DEP Awards $1.65 Million In Mine Mapping Grants

Gov. Tom Corbett Friday announced the Department of Environmental Protection has awarded $1.65 million in Mine Map Grants to seven recipients, including six of the state’s universities.

The grants were awarded to--

-- California University of Pennsylvania, $85,934;

-- Eastern Pennsylvania Coalition for Abandoned Mine Reclamation, $321,968;

-- Harrisburg Area Community College, $122,101;

-- Harrisburg University of Science and Technology, $299,534;

-- Indiana University of Pennsylvania Research Institute, $484,631;

-- Saint Vincent College, $110,832; and

-- University of Pittsburgh, $225,000.

“These grants create an important partnership with higher education, develop a skilled workforce for the energy sector, and continue to ensure a safe working environment for Pennsylvania’s miners,” Corbett said.

The Mine Map Grant Program provides funding to learning institutions and incorporated nonprofit organizations to process mine maps and mine data into electronic formats that can be used in Geographic Information Systems and other computer applications. The grants will also provide funding for mine map and document restoration and preservation.

The grant-funded projects will georeference 7,200 maps, digitize 3,100 maps, scan 26,900 maps, and restore or preserve 259 maps.

Once the maps are digitized, they will be uploaded to DEP’s Mine Map Atlas—an online database of more than 15,000 mine maps that allows users to search for an area based on an address or latitude and longitude. Users can view the atlas from three perspectives: terrain, topographic or bird’s-eye.

The projects funded by the Mine Map Grant Program will enhance the quality, quantity and delivery of mining information to the millions of residents living in Pennsylvania's mining regions. The grant program also gives learning institutions and nonprofits the opportunity to train individuals in the use of the emerging geospatial technologies.

The Mine Map Grant Program is financed by Pennsylvania Surface Mining Conservation and Reclamation Act funds, which come from coal mining license and permit fees and penalties, as well as state Mine Subsidence Insurance funds and the Acid Mine Drainage Abatement Fund.

For more information, visit DEP’s Mine Map Grants webpage.


7/1/2013

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