Southern Empire Updates Permitting Status for its Oro Cruz Project in California

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TSX-V: SMP
OTC: SMPEF
Frankfurt: 5RE 

VANCOUVER, BC, Jan. 16, 2024 /CNW/ - Southern Empire Resources Corp. (Southern Empire) (TSXV: SMP) announces that subsequent to approval by the Imperial County Planning Commission (ICPC) at a hearing held on January 10, 2024, its subsidiary, SMP Gold Corp., has received a Notice of Determination approving the Reclamation Plan for the Oro Cruz Project Exploration Plan of Operations (the Plan) that governs the proposed exploration drill program at its wholly-owned Oro Cruz Project located in Imperial County, California.

Southern Empire Resources Corp. Logo (CNW Group/Southern Empire Resources Corp.)
Southern Empire Resources Corp. Logo (CNW Group/Southern Empire Resources Corp.)

"Having previously received federal approvals from the U.S. Bureau of Land Management pursuant to the National Environmental Policy Act on September 1, 2023, the recent approval of the Oro Cruz Project Reclamation Plan by the Imperial County Planning Commission, the lead agency for permitting related to the California Environmental Quality Act, is a major step forward for Southern Empire. We look forward to drilling the high-grade, oxide gold zone of the Oro Cruz Cross Mine from which gold was last produced in 1996. I would like to especially thank our staff and consultants for their commitment to the Oro Cruz Project permitting process and our shareholders for their continued patience" commented Dale Wallster, Southern Empire's CEO.

The Plan proposes that SMP Gold Corp. conduct mineral exploration drilling activities (the Proposed Action) requiring up to 8.31 hectares (ha; 20.54 acres) of surface disturbance on, primarily, previously mined and disturbed land administered and managed by the United States Department of the Interior's Bureau of Land Management (BLM). The proposed temporary drill pads, operational staging site and access routes occur within an encompassing 253 ha (626 acre) Project Area (as defined in the Plan) located in the southwest corner of the 184,000-acre Picacho Area of Critical Environmental Concern, the latter designated to include important biological habitats, indigenous peoples' cultural sites and the historic Cargo Muchacho - Tumco Mining District. The Proposed Action is within areas previously disturbed by the historical American Girl Mining Joint Venture operations, which concluded in 1996 as gold prices declined and ultimately bottomed at US $251.70 in August of 1999.

Highlights of the Plan include:  

  • Establishment of up to 65 drill pads in seven drill target areas

  • Reverse Circulation (RC) and/or core drilling of up to 65 drill holes

  • Improvement and construction of temporary access roads

  • Creation of a staging area at the Cross Mine underground portal for infrastructure required to support future underground drill programs.