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Once the exchange is completed, "all the applicable laws follow," Gosar said. Rep. Raul Grijalva, D-Ariz., said the environmental review should be conducted now, when the U.S. government has the most leverage over the project. Once land that now is part of the Tonto National Forest is turned over to private control, the government's ability to require changes and enforce the law "is really limited at best," he said. Separately, Grijalva and other Democrats complained that under current law, the mining company will not have to pay any royalties to the U.S. government for lucrative mineral rights that could be worth tens of billions of dollars. Grijalva called the mining proposal one of the most significant issues Congress has faced this year. "A foreign-owned company doing business on U.S. public lands is basically getting a blank check on extraction (of copper) and a green light from Congress to go ahead and begin this without any return on the money," he said. Jon Cherry, a vice president of Resolution Copper, said in a statement that he was optimistic the House will approve the land exchange. Over the life of the project, the mine could generate as much as $61 billion in economic benefit for Arizona "without the need for one dollar of federal stimulus," Cherry said.
[Associated
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