Project to Provide Cleaner Water, Better Wildlife Habitat

Rocky Mountain Elk Foundation secures grant to clean up acid-mine drainage on game lands.

Work has begun on a reclamation project at State Game Lands 100 in Centre County, an initiative that will improve water quality, cleanse wetlands and establish wildlife habitat. The project is made possible by the Game Commission’s partnership with the Rocky Mountain Elk Foundation, which secured a more than $1 million grant for the work from the state Department of Environmental Protection.
Work has begun on a reclamation project at State Game Lands 100 in Centre County, an initiative that will improve water quality, cleanse wetlands and establish wildlife habitat. The project is made possible by the Game Commission’s partnership with the Rocky Mountain Elk Foundation, which secured a more than $1 million grant for the work from the state Department of Environmental Protection.
Pennsylvania Game Commission
Pennsylvania Game Commission

Harrisburg, PA -(AmmoLand.com)- An abandoned coal mine that has been seeping harmful acid drainage into waterways on and downstream of state game lands is being cleaned up with a grant from the state Department of Environmental Protection.

Work has begun on a reclamation project on State Game Lands 100 in Snowshoe Township, Centre County. The project is funded through the Growing Greener Watershed Protection program with a $1,003,139 grant sponsored by the Rocky Mountain Elk Foundation. Acid mine drainage is a major problem for water quality in the bituminous coal fields of Pennsylvania. It is a result of past unregulated coal mining, and mines that never were reclaimed to restore habitat.

The acid mine drainage on State Game Lands 100 discharges into Contrary Run, which is a tributary to Beech Creek.

The project will reclaim the abandoned mine land and neutralize the acidic water in Contrary Run by adding a limestone filter to passively treat the water discharging into the stream.

Berner Construction Inc., a Women Business Enterprise located in Gap, Pa., was awarded the construction contract through a competitive bid process. The project will include reclamation of 40 acres of abandoned mine land with 3,300 linear feet of dangerous highwalls. These highwalls are steep, exposed cliffs that create unsafe conditions for people and wildlife. The high-quality grassland to be established as part of the reclamation will provide excellent habitat for elk, white-tailed deer, turkeys and other game and nongame species.

The project area is adjacent to several other previously abandoned mine areas that recently were reclaimed, resulting in over 180 acres of improved wildlife habitat.

Due to the many habitat-improvement projects, an expanding elk herd exists on State Game Lands 100 and surrounding areas. For the first time in modern history, the Game Commission issued five elk hunting licenses in 2015 for the hunt zone including State Game Lands 100, resulting in the successful harvest of two bull elk.

The Rocky Mountain Elk Foundation is dedicated to ensuring the future of elk, other wildlife, their habitat and our hunting heritage. For over 25 years, RMEF has been an important conservation partner in Pennsylvania’s elk management program by funding the preservation or enhancement of nearly 21,000 acres of valuable habitat in the north central region.

As a 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization, RMEF was able to apply for and receive the grant through which the work is being done.
More information on RMEF is available at www.rmef.org.

The project was designed and is being managed by Alder Run Engineering LLC, with oversight from the Centre County Conservation District and DEP. Construction and revegetation of the site should be completed in 2016.

About Pennsylvania Game Commission:

For more than 100 years, the Game Commission has managed the Commonwealth’s wildlife resources for all Pennsylvanians. With the help of more than 700 full-time employees and thousands of part-timers and volunteers, the agency provides a host of benefits to wildlife, state residents and visitors.

For more information, visit: www.pgc.state.pa.us.