Title 30 › Chapter 25— SURFACE MINING CONTROL AND RECLAMATION › Subchapter II— OFFICE OF SURFACE MINING RECLAMATION AND ENFORCEMENT › § 1211
Creates the Office of Surface Mining Reclamation and Enforcement inside the Department of the Interior. The Office must have a Director picked by the President and approved by the Senate, paid at the rate for level V of the Executive Schedule under section 5315 of title 5. The Director will have the staff needed. Under section 5108 of title 5, the Director of the Office of Personnel Management must decide how many General Schedule positions at grades 16, 17, and 18 are needed and give those positions to the Secretary. Employees must be hired for their skill and ability. The Office can use other federal employees on a reimbursable basis, but it cannot take over programs whose purpose is to promote coal or to regulate miner health and safety under the Federal Coal Mine Health and Safety Act of 1969. The Secretary, through the Office, must run the federal surface coal mining and reclamation programs. That includes approving or rejecting State programs, inspecting sites, holding hearings, issuing orders (including stop-work orders), and suspending or revoking permits for violations. The Office must make rules, run State grant programs, buy and reclaim abandoned mines, support research and demonstration projects, keep studies and a public information center, help States set rules and decide areas unsuitable for mining, coordinate with other agencies to avoid duplicate work, and recommend research to Congress. The Director may not use mine-inspection staff covered by the 1969 Act unless the Director publishes a finding that it will not interfere with those inspections. No Office employee may have a financial interest in mining; violators face a fine up to $2,500, imprisonment up to one year, or both. Within 60 days after August 3, 1977, the Director must publish rules for monitoring and enforcing the financial-interest ban and must report on actions in the annual report. After the Secretary’s rules are in place, anyone may petition the Director to start a rulemaking; the Director must grant or deny the petition within 90 days and explain denials in writing.
Full Legal Text
Mineral Lands and Mining — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
30 U.S.C. § 1211
Title 30 — Mineral Lands and Mining
Last Updated
Apr 5, 2026
Release point: 119-73not60