This is the preview version of the Wisconsin State Legislature site.
Please see http://docs.legis.wisconsin.gov for the production version.
107.12107.12Penalty. If any person operating a metal recovery system or purchaser of nonferrous metallic minerals or the agent of any such person or purchaser doing business fails to keep such a book or to make such entries as required under s. 107.11 or unreasonably refuses to show the book for inspection or taking extracts or makes false entries in the book he or she shall forfeit $10 for each offense, one-half to the use of the prosecutor; and each day such failure or refusal continues shall be deemed a distinct and separate offense.
107.12 HistoryHistory: 1977 c. 420; 2013 a. 1.
107.15107.15Requirements for mineral exploration.
107.15(1)(1)Legislative purpose. The purpose of this section is to further the public interest in informed decision-making by appropriate state agencies, including the office of the state geologist, which are responsible for mineral, geologic and other earth-related sciences by ensuring that those agencies have as much geological information as possible where such information is relevant to their functions and at the same time protecting proprietary rights in such information.
107.15(2)(2)Definitions. In this section:
107.15(2)(a)(a) “Exploration” has the meaning designated in s. 293.01 (5).
107.15(2)(b)(b) “Licensee” means any person licensed to conduct exploration activities by the department of natural resources under s. 293.21. If the person is a corporation or limited liability company, “licensee” includes the parent and any subsidiary or affiliates of the corporation or limited liability company engaged in mining or activities related to mining in this state.
107.15(2)(c)(c) “Metalliferous minerals” means naturally occurring minerals which contain metal.
107.15(2)(d)(d) “Mining” or “mining operation” has the meaning designated in s. 293.01 (9).
107.15(2)(e)(e) “Prospecting” has the meaning designated in s. 293.01 (18).
107.15(4)(4)Release of geologic data.
107.15(4)(a)(a) The licensee shall submit to the state geologist a report containing the following information on or before July 1 of the year following each year in which soil, rock, core or drill cutting samples are obtained by the licensee:
107.15(4)(a)1.1. The name and address of the person conducting exploration and, if the person is a corporation or limited liability company, the names and addresses of the parent and any subsidiaries or domestic affiliates of the corporation or limited liability company engaged in exploration activities in this state;
107.15(4)(a)2.2. The names and addresses of the owners of the lands in this state on which exploration activities have been conducted;
107.15(4)(a)3.3. The specific location, inclination and the collar azimuth of completed drill holes;
107.15(4)(a)4.4. The date core samples and drill cuttings which have been collected or prepared, were obtained;
107.15(4)(a)5.5. The approximate elevation of the collars of drill holes;
107.15(4)(a)6.6. The percent core recovery log; and
107.15(4)(a)7.7. A noninterpretive lithologic description of all portions of core samples and, of all drill cuttings if any noninterpretive lithologic descriptions of drill cuttings are prepared, excluding mention of metalliferous minerals found in the samples and cuttings.
107.15(4)(b)(b) The state geologist may require that designated representative and reasonable quantities of soil, rock, core or drill cutting samples obtained by a licensee during exploration be retained by the licensee and released to the state geologist for purposes of geologic study. The state geologist shall designate the samples and the quantities to be retained by the licensee and shall notify the licensee by December 31 of the year in which a report under par. (a) is submitted. The licensee shall release the samples no later than July 1 of the year following the year in which an exploration lease for the site where the samples were obtained has expired, but release shall be no later than 10 years after the commencement of drilling at the site.
107.15(4)(c)(c) The state geologist or his or her designee may visually examine, at reasonable hours mutually agreed upon by the licensee and the state geologist, core samples or drill cuttings which are reported on under par. (a), except for those core samples or drill cuttings or portions of core samples or drill cuttings which the licensee deems proprietary or confidential.
107.15(4)(d)(d) No later than upon the termination of mining or the abandonment of a site subsequent to prospecting, or 10 years from the date core samples or drill cuttings were originally obtained, the licensee shall submit to the state geologist, if not previously submitted, the following noninterpretive geologic information and samples:
107.15(4)(d)1.1. The name and address of the person conducting exploration and, if the person is a corporation or limited liability company, the names and addresses of the parent and any subsidiaries or domestic affiliates of the corporation or limited liability company engaged in exploration, prospecting or mining in this state;
107.15(4)(d)2.2. The names and addresses of the owners of the lands in this state on which exploration activities have been conducted;
107.15(4)(d)3.3. The specific location, inclination and the collar azimuth of completed drill holes;
107.15(4)(d)4.4. A noninterpretive lithologic description of all portions of core samples and, of all drill cuttings if any noninterpretive lithologic descriptions of drill cuttings are prepared, excluding mention of the quantity of metalliferous minerals found in the samples and cuttings;
107.15(4)(d)5.5. Geologic maps of a lithologic nature of a scale smaller than one inch equals 200 feet normally prepared as a permanent record of an exploration, prospecting or mining operation;
107.15(4)(d)6.6. The date core samples and drill cuttings were obtained;
107.15(4)(d)7.7. The approximate elevation of the collars of drill holes;
107.15(4)(d)8.8. The percent core recovery log; and
107.15(4)(d)9.9. Upon the request of the state geologist, a representative sample of any core samples or drill cuttings which have been collected.
107.15(4)(e)(e) The information submitted to the state geologist under par. (a) or (d) may not be used by any person as the basis for any claim of civil liability which is unrelated to metalliferous mineral mining. Any person submitting information in good faith and in compliance with this section shall not be held responsible for any consequences of the use of or reliance upon such information.
107.15(4)(f)(f) Exploration data and samples submitted under par. (a) or (b), or both, shall be kept confidential until December 31 of the 3rd year following the date of submission. The confidentiality of the data and samples obtained during prospecting or mining shall extend to the time of the abandonment of a site subsequent to prospecting, the termination of mining if mining occurs, or 10 years after the core samples or drill cuttings were obtained, whichever is earliest.
107.15(5)(5)Fees. The state geologist shall charge a reasonable fee to persons requesting copies of any written information collected or prepared under this section. A person employed by a state agency shall not be charged for such information if the information requested is necessary for the performance of the person’s duties.
107.15(6)(6)Penalties.
107.15(6)(a)(a) Any person who knowingly or willfully fails to comply with the reporting requirements of this section shall be fined up to $50,000.
107.15(6)(b)(b) In addition to the penalty prescribed in par. (a), any person who fails to submit information which is required to be submitted under this section shall forfeit $10 for each day after the date on which the information should have been submitted until the information is provided.
107.15(6)(c)(c) Any person who knowingly or willfully violates the confidentiality requirements of this section shall be fined not less than $50 nor more than $50,000, or be imprisoned for not less than one month nor more than 6 months, or both. This paragraph shall not prevent the use of the confidential information:
107.15(6)(c)1.1. For assessment purposes under s. 36.25 (6); or
107.15(6)(c)2.2. By the secretary of the department of natural resources for purposes of specific environmental analysis and permit application evaluation and by the secretary of the department of revenue provided that the confidential information shall not be released by either the department of revenue or the department of natural resources, that the departments of revenue and natural resources shall establish procedures to keep any confidential information confidential, and that the responsible person or persons in each department shall be subject to the penalty specified under this paragraph for the unauthorized release of confidential information.
107.15 AnnotationThe public disclosure of confidential mining exploration data and core samples is an unconstitutional taking of property without just compensation. Noranda Exploration, Inc. v. Ostrom, 113 Wis. 2d 612, 335 N.W.2d 596 (1983).
107.20107.20Maximum term for exploration mining leases.
107.20(1)(1)Any provision of an exploration mining lease entered into after April 25, 1978, granting an option or right to determine the presence, location, quality or quantity of nonferrous metallic minerals shall be limited to a term not exceeding 10 years from the date on which the exploration mining lease is recorded in the office of the register of deeds of the county where the property is located, except that any provision of an exploration mining lease entered into after April 25, 1978, granting an option or right to determine the quality and quantity of nonferrous metallic minerals under a prospecting permit shall be limited to a term not exceeding 10 years from the date that the lessee applies for a prospecting permit under s. 293.35, if the lessee applies for the prospecting permit within 10 years from the date on which the exploration mining lease is recorded in the office of the register of deeds of the county where the property is located.
107.20(2)(2)Any provision of an exploration mining lease entered into after April 25, 1978, granting an option or right to develop or extract nonferrous metallic minerals shall be limited to a term not exceeding 50 years from the date on which the exploration mining lease is recorded in the office of the register of deeds of the county where the property is located.
107.20 HistoryHistory: 1977 c. 253; 1981 c. 87; 1995 a. 227; 2013 a. 1.
107.25107.25Right to cancel exploration mining leases; recording.
107.25(1)(1)Right to cancel. An exploration mining lease entered into after April 25, 1978 may be canceled by the lessor as follows:
107.25(1)(a)(a) If the lessor is not a public body, the lessor may cancel an exploration mining lease by notifying the lessee within 10 calendar days after the lease is recorded.
107.25(1)(b)(b) If the lessor is a public body as defined in s. 66.1331 (3) (i), the lessor may cancel an exploration mining lease by notifying the lessee within 90 calendar days after the lease is recorded.
107.25(1)(c)(c) The lessor may cancel an exploration mining lease if 10 years have elapsed from the date on which the lease was recorded in the office of the register of deeds of the county where the property is located and the lessee has not formally applied, under s. 293.35 or 293.37, for either a permit to prospect or a permit to mine. In the event that the lessee formally applies for a prospecting permit under s. 293.35 or a mining permit under s. 293.37 within the 10-year period, but does not receive a mining permit under s. 293.49 within the 10-year period following the date of application for the prospecting permit or mining permit, the lessor’s right to cancel is revived.
107.25(1)(d)(d) The lessor’s right to cancel an exploration mining lease provided in this subsection cannot be waived and any provision to the contrary in such a lease is void.
107.25(1)(e)(e) Paragraphs (a) and (b) do not apply to exploration mining leases of any lands which were the site of a metalliferous mineral mine which was in operation during all or part of the 5-year period prior to April 25, 1978.
107.25(2)(2)Notification of cancellation. A lessor shall notify the lessee of cancellation by registered mail addressed to the lessee. Notice is considered to be given at the time the letter is mailed. The lessor shall also provide written notice of the cancellation to the register of deeds which shall be recorded. The recorded notice shall be in legible form, as determined by the register of deeds and must clearly identify the exploration mining lease document being canceled, the lessor and lessee, the property subject to the lease and the date the lease was originally recorded.
107.25(3)(3)Statement of right to cancel. An exploration mining lease shall contain a printed statement in capital and lowercase letters of not less than 12-point boldface type of the lessor’s right to cancel as provided in this section and the address to which the notice of cancellation should be mailed.
107.25(4)(4)Recording. An exploration mining lease which is not recorded in the office of the register of deeds of the county in which the land is located, within 30 days after it is signed by the lessor, is void.
INJURIES TO PERSONS OR PROPERTY
Subch. II of ch. 107 NoteNOTE: Chapter 353, laws of 1979, which created this subchapter, contains notes explaining the bill.
107.30107.30Definitions. In this subchapter:
107.30(1)(1)“Concentrates” means the mineral-rich, finished, primary products of a concentrator.
107.30(2)(2)“Concentrator” means a plant where ore is separated into concentrates and tailings.
107.30(3)(3)“Concentrator tailings” means waste material resulting from the washing, concentration or treatment of crushed ore.
107.30(4)(4)“Department” means the department of safety and professional services.
107.30(5)(5)“Environmental pollution” means the physical, chemical or biological alteration of quality of any air, water or land resources of the state which makes the same injurious to public health, harmful to agriculture, commercial or recreational use or deleterious to fish, birds, animals or plant or human life.
107.30(6)(6)“Materials in process” means those materials, other than salvageable by-products, which must be temporarily stored in a controlled manner. These materials include stockpiled development ore other than that in a mine or concentrator, mine backfill and reclaim water. The materials also include intermediate concentrates and intermediate refining and smelting products which require further processing, such as ore concentrates which must be agglomerated prior to marketing.
107.30(7)(7)“Mine excavations” means either shaft or pit excavations from which minerals have been extracted in prospecting or mining.
107.30(8)(8)“Mining” or “mining operation” means all or part of the process involved in the mining of metallic minerals, other than for exploration or prospecting, including commercial extraction, agglomeration, beneficiation, construction of roads, removal of overburden, and the production of refuse.
107.30(9)(9)“Mining company” means any person who, either directly or through subsidiaries, affiliates, contractors or other business arrangements, engages in prospecting, mining, refining or smelting.
107.30(10)(10)“Mining damage appropriation” means the appropriation under s. 20.165 (2) (a).
107.30(11)(11)“Mining site” means the surface or subsurface area disturbed by a mining operation, including the surface or subsurface area from which the minerals or refuse or both have been removed, the surface or subsurface area covered by the refuse, all lands disturbed by the construction or improvement of haulageways, and any surface or subsurface areas in which structures, equipment, materials and any other things used in the mining operation are situated.
107.30(12)(12)“Mining waste” means wastes directly resulting from or displaced by prospecting or mining and from the cleaning, preparation, separation or purification of minerals or metals during prospecting, mining, concentrating, refining or smelting operations and includes but is not limited to concentrator tailings, refinery and smelter residue, refining and smelting process emissions, mining overburden and waste treatment sludges, materials in process and salvageable by-products.
107.30(13)(13)“Mining-related injury” means death or injury to person or property caused by:
107.30(13)(a)(a) Environmental pollution from emissions, seepages, leakages or other discharges from mine excavations in this state or of or from mining waste in this state; or
107.30(13)(b)(b) Substantial surface subsidence from mine excavations in this state.
107.30(14)(14)“Ore” means a mineral which may be mined and processed for sale.
107.30(15)(15)“Prospecting” means engaging in the examination of an area for the purpose of determining the quality and quantity of minerals, other than for exploration but including the obtaining of an ore sample, by such physical means as excavating, trenching, construction of shafts, ramps, and tunnels and other means, other than for exploration, which the department of natural resources, by rule, identifies, and the production of prospecting refuse and other associated activities. “Prospecting” does not include such activities when the activities are, by themselves, intended for and capable of commercial exploitation of the underlying ore body. The fact that prospecting activities and construction may have use ultimately in mining, if approved, does not mean that prospecting activities and construction constitute mining within the meaning of sub. (8), provided such activities and construction are reasonably related to prospecting requirements.
107.30(16)(16)“Prospecting site” means the lands on which prospecting is actually conducted as well as those lands on which physical disturbance will occur as a result of such activity.
107.30(17)(17)“Refinery and smelter residue” means waste material resulting from the refining or smelting of concentrates.
107.30(18)(18)“Refining” means the process by which metal or valuable mineral is extracted and purified from an ore or concentrate and includes but is not limited to hydrometallurgical operations such as leaching and pyrometallurgical operations such as fire refining, roasting and cindering.
107.30(19)(19)“Salvageable by-products” includes but is not limited to coarse tailings and other materials, other than concentrates, resulting from the mining operation which are useful and for which a market or use exists or is anticipated to exist.
107.30(20)(20)“Smelting” means any metallurgical operation in which metal is separated by fusion from those impurities with which it may be chemically combined or physically mixed such as in ores.
107.30(21)(21)“Subsidence” means the sinking down of a part of the earth’s crust, including the surface, due to underground excavations or workings.
107.31107.31Claims against mining damage appropriation.
107.31(1)(1)Administration. The department shall establish by rule procedures for the submission, review, settlement and determination of claims against the mining damage appropriation under this section. The rules shall include procedures for the proration of awards made under this section when the awards exceed the balance in the mining damage appropriation.
107.31(2)(2)Who may file claim; notice.
107.31(2)(a)(a) Any person may make a claim against the mining damage appropriation to recover damages for mining-related injuries.
Loading...
Loading...
2023-24 Wisconsin Statutes updated through all Supreme Court and Controlled Substances Board Orders filed before and in effect on January 1, 2025. Published and certified under s. 35.18. Changes effective after January 1, 2025, are designated by NOTES. (Published 1-1-25)