde Model Watershed42998B52Remove Mine TailingsRemove taiings from the floodplain of the Upper Grande Ronde RiverA total of 18 areas would have mine tailings removed or redistributed for an approximate total of 46,964 yards. All of these areas are located within the floodplain of the upper Grande Ronde River (approx. 2.5 stream miles) and East Fork Grande Ronde River (approx. .25 mile). The mine tailings would be hauled for placement on the native surface section of Road 5138, designated stock pile sites (12 sites), redistributed as far away from the wetted edge as possible, or redistributed and recontoured within the floodplain to provide for tree growth and wetland development. When tailings are placed on the native surface section of the 5138 road, the material would be compacted with a dozer to make a drivable road surface. All mine tailings located within existing claims would not be moved outside of the claim boundary. A total of 7 stream crossings have been identified to access the Southwest side of the stream. Three of these crossings would be fords, which would not involve hauling material back across the stream. These crossings would be for one pass across and one pass back for approximately ½ of the equipment mentioned below. These crossing sites are located in areas that have low stream banks to minimize ground disturbance. An additional four crossings have been identified for temporary bridge placement. These sites would require some instream channel work to place the bridge on appropriate sills. Minimal construction work would be required to place and remove the bridge. All equipment would use the bridge to cross and haul the tailings to designated spoil sites. All of the crossing sites would be checked for redds prior to construction operations. If a redd is identified in or directly adjacent to the crossing, the crossing would be moved to the nearest site that would cause minimal ground disturbance and no redd disturbance. Refer to Figure 1 for crossing locations.1403# of riparian acres treated200938.038.0This occurs over a 2.5 mile reach of stream.
1992-026-01Grande Ronde Model Watershed42998B52Remove Mine TailingsRemove taiings from the floodplain of the Upper Grande Ronde RiverA total of 18 areas would have mine tailings removed or redistributed for an approximate total of 46,964 yards. All of these areas are located within the floodplain of the upper Grande Ronde River (approx. 2.5 stream miles) and East Fork Grande Ronde River (approx. .25 mile). The mine tailings would be hauled for placement on the native surface section of Road 5138, designated stock pile sites (12 sites), redistributed as far away from the wetted edge as possible, or redistributed and recontoured within the floodplain to provide for tree growth and wetland development. When tailings are placed on the native surface section of the 5138 road, the material would be compacted with a dozer to make a drivable road surface. All mine tailings located within existing claims would not be moved outside of the claim boundary. A total of 7 stream crossings have been identified to access the Southwest side of the stream. Three of these crossings would be fords, which would not involve hauling material back across the stream. These crossings would be for one pass across and one pass back for approximately ½ of the equipment mentioned below. These crossing sites are located in areas that have low stream banks to minimize ground disturbance. An additional four crossings have been identified for temporary bridge placement. These sites would require some instream channel work to place the bridge on appropriate sills. Minimal construction work would be required to place and remove the bridge. All equipment would use the bridge to cross and haul the tailings to designated spoil sites. All of the crossing sites would be checked for redds prior to construction operations. If a redd is identified in or directly adjacent to the crossing, the crossing would be moved to the nearest site that would cause minimal ground disturbance and no redd disturbance. Refer to Figure 1 for crossing locations.1404# of upland acres treated20090.00.0
1992-026-01Grande Ronde Model Watershed42998B52Remove Mine TailingsRemove taiings from the floodplain of the Upper Grande Ronde RiverA total of 18 areas would have mine tailings removed or redistributed for an approximate total of 46,964 yards. All of these areas are located within the floodplain of the upper Grande Ronde River (approx. 2.5 stream miles) and East Fork Grande Ronde River (approx. .25 mile). The mine tailings would be hauled for placement on the native surface section of Road 5138, designated stock pile sites (12 sites), redistributed as far away from the wetted edge as possible, or redistributed and recontoured within the floodplain to provide for tree growth and wetland development. When tailings are placed on the native surface section of the 5138 road, the material would be compacted with a dozer to make a drivable road surface. All mine tailings located within existing claims would not be moved outside of the claim boundary. A total of 7 stream crossings have been identified to access the Southwest side of the stream. Three of these crossings would be fords, which would not involve hauling material back across the stream. These crossings would be for one pass across and one pass back for approximately ½ of the equipment mentioned below. These crossing sites are located in areas that have low stream banks to minimize ground disturbance. An additional four crossings have been identified for temporary bridge placement. These sites would require some instream channel work to place the bridge on appropriate sills. Minimal construction work would be required to place and remove the bridge. All equipment would use the bridge to cross and haul the tailings to designated spoil sites. All of the crossing sites would be checked for redds prior to construction operations. If a redd is identified in or directly adjacent to the crossing, the crossing would be moved to the nearest site that would cause minimal ground disturbance and no redd disturbance. Refer to Figure 1 for crossing locations.1405# of wetland acres treated20097.57.5This occurs over a 2.5 mile of reach of stream.
1992-026-01Grande Ronde Model Watershed42998B52Remove Mine TailingsRemove taiings from the floodplain of the Upper Grande Ronde RiverA total of 18 areas would have mine tailings removed or redistributed for an approximate total of 46,964 yards. All of these areas are located within the floodplain of the upper Grande Ronde River (approx. 2.5 stream miles) and East Fork Grande Ronde River (approx. .25 mile). The mine tailings would be hauled for placement on the native surface section of Road 5138, designated stock pile sites (12 sites), redistributed as far away from the wetted edge as possible, or redistributed and recontoured within the floodplain to provide for tree growth and wetland development. When tailings are placed on the native surface section of the 5138 road, the material would be compacted with a dozer to make a drivable road surface. All mine tailings located within existing claims would not be moved outside of the claim boundary. A total of 7 stream crossings have been identified to access the Southwest side of the stream. Three of these crossings would be fords, which would not involve hauling material back across the stream. These crossings would be for one pass across and one pass back for approximately ½ of the equipment mentioned below. These crossing sites are located in areas that have low stream banks to minimize ground disturbance. An additional four crossings have been identified for temporary bridge placement. These sites would require some instream channel work to place the bridge on appropriate sills. Minimal construction work would be required to place and remove the bridge. All equipment would use the bridge to cross and haul the tailings to designated spoil sites. All of the crossing sites would be checked for redds prior to construction operations. If a redd is identified in or directly adjacent to the crossing, the crossing would be moved to the nearest site that would cause minimal ground disturbance and no redd disturbance. Refer to Figure 1 for crossing locations.1407Was barrier Full or Partial?2009n/an/a
1992-026-01Grande Ronde Model Watershed42998B52Remove Mine TailingsRemove taiings from the floodplain of the Upper Grande Ronde RiverA total of 18 areas would have mine tailings removed or redistributed for an approximate total of 46,964 yards. All of these areas are located within the floodplain of the upper Grande Ronde River (approx. 2.5 stream miles) and East Fork Grande Ronde River (approx. .25 mile). The mine tailings would be hauled for placement on the native surface section of Road 5138, designated stock pile sites (12 sites), redistributed as far away from the wetted edge as possible, or redistributed and recontoured within the floodplain to provide for tree growth and wetland development. When tailings are placed on the native surface section of the 5138 road, the material would be compacted with a dozer to make a drivable road surface. All mine tailings located within existing claims would not be moved outside of the claim boundary. A total of 7 stream crossings have been identified to access the Southwest side of the stream. Three of these crossings would be fords, which would not involve hauling material back across the stream. These crossings would be for one pass across and one pass back for approximately ½ of the equipment mentioned below. These crossing sites are located in areas that have low stream banks to minimize ground disturbance. An additional four crossings have been identified for temporary bridge placement. These sites would require some instream channel work to place the bridge on appropriate sills. Minimal construction work would be required to place and remove the bridge. All equipment would use the bridge to cross and haul the tailings to designated spoil sites. All of the crossing sites would be checked for redds prior to construction operations. If a redd is identified in or directly adjacent to the crossing, the crossing would be moved to the nearest site that would cause minimal ground disturbance and no redd disturbance. Refer to Figure 1 for crossing locations.1408Did the tailings create a fish passage barrier?2009NoNo