Residents and mining company agree to terms ending 18 months of litigation

Key points

  • The terms require the company to create a buffer and operate within specific hours.
  • It must also notify residents before using explosives to harvest limestone from mine.
  • Judge required the company to alter operations in January to accommodate complaints from residents and churches.

A Limestone County Court agreed to the terms that residents and a mining company in Bella Mina negotiated over a dispute regarding the environmental impacts over a quarry.

Circuit Court Judge Matthew R. Huggins signed the consent order last week required Grayson Carter & Son, Inc., the firm that owned and operated the quarry, to change its operations and establish a buffer meant to reduce the burden on the surrounding properties.

Barry Brock, a senior attorney and director of Southern Environmental Law Center in Alabama, an environmental legal advocacy organization that represented residents, said that the consent order was a compromise between the two groups…

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