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Joel Norva, Eugene, stated he lived adjacent to the pit. He said he had lived on his <br />property for the past 18 years He said in the past five or six years, the City of Eugene had <br />approved and allowed development of the Silver Meadows addition that has 70 new <br />homes. He said when that was done, they cleaned up the waterway that had not been <br />running for the past 18 years, but now runs heavily. He indicated it runs through Silver <br />Meadows to the back of Albertson’s Supermarket on Division Avenue. He thought the <br />aquaclude would cause greater saturation of the land that would last longer. He thought <br />the jobs that are there now will be there in the future. He didn’t think 135 jobs would <br />disappear, the jobs would be there ten more years and after that the same number of jobs <br />would be in the community for digging gravel no matter where the pit is at. He <br />commented that they have another 20 years or more to rehabilitate the pit. He stated that <br />the noise of the pit bothers him. He said when they move to 150 feet from him and his <br />neighbors, the noise will be louder. With there being a conflict, the planning <br />commissions voted 11-0 that it is a conflict and whether it could be mitigated was not the <br />case they were concerned about. He noted the proposed pit is located adjacent to a new <br />elementary school. <br /> <br /> Mark Reed, Mineral Resource Geologist, Eugene, said his interest was helping to ensure <br />the integrity of scientific input in the making of public policy by adherence to the rules <br />established to protect their best farmland. He said his opinions are founded on 30 years <br />of experience as an economic geologist, including 25 years as professor of geology and <br />geochemistry at the University of Oregon, and three years of full-time work for the <br />Anaconda Cooper Company in Butte, Montana where his responsibility was to decide <br />where to drill holes for exploration of mineral resources, logging of the bore hole <br />cuttings, interpreting drilling results and to decide what sample to take and how to mix <br />samples from a drill hole to make composite samples. He said that was a key issue with <br />regard to the significance question in this case. He said the general sampling principles <br />are simple, universal and common sense that non specialists could understand. He <br />commented that gravel resource in the proposed Delta Sand and Gravel expansion area <br />fails to meet the significance test under the Goal 5 Rule because six of the samples <br />submitted for testing of quality are not representative samples. He indicated the rule <br />requires representative samples and these were not representative. He added the <br />fundamental failing of four EGR samples is that EGR mixed concrete grade rock from <br />the upper unit that is high quality rock with poor grade rock thereby diluting the poor <br />grade rock with the higher grade rock to get a composite that passes the ODOT test. He <br />added the bottom 35 feet may fail the test, he didn’t know. He said the gravel deposit is <br />divided into two units, an upper unit of high quality and the lower unit with low quality. <br />He said the mixing of the two parts is contrary to well established standards for taking <br />representative samples from this type of resource. He said it was an essential part of the <br />significance determination for a deposit of that kind that the quality of the rock be <br />adequate to justify sacrificing the Class 1 and 2 farm soils on the surface. He stated the <br />reason for the Goal 5 Rule is to make a fair trade for the farm land. He commented that <br />the test of quality is a fundamental importance under the law. He said that was the key <br />issue that needed to be addressed. He said the basics of representative sampling are <br />outlined in a set of national standards from the American Society of Testing Materials, <br />the Army Corps of Engineers and the American Association of State Highway and <br />Page 8 – Joint Elected Officials' Meeting – December 12, 2006 <br />WD bc/m/06121/T <br /> <br />