Wolfden Announces Denial of Pickett Project Rezoning Application

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TORONTO, ON / ACCESSWIRE / February 15, 2024 / Wolfden Resources Corporation (WLF.V) ("Wolfden" or the "Company") announces that the Maine Land Use Planning Commission (the "LUPC" or "Commission") denied the request by Wolfden and Franklin County to delay final action on the Company's Pickett Project rezoning application until all 9 of the LUPC Commissioners could participate. Instead, 5 of the 7 commissioners in attendance at the meeting voted to deny the application. The vote is contrary the comprehensive assessment prepared by LUPC staff in support of the deliberative session held on December 13, 2023. That document summarized the record evidence and, on every key issue concluded that the evidence weighed in favor of a rezoning approval (see the appendix of that document).

"We are very disappointed in the outcome and that the final decision is at odds with the prior comprehensive staff assessment and the conclusions reached by independent experts hired by the Commission to review the application," stated Ron Little, President and CEO for Wolfden. "Instead, the staff was directed to draft a recommended decision document to deny the project - a decision that is not substantiated by the evidence in the record."

The comments by the Presiding Officer and Commission Chair at the time of the October 2023 hearing are informative and instructive. He stated that he feared the LUPC decision was being made on the basis of environmental impacts and standards that are meant to be applied by the Department of Environmental Protection (DEP) in the mining permit application process, and not the standards that govern the LUPC rezoning process. He also stated that the LUPC has a high turnover of limited personnel who do not have the depth and knowledge to make decisions about environmental impacts whereas the DEP has 350 employees who do this for a living. Until such time there is a clear differentiation of duties as to which of the two regulators are charged with making environmental decisions on a mining project, no mining company is likely to apply to rezone land in the Unorganized Territory of Maine for mining.

The Commission is made up of 9 volunteers, of which one is appointed by the Governor and the other 8 are put forward by the County Commissioners of the 8 counties that host the majority of the ~10 million acres that represent the Unorganized Territory. This large relatively unpopulated area represents roughly half the State and is comprised of large privately owned timber land tracts, cottages and camps, except for those few areas designated as state lands and parks or rezoned for other uses. Wolfden owns its 7,135 acre plot that is adjacent to a Town (township) boundary that voted in support of the project.