The Murder of Mario Wesley in Timmins Still Unsolved

As 2014 draws to an end, the murder of Mario Wesley in Timmins remains unsolved. Last April, I wrote one of my “A Northern Blogs” about my friend Mario Wesley titled “Mario Wesley Sculptor and Musician Battles Personal Demons.” I never posted it on A Northern Blog and only recently discovered it in my draft unpublished blogs. Mario never had a chance to defeat his demons. He was murdered on July 28, 2014. The first murder of the year in Timmins.

Five months later the Timmins Police still have not charged anyone with Mario’s murder. I understand that the Timmins Police are taking Mario’s murder seriously and have followed strands of leads all the way to Attawapiskat, where a police investigator traveled to question potential witnesses. Sources close to the Wesley family tell me Timmins police have questioned over 200 people who Mario knew and associated with…but nothing has led to the laying of criminal charges so far.

mario-wesleyShortly after Mario’s funeral, Timmins police placed posters around town of Mario playing a guitar and asked anyone with leads into Mario’s death to get in contact with them or with CrimeStopper. Officers also visited the Lord’s Kitchen, a community kitchen in the basement of the old Church of the Nativity on Spruce St. North where Mario used to meet his friends for a meal once a week.

Here is the Timmins Daily Press story reporting on Mario’s murder http://www.timminspress.com/2014/07/31/tps-probes-first-murder-of-2014

As we end a very sad and empty 2014 I certainly hope that police continue to work hard on solving Mario’s murder. Mario like all of us had his demons and I believe he would have conquered them. I know his daughters want the person or persons who murdered their father apprehended and brought to trial.

Mario Wesley Sculptor and Musician Battles Personal Demons

Here is the blog I wrote in April, 2014, that I posted on my Facebook page, but didn’t add to A Northern Blog until now.

“Artists and musicians are doomed to be cast in many instances as tormented souls who see and interpret the craziness of the world for the so-called sane majority. Mario Wesley my friend originally from Moosonee would fall into this definition. A man who is beset by hosts of personal demons, some inflicted by his early years of being abused in residential school, others being caused by his alcoholism which he battles successfully for a brief period…and when he does he produces such a beautiful song such as this one…”First Love”.

Mario is also a talented sculptor, working in soapstone. I purchased one of his sculptures and donated it to the Ojibway Cree Cultural Centre where it belongs for all to see and appreciate. Now Mario is afflicted with glaucoma and is legally blind. I wish he could beat his demons and continue writing songs and sculpting. Last Time I saw him he told me he had stopped drinking. I hope to set up an Artists Table at Timmins Urban Park this summer and am encouraging Mario to focus on his sculpting. He will sell many of his works, that I am sure, although with his glaucoma getting worse it will be increasingly more difficult for Mario to sculpt.

As for music, we will have our Friday afternoon open mic at Urban Park and I hope to encourage Mario to get up and sing his songs.

Gallery Owner in Thunder Bay Liked Mario’s Sculptures

Today, I got a comment on Mario Wesley’s First Love Video which is posted on my you tube site from a gallery owner named Louise in Thunder Bay, Ontario who was searching for Mario because she liked his sculptures. Maybe we can get Mario sculpting again and perhaps Louise in Thunder Bay can be sent a few to display in her gallery…I am sure Mario could use some of the proceeds of the sales.

Here is “First Love” By Mario Wesley recorded in September 2011 by Gillies Lake…unfortunately the ending is kind of bumpy as my editing skills failed me….I hope you enjoy this nonetheless.”

The Benefits of Being Late: The Christmas Bird Count and One Degree of Separation

DSC04999Today was Christmas Bird Counting Day in Timmins. As usual I woke up too late to join the others at 7:30 a.m. so I went out around 10 a.m. and drifted to the general location where they were to be counting that was a 24 sq.km area with Highway 101-Highway 655 being the centre point. I walked to that intersection and then headed along a snow mobile trail… I counted 8 crows…more, but I think they were the same old crows circle over the President’s Choice parking lot. I then walked up a trail and ended up at the home of a local doctor where I counted 4 chickadees at his feeder…could have been more his two dogs were barking at me and scared the little chickadees…the doctor came out and was quite friendly, he got his binoculars from the house and pointed out the pine grosbeak with its splendid red and black plumage.
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And the a common redpoll…. smallish pudgy bird with a red splotch under its beak settled on the same tree a couple of branches below.DSC_0010

As it turned out the doctor’s daughter launched her book of photographs about Timmins at Timmins Voices…as I always say in Timmins there is one degree of separation. My photo of the pine grosbeak is the distant one…the excellent photos of the pine grosbeak and the common red poll are photos I took of the Audubon Bird Guide. Followed by some frosty photos of Timmins. The last photo is of the freshly painted Timmins Water Tower.

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Christmas in the Timmins Mining Camp: A Special Time of the Year By Frank Giorno

As in other parts of Canada,Christmas in Timmins is a special time of the year. Past Christmas traditions are fondly held as shown by the theme of this year’s Santa Claus Parade – “Memories of Christmas Past.”

Christmas in Timmins, is a time to celebrate and share in the spirit of the season with family and friends. Among the traditions that find most delightful none can compare to the gift-giving traditions that have developed over the years.
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Gifts for the Children of Schumacher
One of the treasured Christmas traditions was introduced by Fred Schumacher, a travelling pharmaceutical salesman who eventually built Schumacher mines. Fred made several donations to the town which now bears his name over the years. Among these donations, the one which may be the best known part of his legacy is the $1,000 donated for presents each Christmas since 1916 for the school children of the town of Schumacher, which now is part of Timmins

The tradition continues today 98 years later. Schumacher left a trust fund for the children of Schumacher. Volunteers meet prior to Christmas at the Schumacher Volunteer Fire Department to wrap fits will be given to Schumacher school children at an event just before leaving for the Christmas holidays.

Hollinger Mine Christmas
The Hollinger Mine in Timmins started to provide Christmas hampers for mining families in the 1920s. This is a story that still has to be fully told.

In addition, Timmins service organizations like the Shriners, the Lions Club and the Rotary Club also organized fund-raising to help bring Christmas cheer to the Timmins community or to help with other charities.

The Christmas Bird Count

The Christmas Bird Count was started 114 years ago by the Audobon Society. The Timmins Naturalists introduced this Christmas event only 20 years ago but it has since become a cherished part of the festive season. Over the last 20 years there has been over 75 participants, over 400 volunteer hours spent and 45 species identified. For more information, visit http://www.timminslcc.org/CBCdata.htm .

A New Church
Christmas in 1926 was a particularly merry occasion for the parishioners of the Church of the Nativity as their new church opened on December 23, 1926. Today the Church is better known as the Father Costello Community Care Centre on Spruce St. N.

Bucovetsky’s Christmas
Bucovetsky’s was the place that Timmins shopped for Christmas gifts and ornaments. Every Christmas the store was festooned with Christmas goodies and gift ideas. Walking by and gazing at Bucovetsky’s Christmas window was a cherished Timmins tradition. Sadly, this year, Tweed and Hickory, the successor to Bucovetsky’s will close its door just before Christmas bring an end to a cherished institution and tradition.Santa2_ORIGINAL

The Santa Claus Parade
The Timmins Santa Claus Parade Committee annually draws between 12,000 to 15,000 people to the Santa Claus Parade an event held the first or second weekend in November. The parade traditionally attracts more than 50 or 60 entries each year.

Christmas from Around the World in Timmins
Being a mining town, Timmins attracted people from all over the world to work in the mines or to provide services for the communities. Many of these communities celebrated with their families in their traditional ways that they brought with them from England, Ireland, Scotland, Italy, Poland, Finland, Russia, Ukraine, and Croatia, Serbian, Germany and other locations. Often the celebrations included a service at the local church in their native language.

Here is how you say Merry Christmas in Timmins and in some cases Happy New Year too!

English – Merry Christmas & Happy New Year
French – “Joyeux Noël et Bonne Anneé”
Cree – Mino Makoshay Keyshegow and Mino Oh-ski Pay-boon
Ojibway – Minoganawaamdig Niibaanaamaang Miinwaa Nimkoodaading
Chinese – [Mandarin] – “Kung His Hsin Nien bing Chu Shen Tan”
Chinese – [Cantonese] – “Saint Dan Fai Lok”
Croatian – “Sretan Bozic i Nova Godina”
Filipino “Maligayang Pasko, Manigong Bagong Taon”
German – “Froehliche Weihnachten”
Hindi – “Shub Naya Baras”
Irish – “Nollaig Shona Dhuit”
Italian – Buon Natale e Buon Anno
Lithuanian – “Linksmu Kaledu”
Polish – “Wesolych Swiat, Bozego Narodzenia”
Portuguese – “Feliz Natal” “Boas Festas”(Good Holidays.)
Serbian – “Hristos se rodi”
Scottish Gaelic “Nollaig chridheil huibh”
Spanish – “Feliz Navidad”, “Feliz Año Nuevo”
Ukrainian – “Z Rizdvom Khrystovym!” – “Z Novym Rokom !” –
(Source http://xmasfun.com/Merry-Christmas-In-Other-Languages.aspx)

The Hobbit: The Battle of the Five Armies: “Gold and Cold” by Frank Giorno

Sitting in the warmth of theatre 3 in the Cinema 6 complex, watching the Timmins premiere of The Hobbit: The Battle of the Five Armies, I couldn’t help but think to myself – Timmins is the best place to watch this epic movie.

The movie opens to a massive, dragon-induced, firestorm reminiscent of the aerial bombings during World War 2. Flames of destruction everywhere. The Geneva Convention of middle-earth or its equivalent obviously had not banned such destructive weapon of mass-dragon destruction. Shortly after, the scene switches to a cavernous castle inhabited by the Dwarf-King, Thorin. The castle is knee deep..no make that hip deep in gold coins and gold treasures. With so much gold, I immediately thought of all the gold ever mined in Timmins and the Abitibi-Greenstone gold belt and imagined this is where it ended up.

Bilbo ankle deep in gold in the castle chambers

Bilbo ankle-deep in gold in the castle chambers

Gold plays such an important role in The Battle of the Five Armies –  as it does in Timmins and along the Abitibi-Greenstone Gold Belt in Northern Ontario and Quebec.

But that is not where the connection between The Battle of the Five Armies and Timmins ends. There is the cold…freezing, biting..bone chilling, cold. I thought of the walk from my apartment to the Cinema Six complex through a couple of feet of snow in -25 Celsius weather. Clear and cold…so clear I could see the Hunter up in the night sky – Orion. And now – there on the screen are the poor souls who had barely escaped the scorching hell of the fire-breathing dragon and such is luck that they would end up at the gates of Thorin’s mountain castle freezing in misery.

Gold and cold. The battle over the untold wealth of gold contained in the castle and the freezing mass of humanity outside the castle gate. Gold and cold. If someone were to name the two best words to describe the cities and towns of the Abitibi-Greenstone belt they would be “gold and cold”.

I really enjoyed the movie. Well-written, acted. The film held my interest and the fact I was watching this epic in the land of gold and cold added to the ambiance of the film. When the people at the gate were freezing I not only saw them trembling in the frigid land outside the castle gate — I felt it. When the camera panned on the endless gold…I thought of all the gold that has been mined up here only to end up vaults very similar to the gold-laden chambers of the castle or Fort Knox.

The real clincher for me was the Battle on Ice between King Thorin and the Orc commander. The two were battering each other all over  a frozen pond that reminded me of a frozen-over Pearl Lake or Gillies Lake. With each fracture of the ice’s surface, I thought of ice fishing and all the other frozen pleasures of the north.

I give this movie two mitts up! With all the gold and cold in the movie, I felt right at home.King Thorin, the Dwarf King, with a castle full of gold

King Thorin, the Dwarf King, with a castle full of gold

In Timmins There is One Degree of Separation: Wolf Man Joe LaFlamme, Author Suzanne F. Charron, Artist Charles Pachter and Me!

My daughter Sophie said I should layoff all the heavy political stuff…people don’t want to hear that crap. She insisted that people want to read about nothing…the ordinary nothingness about unimportant things that may be humorous or insightful. But as my son Giancarlo said when he was but five or six years old – “Dad even when you are doing nothing….you are doing something.”

Even Nothing is Something

So here I am once again caught in life’s complexity between my daughter’s wish for me to write about nothingness a la Jerry Seinfeld; and my son’s intuitive grasping at a very young age that even nothing is something.

In my quest for Northern Nothingness I am today posting a story… a sidebar…if you will to the story of “Wolf Man Joe LaFlamme” as told by Suzanne F. Charron at Timmins Voices in Christopher’s Coffee House on the evening of February 12, 2014 (which also happened to be my 59th birthday).

I learned this interesting fact listening to Suzanne Charron’s story. To most people this fact is probably a nothing piece of information…which for me and this blog is a good thing! I was amazed to learn from Suzanne’s talk about her book “Wolf Man Joe LaFlamme: Tamer Untamed” (Scrivener Press- http://www.scrivenerpress.com ) that well-known Canadian painter Charles Pachter was inspired by Wolf Man Joe LaFlamme.

Suzanne Charron at Timmins Voices, Feb.12, 2014

I was literally floored when Suzanne started talking about renowned Canadian artist Charles Pachter being influenced by Joe LaFlamme. Pachter’s art includes the insertion of moose onto his canvas. His studio is affectionately called the Moose Factory. For more info on Charles Pachter http://www.cpachter.com/

… here is the coincidence. Pachter is the cousin of my high school chum Ted Sanders at whose place I stay when visiting Toronto these days while I live in Timmins and engage in searching for Northern Nothingness.

One Degree of Separation

This fact solidified my belief that in Timmins there exists only one degree of separation. In large urban centres like Toronto or New York City, the ratio increases to six degrees of separation.

Early last year I actually spoke with Charles over the phone. I still haven’t met Charles, but intend to visit his studio/gallery when I return to Toronto shortly. The internationally renowned artist, Charles Pachter, painted the infamous Montreal Canadien/Toronto Maple Leaf players at the Toronto College Subway Station; you know the one where Leaf owner Harold Ballard refused the use of the words “Toronto Maple Leafs” on the maple leaf logo. Pachter also painted the famous painting of Queen Elizabeth riding a moose.

I listened to Suzanne Charron tell the Christopher Coffee House crowd that young Charles Pachter met Joe LaFlamme when he was 4 years old while Joe was at the Sportsmens Show in Toronto back in 1947. She even included a photo of young Charles and the Wolf Man and his moose in her book. See below for the photo.

That meeting with LaFlamme and his moose impacted Charles Pachter so much that moose have been an inspiration in his art work all his life. By the way those Ontario road signs showing Moose Crossing were also designed by Pachter. I am all to familiar with those signs driving the roads north of the watershed divide. They can be life savers reminding drivers to be alert and watch for moose darting across the highway usually during twilight or dawn.

But this one degree of separation happens all the time in Timmins…if the person you are talking to doesn’t know or isn’t connected to the other person you speak of – the next person will know them.

Wolf Man Joe LaFlamme an Excellent Example of Northern Literature

The goal of Timmins Voices and Northern Voices Journal is to develop and promote Northern literature. Well, you can’t find a better example of contemporary Northern writing than Suzanne Charron’s “Wolf Man Joe LaFlamme:Tamer Untamed.”

I bought the book and so should you…it is an amazing story. A true story that is stranger than fiction. And that reminds me that in the pre-television era the public had an intense desire to hear about the bizarre, the outlandish, the unusual, the larger-than-life and Wolf Man Joe LaFlamme certainly fits that description.
I’m sure young Charles Pachter felt the same way when he met the Wolf Man – that he was in the presence of a larger than life character.

In that era you had the likes of Robert Ripley galloping the globe looking for exotic stories to amaze the public through the popular Ripley’s Believe it or Not. Suzanne Charron illustrates in her book that ..Wolf Man Joe LaFlamme definitely fits in that Believe It or Not mold.

Psst…Listen to This!

By the way and don’t tell this to my daughter Sophie…but I still do believe we do need to be politically aware and involved…I do agree with political philosopher Edmund Burke who wrote “Evil grows in the world when good people stand by and do nothing.” For my politically charged blogs please visit

http://www.wallywatch.wordpress.com

http://www.franklyspokenfrank.wordpress.com

Until next time

And like my son Giancarlo says…”Even Nothing is Something”….Got that Jerry Seinfeld?
Wishing you Sweet Nothings…on this February 14 Valentines Day 2014

For Further Information

For further information on Suzanne Charron and her Timmins appearances see the following sites:

For Timmins Voices please click this link http://www.facebook.com/timminsvoices

For Nabi-Alexandre’s interview with Suzanne Charron and myself please click on this link
http://www.radio-canada.ca/util/postier/suggerer-go.asp?nID=1173112

For Kyle Gennings promo of his coverage of Suzanne Charron at Timmins Voices
http://northernontario.ctvnews.ca/video?&binId=1.1142313

I will post the link to CTV’s full report Suzanne Charron’s Timmins Voices appearance as soon as it is available

Two Other Timmins Events For Suzanne Charron

She also told her story of Joe LaFlamme at the Book Bin http://www.bookz.ca/ – Timmins’ best book store– the morning of Feb.13th and the Timmins Public Library on the afternoon of Feb.13th (http://tpl.timmins.ca/).

Charles Pachter_4 yr old with Joe LaFlamme

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My Quest For Northern Nothingness…My Blog about Nothing

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I’m trying to write about nothing, as my daughter Sophie insists this is what people want to read about and not my long, boring political diatribes. So here is my first Blog About Northern Nothingness – a sort of chilled-out, frozen-stiff version of Jerry Seinfeld. But Timmins is not New York City, where Seinfeld’s urban nothingness takes place. In fact, Timmins at 40,000 people, is about 300 times smaller than New York City’s population of nearly 12 million people.

However, I hazard to guess that the per capita cast of wacky characters may be about equal. There certainly are plenty of Cosmo Kramer goofball, free spirits up here. And I guess, I don’t have to look any further than myself to find the local George Costanza as I often remind people of George.

Elaine? Well there are a few up here who remind me of Elaine Benes…but mostly the women in Timmins are a bunch of zany, crazy, wild, northern, savage women – who have a very unconventional dimension to their persona…by the way there is even a Kathy Griffin type up here…remember Kathy Griffin? – the ditzy red-head who based her entire one-woman theatrical off-Broadway play on whatever Jerry happened to say as she hounded him and then incorporated ridiculing Jerry’s progressively angry responses into her next performances.

Well our little Kathy Griffin moment up here north of the watershed divide occurred when I naively accepted an invitation to go back to this savage Timmins female’s house. The house was nicely furnished in early frontier decor…you know moose head, bearskin rug….deer antler…lot of rough hewed wood furniture…quilts every where…it smelled like cedar.

Anyway, when Ms.X sat down next to me on the sofa, I started to massage her neck…the back of her neck to be exact. Much to my shock…she jumps about fifty feet away from me to the other side of the room and tells me she does not like that and she would prefer I stopped. Which I did.

Now comes the Kathy Griffin part….at my next Timmins Voices, a literary reading series I founded up here and held at Christopher’s Coffee House, Ms.X gets up to the open mic and begins her rant…”There are 4 people in Timmins who are trying to seduce me!” she shrieked.

Yikes…I cringed and slid down in my seat…this could prove to be embarrassing if she names names…I start crafting my defense..which really wasn’t that hard..as it is a long stretch to go from a brief neck massage to seduction, although I do admit the two are on the same continuum, and the thought did cross my mind. Damn thought-crime!

I searched the room to see if anyone was casting glances at me. Ms.X continued…”Why do men in Timmins always want to seduce me?!” The audience was laughing now with anticipation of names being belched out from this fire- breathing, relentless-ranter’s mouth; and a person whom I had permitted to rant at my own reading series open mic!
How about being hoisted by my own petard!

But Ms.X pulled back..holy coitus interuptus! Just as I thought I was going to be screwed…Ms.X didn’t spit out my name, or the names of any of her four, filthy seducers!

I went home that night and sent Ms.X an email….”Dear Ms.X: I hereby resign from ever wanting to seduce you. Next time you give your rant please say there are only three men trying to seduce you.”

I heard nothing from Ms.X for a week; and then I received an email from her….”Frank, just to let you know there are now no men trying to seduce me” she said,”the other three resigned as well….”.

I guess the other three must have been at Christopher’s Coffee House that night at Timmins Voices and also dreaded being outed as disgusting, Timmins seducers and they too also resigned.

Now Ms. X can roam the streets of Timmins, free of those constant nagging, attempts by depraved men trying to seduce her.

I hope this story is sufficiently nothing enough to quench people’s desire to read stories about nothing as my literary adviser, my daughter Sophie, insists…so instead of my usual, long winded political diatribes against Toronto Mayor Rob Ford, Prime Minister Stephen Harper and Canada Post, LOL, I will continue writing about Northern Nothingness. I actually enjoyed writing about nothing.

Stay tuned for my next Blog About Northern Nothing. I think I am getting the hang about writing about nothing…well not exactly nothing, because as my son Giancarlo,the philosopher, realized when he was only five or six and I am paraphrasing his quote…”Dad, even when you are writing about nothing, you still are still writing about something.” I wonder if Seinfeld ever figured that out?

Mayor Ford’s Job Is to be an Ambassador for Toronto, Represent Toronto and Bring the Best Face of Toronto Forward to the World

Well bully boy, Mayor Rob Ford after months of lying…what is it with Conservatives and lying??…it is almost a requirement to be a liar in order to be a Conservative; anyway Rob Ford finally has admitted what everyone who has any sense of the man’s history knew was the case right from the start. Mayor Ford is a troubled man, a bully, but like most bullies, his behaviour is deeply rooted in his dysfunctional life.

But there is a chance for Mayor Ford to save himself and to blaze a trail for other substance abusers to follow…if he does the right thing and resigns to seek treatment Rob Ford will have performed his best feat while in public service. His actions will tell all other deniers that it is OK to get treatment.

What is it about Rob Ford? Well, he is a spoiled brat, son of privilege who grew up and became an unrelenting bully who has favoured cutting spending to programs designed to assist the poor and the needy. It is so easy for a wealthy man to advocate small government and deep spending cuts. It is easy for Mayor Ford with his hundreds of millions that he inherited from his father’s fortune can live with small government. Many of us do not have the luck of being born into such a wealthy family. We look to our services to help us

His daddy the late Doug Ford Snr. built up an empire in the fashion label industry called Deco Label which is worth about $100 million dollars a year in sales.http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rob_Ford .  Neither Rob or his equally ne’er do well older brother Doug Ford Jr. have actually done anything worthwhile in their lives that doesn’t involve Deco Labels.

It seems that the two Ford brothers spent their high school years hanging out with drug dealers and thugs like Lino Basso and Alessandro Lisi who are still possibly still supply the Mayor with drugs and or other nefarious services. Lisi has recently been charged with extortion as he tried to recover the tape that Ford said didn’t exist.

Ford wanted to be a professional football player but failed despite his daddy expending thousands, tens of thousands to send Robbie to a special training camp with the Washington Redskin. Actually love of NFL football is something the Mayor and I have in common. I too love football and played football for the Oakwood Collegiate Barons in the early 1970s. Ford went to Carelton University but he never finished his undergraduate degree.

He pleaded guilty to driving under the influence in Florida in 1999.In 2006 while he was a Councillor, he was drunk and disorderly at a Toronto Maple Leaf game and in a familiar pattern of lies and deceptions strenuously lied and denied he was even at the game. He attacked the Toronto Star for picking on him. But later in the week he fessed up…the media reports were right. Yes it was he and he apologized for his behaviour. After he was elected Mayor his behaviour changed for the worst…more and more reports of drunken excesses at the Garrison reception at Fort York; while strolling down Greektown during Taste of the Danforth and then infamous video of him smoking crack. Perhaps it is the unbearable pressure of being Mayor of Toronto. But Rob Ford has deteriorated and been embolden in his substance abuse. I believe Mayor can no longer effectively be the Mayor of Toronto. From my days studying municipal politics at York University I know that Toronto has a weak mayor system. That means the Mayor has only one vote and his leadership is based on his ability to work with council and lead by persuasion. The position is also largely ceremonial. The Mayor is the face and soul of Toronto. His prestige and reputation are vital for him or her to lead trade delegations, receive distinguished guests to Toronto and speak on behalf of the city at various national and international forums. Mayor Ford may be partially right that he was elected to do a job…cut government. In this he is a “one trick pony” that is his only schtick…but it is not his only duty as Mayor. If Rob Ford was to be given a job appraisal he would be found unfit to continue as Mayor. Ford cannot fulfill his role as Mayor as described above.

Help Mayor Rob Ford leave the office of Mayor with dignity, before the police come in the middle of the day and arrest him from breaking the Criminal Code of Canada….Please go to this site and urge Mayor Ford to resign and get help… http://www1.toronto.ca/wps/portal/contentonly?vgnextoid=615332d0b6d1e310VgnVCM10000071d60f89RCRD

Here is what I said to Mayor Rob Ford in my email to the Mayor’s Office.

http://youtu.be/5-NlR54PqLw
Hey Mayor Ford…. Check out this video by the Eagles who are playing in Toronto…I hope they play Lyin’ Eyes…because Mayor Ford you definitely have Lyin’ Eyes..do the right thing sir…resign get help take care of your health..you own a company worth $100 Million dollars…you don’t need politics and we certainly don’t need your sullied performance..do the right thing leave go to rehab and maybe come back and run for MPP in Etobicrack Centre… I lived in Toronto for 52 years the last 10 at Tiffany Place on the corner of Wincott and Dixon. I was on the board of director of our condo board….we dealt with the crud of drug dealers in the four sisters across the street at 320, 340, 360 and 380 Dixon…I had no idea your pals were among the drug dealers who caused so much mayhem in my old Neigbourhood..who knew? and the dry cleaner at the Wincott Plaza?? I never would have guessed he was dealing dope too….so I do not have much respect for you as a politician and drug abuser/alcohol abuser..but as a human being I am ready to support and embrace your effort to do the right thing and resign and get treatment… you likely will be charged with a criminal offense because smoking crack cocaine is a violation of our Criminal Code. The police investigation may also uncover other crimes you may have committed during those envelope exchanges with Alessandro Lisi..do you want to be in office when that hammer comes down?…hey listen resign…come up north to Timmins…the air is good up here…there is a lot of natural beauty and some good rehab centres like Jubilee Centre and others…if you are interested here is an overview of the services the Jubilee Centre provides.

“Jubilee Centre Timmins, Ontario
http://www.jubileecentre.ca/

Welcome to the website of the Jubilee Centre in Timmins, Ontario where we motivate optimal lifestyles. Our substance abuse & concurrent disorders treatment centre offers many programs and services with a strong focus on concurrent disorders.

The residential program is a 23 day long and is offered to clients sixteen years and older who are experiencing problems with substance use and/or concurrent disorders.

The day treatment is a community program which is approximately 16 days in length, spread over a 23 day period. This program is offered to clients sixteen years of age and over who are experiencing problems with substance use and/or concurrent disorders.

The maintenance program is held once a week for ten weeks. The program is open ended therefore clients can enter at any time. The program is offered to clients sixteen years of age and over who have completed a residential, day or any community treatment program.

The safe bed program is a short-term residential crisis support service which includes crisis support, case management, supportive housing and court support. This service is offerered to clients sixteen years and older who are developing unstable addictions, concurrent disorders, mental health symptoms (ie: relapse/crisis episode) who may also have come into conflict with the law.”

Mayor Ford I wish you would do the right thing…you can be a role model for many people out there who are struggling with similar substance abuse issues…you can get involved and be a proud leader of recovery and rehabilitation.

I will stand by you….and so will the community.

But if you keep on clinging to power..like that disgraced mayor of San Diego you will humiliated unmercifully in public, on TV, on the web and in private discourse…thing of what all this is doing to your family…resign. Do the right thing.

Do the right..get help call the Jubilee Centre or some other rehab facility be a leader make a difference…

My prayers are with you Mayor Ford. May you go to rehab. Please, please do not follow the sad tragic path of the late Amy Winehouse
http://youtu.be/KUmZp8pR1uc who sang that she would never go to rehab….please Mayor Ford go to Rehab and make your family and Toronto proud of you.

Frank Giorno
formerly of Tiffany Place,11 Wincott Dr. #204 Etobicoke,Image Ontario
presently 18 Grant St. Timmins P0N 1G0

KWG Mining Partners with Bold Ventures on Black Horse Deposit

Finally, after a month’s absence, I’ve returned to post the following article about KWG Resources and their exploration program in the Ring of Fire. The month was spent productively researching and writing articles for the March Issue of Mining Life and Exploration News Magazine, which will be released at the Prospectors and Developers Association of Canada Convention. http://www.pdac.ca/pdac/conv/

The stories I wrote in January will be appearing on A Northern Blog shortly…

Mining Life and Exploration News will also be launching an online site with the latest news and features from the world of mining….stay tuned. http://mininglifeonline.net/

Glenn Dredhart the publisher of Mining Life and Exploration News also puts on The Canadian Mining Expo the largest mining industry show in Northern Ontario http://www.canadianminingexpo.com/

As for this story- the top part of the story is original and published here for the very first time. The second part of the story appears courtesy of Glenn Dredhart and Mining Life and Exploration News Magazine.

Please let me know what you think of the article and your comments are always welcome.

KWG Resources Signs Agreement with Bold Ventures Inc. to Fund Drilling Program at Black Horse Chromite Discovery  Site

By Frank Giorno

KWG Resources is the third company in the Ring of Fire that has advanced the most towards exploration of mineral potential and  towards finishing its feasibility studies and environmental assessment studies. Along with Cliff Natural Resources and Noront Resources,  KWG Resources Inc. (KWG) has found major sources of chromite at its Big Daddy property.

KWG-Bold Ventures  Agreement to Explore Black Horse Site  for Chromite

However a recent announcement made on February 4, 2013 could be a game changer. KWG Resources and Bold Ventures Incorporated – a fast rising exploration company – announced an agreement that will see Bold Ventures drill the Black Horse chromite discovery in the Ring of Fire, starting as soon as the transaction with Bold Ventures Inc. closes.

KWG_Bold Ventures_Coper Lake

The intent of the program is to determine whether this  chromite mineral deposit is of  sufficient quantity and quality to make it  feasible for mining. KWG is advocating the construction of a rail line as the best, most cost-effective method for transporting the chromite for refining.

“The Black Horse discovery encountered 55 meters of 45% chromite, the richest drill core recovered in the Ring of Fire”, said KWG President Frank Smeenk.

“There is compelling geological and geophysical evidence to suggest that this mineralization could be part of an extensive continuous emplacement. If this drilling program is able to confirm that, we would be the first Canadian company to develop markets for the Ring of Fire chromite by providing transportation over Canada Chrome Corporation’s contiguous claims, ” Smeenk said.

Bold Ventures Obtains Option to Acquire Black Horse from Fancamp Explorations Ltd.

Earlier in December, 2012,  Bold Ventures concluded a four stage option to acquire the Black Horse claims from Fancamp Exploration Ltd., subject to Fancamp retaining a price variable gross metal royalty (the “Fancamp Option”).

Under the terms of the recent agreement between  KWG and Bold Ventures,  KWG can acquire up to 80% of Bold Venture’s interest in the Fancamp Option by funding 100% of Bold’s earn-in expenditures and option payments. The current program has budgeted $2 million to drill the chromite horizon. An additional $1 million has been budgeted to drill a contiguous possible nickel target.

KWG – Bold Ventures  Agreement to Explore for Nickel and Other Non-Chromite Minerals

A joint venture between KWG and Bold Ventures was formed  for nickel and other non-chromite minerals identified during the exploration programs, in which KWG has a 20% working interest. KWG will have a right of first refusal to purchase all ores or concentrates produced by such joint venture whenever its JV interest exceeds 50%.
The agreement with Bold Ventures  is subject to due diligence, all necessary approvals and is expected to close by February 21, 2013. Bold Venture’s interest in the 20% carried interest for chromite and the 80% participating interest for nickel and other non-chromite minerals is subject to Bold Venture Option Agreement with 2282726 Ontario Limited (“Bold Venture’s Co-Venturer”), a subsidiary of Dundee Corporation. Under the Option Agreement,  Bold Venturer’s co-venturer may earn a 33 -1/3% interest in Bold Venture’s Ring of Fire (ROF)activities around the area of Bold Venture’s Ring of Fire claims in Ontario (the “Bold Venture ROF Project”) by funding $2.5 million of exploration work, over $2.0 million of which has been expended to date.

 

KWG’s Big Daddy Site Received a National Instrument 43-101 Compliant Resource Estimate

KWG working towards developing its Big Daddy site in the McFauld’s Lake area received a National Instrument 43-101 compliant resource estimate from Sibley Basin Group over the summer of 2012.
The report was based on an update of a 42-hole core-drilling program at the Big Daddy Mine in the Ring of Fire totaling 13,459 metres that was completed in March, 2012.

Objective of the Drilling Program

The objective of the program was to upgrade resources to the indicated and measured categories, suitable for use in mine design at Big Daddy.  The drilling program was managed by Cliffs Chromite Far North Inc. who are also developing the Black Thor chromite mine.

The results show that at a 15% cutoff, the measured resource is 29.5 MT (megaton), grading 29% chromium oxide (Cr2O3) the indicated resource is 7.9 MT grading 26.7% Cr2O3, and the inferred resource is 4.8 MT grading 25.0% Cr2O3.

“We are pleased to note that this updated resource calculation has now confirmed a measured resource category, an important step in determining feasibility of the Big Daddy deposit,” said Frank Smeenk, KWG President.

Helicopter landing at Big Daddy Site

Helicopter landing at Big Daddy Site – photo courtesy of KWG

“The overall size of the deposit has increased without drilling deeper. We are now presented with different options as to how best to mine the Big Daddy, including the possibility of ore sorting or selectively mining the high-grade massive domains with the potential for high-grade direct ship,” he added.

Previous Resource Estimates

The previous resource estimate prepared by Micon International (KWG PR, May 3rd, 2010) also modeled the deposit at a 15% cutoff and produced an indicated resource of 26.4 MT grading 39.37% Cr2O3. The Micon report indicated resource corresponds to the Sibley combined measured and indicated of 37.4 MT grading 28.5% Cr2O3. The lower grade and higher volume of the new model contemplates the use of a less selective approach to mining and incorporates lower grade material, resulting in a lower average grade.

The most significant difference between the two resource estimates is in the inferred category. The Micon model extrapolated the depth continuity to 250 to 300 m beyond the drilling intercepts, while the new model extrapolates the resource to only 50 m beyond drilling. For the purpose of mine planning, this conservative approach is more prudent.

The report entitled “National Instrument 43-101 Technical Report, Big Daddy Chromite Deposit, McFauld’s Lake Area, Ontario, Canada, Porcupine Mining Division, NTS 43D16, Miner Natural Resource Estimation Technical Report” has an effective date of June 1, 2012. The report has a signing date of June 27, 2012. The full report was filed on the System for Electronic Document Analysis and Retrieval (SEDAR) on August 13, 2012 along with the requisite material change report.

The Sibley Basin Group staff person responsible for this resource estimate is Mr. Alan Aubut, a Qualified Person as defined in 43-101 who is independent of KWG Resources Inc., and who has approved the contents of this press release.

Aggregate Permits Sought by Canada Chrome Corporation Along Route of Proposed KWG Railroad Right-of-Way

Meanwhile KWG Resources Inc. reported that its subsidiary Canada Chrome Corporation filed applications with the Ministry of Natural Resources (MNR) for thirty-two aggregate permits at sites that located within the mineral claims along the company’s 308 kilometre-long railroad right-of-way. The sites are located along the proposed route for KWG’s railway to the Ring of Fire region, and may provide material for the construction of the planned rail bed. An environmental assessment and consultation with affected parties have not yet been concluded.

KWG exploration team preparing ground prior to drilling...

KWG exploration team preparing ground prior to drilling. Photo courtesy of KWG

“In our meetings with Matawa First Nations Management Inc. officers and the Canadian Environmental Assessment Agency to review our draft Project Description, we have indicated our preference that the consultation requirements and protocols be developed in their entirety by the affected First Nations, to ensure the adequacy of the process,” said KWG President Frank Smeenk.

“To make that exercise meaningful, we felt that the physical consequences of the development should be described as fully as possible within the regulatory framework. For that reason we have prepared and filed preliminary aggregate borrowing plans to enable a relatively more informed determination of consultation requirements.”

Plan for Permanent Amphibious Aerodrome

Canada Chrome Corporation has also made application to MNR under the provisions of the Public Lands Act, for the grant of title to the lands it has tentatively designated as the “Port of Koper Lake” at the northern terminus of its right-of-way. The application covers two 16-unit claim blocks which include the western shore of Koper Lake where temporary float-plane docking facilities are now in use. As included in the draft Project Description, preliminary plans envisage the development of a permanent amphibious aerodrome at that location together with an adjacent and permanent East-West all-weather runway and heliport terminal as an adjunct to a railroad terminal, fuel storage compound, communications hub, accommodation services, and repair and maintenance facilities.

KWG has a 30% interest in the Big Daddy deposit. KWG also owns 100% of Canada Chrome Corporation which has staked claims and conducted a $15 million surveying and soil testing program for the engineering and construction of a railroad to the Ring of Fire from Exton, Ontario where the Trans Canada line of the Canadian National Railway can be connected.

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Noront Resources Releases NI 43-101 Compliant Feasibility Study

Welcome to A Northern Blog. Today’s entry is the 4th in series dealing with mining issues. This article will examine a Canadian company – Noront Resources and its  role in exploring and mining development  in the Ring of Fire area of Northwest, Ontario.  The Ring of Fire has been described as having  the largest mining potential in Ontario, larger than what has gone on in the past.

The article on Noront appears courtesy of Glen Dredhart, the publisher of Mining Life Magazine, where the portion dealing with Noront’s work on the Ring of Fire initially appeared. For information on mining in Northern Ontario visit Glenn’s Canadian Mining Portal  at

http://www.canadianminingexpo.com

Glenn is also preparing to publish the first Mining Life magazine issue of 2013 featuring reports on prospecting in Canada and the Prospectors and Developers Association of Canada.

http://www.pdac.ca/

Noront Resources Releases NI 43-101 Compliant Feasibility Study in 2012

By Frank Giorno

Noront Resources Ltd. released results, on September 4, 2012, of an updated National Instrument 43-101 – Standards of Disclosure for Mineral Projects (“NI 43-101”) compliant Feasibility Study (“FS”) for a stand alone nickel, copper, platinum group element (“Ni-Cu-PGE”) mine and mill complex at its 100% owned Eagle’s Nest deposit near  McFaulds Lake, the Ring of Fire.

“The feasibility study confirms Eagle’s Nest is economically viable and establishes the capital, operating and potential profits to a reasonable level of certainty, which will allow Noront to initiate discussions with various financial institutions to fund the proposed mining project ,” said Olya Yousefi, the Manager of Corporate Communications for Noront in a telephone interview with Mining Life.

 The Ring of Fire is located about 500 kilometres northeast of Thunder Bay and about 70 km east of the Webequie First Nation. It is about 150 km west of the DeBeers Victor Diamond Mine. The area consists of muskeg swamps and has the potential to become a major mining site for chromite, nickel, copper, gold, and other minerals.

 Noront plans to develop a stand alone nickel, copper, platinum and palladium mine and mill complex at its Eagle’s Nest location near McFauld Lake. The mine, mill and tailing storage facility will all be situated underground.

Noront’s feasibility study assumes that 1.0 million tonnes per year of nickel and copper ore will be extracted from the underground mine using blast hole sub-level stoping. On site processing  will produce approximately 150,000 tonnes of high-grade nickel-copper concentrate per year which will be trucked to a rail siding located approximately 300 kilometres to the south.

Core samples taken from Noront's property in the Ring of Fire --photo courtesy of Noront Resources

Core samples taken from Noront’s property in the Ring of Fire –photo courtesy of Noront Resources

The feasibility study’s discounted cash flow (“DCF”) model indicates that Noront’s Eagle’s Nest project will produce an after tax Net Present Value (at an 8% discount rate, “NPV(8%)” of $543 million, based on the Assumed Metal Prices).

Other financial benefits include:

  • an after tax IRR exceeding 28%;
  • an estimated initial capital investment of $609 million;
  • an estimated life of mine sustaining capital cost of $160 million;
  • estimated operating costs (including road access fees) of $97 per tonne or $2.34 per pound of nickel equivalent to minus $0.31 per pound of nickel net by-product credits;
  • an estimated mine life of 11 years; and
  • a capital payback period of under 3 years based on a 100% equity project.

 

“In terms of benefits to the province, the current reserve identified at Eagle’s Nest would generate approximately  $420 million in tax revenues,” Yousefi said. “This figure does not include any future reserve increases resulting future exploration efforts in the camp.”

 

Along with its feasibility study, Noront has also submitted its terms of reference for their comprehensive environmental assessment to the Ontario Ministry of the Environment. The terms of reference will serve as the basis for completing the environmental assessment

 

“The major challenge for Noront in developing the Eagle’s Nest site is the lack of existing infrastructure in the region ,” Yousefi said.

Transportation

One of the most crucial elements of the infrastructure is the construction of a road that will open up the area and allow materials to be trucked in to develop the site and ores and concentrates shipped out.

Noront’s feasibility study assumed that ore concentrate would be trucked along a north-south, all season road to a CNR loading facility near Nakina where it will be transferred to rail for further shipment.

The proposed north-south route has been proposed by Cliffs, a multi-national, diversified producer seeking to develop their chromite assets in the Ring of Fire.

In its pre-feasibility study, Noront assumed an east-west road would be the primary means of access to the Ring of Fire. At this time, Noront continues to identify this east-west route as an alternative to the north-south corridor, as require of the environmental assessment process.

All season North-South Road

 

Noront revealed that the Ministry of Northern Development and Mines (MNDM) in a letter dated August 10, 2012 said they were in early stages of discussion with Cliffs Natural Resources regarding a north – south all-season road that would connect the Ring of Fire to existing provincial transportation routes and railway lines.  The letter confirmed the Province’s intent to contribute financially to develop the proposed all-season road subject to various environmental, regulatory and financial approvals.

In the letter, MNDM advised Noront that “the current expectation is that the all-season road would be made available for use by industrial users other than Cliffs, with access fees generally based on proportional road usage, although specific terms are still to be determined.”

Details on the estimated capital costs of the proposed north-south road have not been provided to Noront. However, Cliffs Natural Resources has publicly stated that the cost of their proposed integrated transportation system is budgeted at $600 million. This cost is consistent with previous work completed by Noront on this alternative and was used as the basis to establish road usage costs in their feasibility study.

 

 “The decision of the Province of Ontario to financially support the north-south road corridor pending environmental approval, is a very positive development in unlocking the mineral wealth of the Ring of Fire, “said Wes Hanson,President and CEO of Noront states.

“Our discussions with the Province have confirmed that the all season

road will be accessible to all industrial users including Cliffs and that the costs to use the road will be based on proportional usage, a critical consideration for Noront as our concentrate shipments represent less than seven percent of the currently identified ore haulage along the corridor, “ Hanson added.

Refining Noront’s Ore Concentrates

Diagram of Noront's proposed milling operation planned for the Ring of Fire-photo courtesy of Noront

Diagram of Noront’s proposed milling operationplanned for the Ring of Fire-photo courtesy of Noront

Another component of Noront’s proposal that needs to be determined is where it plans to refine the nickel ore concentrated produced by the on site milling operations.

“The logical destination would be Sudbury where both Xstrata and Vale INCO are operating nickel smelters and where there is currently excess capacity.” Yousefi said. “Our initial testing indicates that this would be a marketable concentrate for most of the world’s existing nickel smelters.”

First Nations Relationships

“Noront has worked hard to establish solid relationships with local First Nations communities near the Ring of Fire discoveries.” Yousefi said. “We want to ensure that the communities of north-western Ontario realize the benefits of mineral development through long-term jobs and business opportunities.”

“We are very active in community consultation to  ensure the communities fully understand what we propose to do, when we propose to do it and how will it impact their communities now and in the future. We have also focused a great deal of effort on the  young people in the communities where we have been active.. Each summer, we hold  mining camps aimed at introducing the young people to the exploration and mineral development industry. We hope to highlight to the young people the importance of staying in school, what jobs will be available in their region in the future and what each job entails in terms of training and education. Noront hopes that future geologists, engineers, managers and other specialists originate from the various communities surrounding the Ring of Fire,” she added

First Nations student examining mineral samples- photo courtesy of Noront Resources

First Nations student examining mineral samples photo courtesy of Noront Resources

Exploration Potential

 

On July 9, 2012; Noront released the results of its winter drilling program which included some positive results. Noront reported that all six holes that were drilled intersected low-grade nickel sulphide mineralization, suggesting that the ground based geophysical surveys are a valuable exploration tool going forward. This system has dramatically increased the Company’s success rate in testing multiple targets within the Ring of Fire claims for nickel sulphide mineralization. The fact that all holes from the late winter program intersected nickel sulphide mineralization is a significant improvement from past drill programs.

The Ring of Fire was only discovered in 2007. By comparison, the Sudbury camp, one of the worlds most prolific sources of nickel, has seen the benefits of nickel mining and processing for over a hundred years. The potential for further resource growth is significant and the Ring of Fire may someday rival Sudbury as Canada’s most prolific nickel camp.

Other Nor0nt News

Windfall Lakes Project

Recently Noront announced agreement to sell it’s 25 percent interest in the Windfall Lake Project in Quebec to Maudore Minerals Ltd.  The Windfall Lake Project is a joint venture between Noront and Eagle Hill Exploration Corporation (“Eagle Hill”). Eagle Hill has earned a 75% interest in the project and is the operator. Maudore has agreed to pay a sum of CAD$10.0 million in cash plus three million warrants which entitle Noront to purchase common shares of Maudore at a price of CAD$2.20 per common share (“the Warrants”) (collectively the “Purchase Price”) in exchange for Noront’s current 25% interest in the Windfall Lake Project.  For more information on Noront’s agreement with Maudore visit

http://www.norontresources.com/?pressreleases&pressreleasesMain=1

In a news release issued on December 17, 2012 Eagle Hill Corporation announced that Stantec Consulting Ltd. (“Stantec”) had been awarded a contract to produce a pre-feasibility study (“PFS”) on the Windfall Lake

Eagle Hill’s interest in Windfall Lake is governed by the terms and conditions of an option agreement between Noront and Eagle Hill that was entered into on July 21, 2009 (“the “Option Agreement”).

In the December 17th Press Release, Eagle Hill states: “Under the terms of the Option Agreement to acquire the Windfall Lake Property, Eagle Hill must give notice of the Company’s commitment to cause the commencement of commercial production on the Property within one year of earning a 75% interest in the Windfall Lake Property (the “Notice”). Eagle Hill earned its 75% interest in the Property on April 20, 2012. In this regard, Eagle Hill has engaged Stantec to provide a mineral reserve estimate based on the results of the PFS. The results of the PFS will be available on or before April 20, 2013. Upon receipt of the reserve estimate, Eagle Hill will be in a position to deliver the Notice to the  options pursuant to the Option Agreement.” Eagle Hill’s press release also states “Once the obligations are satisfied, the buy-back provisions contained in the Option Agreement will be eliminated.”

For more information please go to http://www.norontresources.com/?pressreleases&pressreleasesMain=1

Noront Retains New York-based RB Milestone Group

Noront Resources Ltd. has retained New York-based financial communications firm RB Milestone Group, LLC (“RBMG”) to strengthen shareholder value through RBMG’s market intelligence, corporate advisory, public relations, and equity research initiatives.

Olya Yousefi, Manager of Corporate Communications of Noront states: “We have a great story to tell and we look forward to working with RBMG to further our reach.”

“We’re excited to be representing Noront Resources,” said Renee Volaric, RBMG’s Director. “RB Milestone Group’s experience in the natural resource sector will allow us to present significant opportunities to Noront, its shareholders and new investors.”

For more information see

http://www.norontresources.com/?pressreleases&pressreleasesMain=1

HiAlpha Mining Investment Conference

Wes Hanson, President and CEO of Noront Resources was a presenter at last month’s HiAlpha® Mining Investment Conference. Click here (http://youtu.be/RgZz_aDtYq0) to watch his interview with Fox Business Network contributor Stu Taylor.

For more information on Noront Resources please visit

http://www.norontresources.com/

Cliffs Natural Resources May Delay Black Thor Start Up, Continues to Work on Environmental Assessment

Welcome to my 3rd A Northern Blog posting. This post will delve into Cliffs Natural Resources efforts to start up a chromium mine on its Black Thor Property.  As this story illustrates it takes a long time to start up a mine. There are oenvironmental assessments to be filed and approved. Ancillary works such as roads and electrical infrastructure need to be constructed or installed. Consultation with nearby communities need to held and agreements reached. Of all the companies working in the Ring of Fire, Cliffs Natural Resources has progressed the furthest, but still has a long way to go. In May, 2012 Cliffs chose Capreol, Ontario near Sudbury to be the location for its ferrochrome refinery.  This was an important step. Cliffs now will be focusing on getting environmental approvals, securing agreements with First Nations and other nearby communities and working with the provincial government to secure the construction of a road that will link Black Thor operations to Ontario’s highway system.

 I want to thank publisher Glenn Dredhart for the permission to  use the article on Cliffs Natural Resources that was originally published in the December, 2012 issue of Mining Life Magazine. For excellent coverage of mining issues in the North and throughout Canada visit the Canadian Mining Portal. Glenn’s company Canadian Trade Ex hosts the largest mining show in the North.

http://www.canadianminingexpo.com

 Glenn also is in the process of setting up the Canadian Mining Portal which will carry the latest mining information on the internet including e-versions of Mining Life and Exploration News.  http://mininglifeonline.net/

Cliffs Natural Resources May Delay Black Thor Start Up, Continues to Work on Environmental Assessment  

By Frank Giorno

Cliffs Natural Resources may defer some preparatory work on the Black Thor site as a result of an earnings call in the last week of October and in light of current iron ore pricing.

Image

Aerial view of Cliffs Natural Resources Black Thor property. Photo courtesy of Cliffs Natural Resources

“One of the levers Cliffs has to deal with market changes is related to our chromite project,  ” said Patricia Persico, Director of Global Communications for Cliffs, in a telephone interview with Mining Life.

“Despite the significant potential this project has for the company’s future, in light of the current iron ore pricing environment, we are reviewing the project’s timeline,” Persico said.

Cliffs is looking to open its chromite mine by the end of 2016, but it has decided to delay early construction work until completion of its feasibility study. This move could potentially delay start up of production into 2017 or even later depending on market conditions and Cliffs’ cash position. In the meantime Cliff will consider taking on a partner for the project. Cliffs still expects to complete the feasibility study and the environmental assessment by 2013.

Cliffs proposes to develop a chromite mine in the Ring near McFaulds Lake. It is currently undertaking a coordinated Environmental Assessment (EA) under the Canadian Environmental Assessment Act and the Ontario Environmental Assessment Act.

“There will be multiple opportunities for the public to participate in the environmental assessment process, “said Patricia Perisco.

Cliffs Resources must obtain approval for its environmental assessment from the Ontario and Canadian government before proceeding to develop the chromite mine, related processing and transportation components, and the ferrochrome production facility. In addition, it must also obtain approval permits for the design of water and wastewater treatment facilities, tailings management, site rehabilitation and air emission controls.

The Ring of Fire is located about 500 kilometres northeast of Thunder Bay and about 70 km east of the Webequie First Nation. It is about 150 km west of the DeBeers Victor Diamond Mine. The area consists of muskeg swamps and has the potential to become a major mining site for chromite, nickel, copper, gold, and other minerals.

Map showing the location of areas considered for mining in the Ring of Fire including Cliffs' Black Thor property. Map courtesy of Ring of Fire Secretariat

Map showing the location of areas considered for mining in the Ring of Fire including Cliffs’ Black Thor property. Map courtesy of Ring of Fire Secretariat

Draft Provincial EA Terms of References Released

In July 2012, Cliffs released its draft terms of references for the provincial environmental assessment for public comment to multiple interested municipalities, First Nation communities, federal and provincial government agencies, and non-governmental organizations. The comment period ended in August, 2012 and extensions were granted for some commentators into October. The Terms of Reference document will be updated based on the comments received during the comment period.

The Terms of Reference contains the description of Cliff’s proposal for developing the chromite mine, concentrate process facility, transportation system and the ferrochrome production facility. The operation of these components will be the basis for Cliffs’ Environmental Assessment if approved by the provincial environment ministries.

Addressing the public’s concern about possible negative impacts will be an important aspect of the environmental assessment.

The environmental assessment will help determine the best way to carry out the mining, transportation, processing and refining operations by evaluating potential impacts on the environment by the Project.  It also will contain information about how potential negative impacts will be mitigated or eliminated through Project design or utilization of alternatives.

The federal Environmental Impact Statement guidelines, the coordinated counterpart to the provincial EA Terms of Reference, were finalized in December 2011.

Cliffs Natural Resources’ Proposal

Cliffs proposes to operate an open pit mine that will be used to extract ore at a rate of approximately 6,000 tons to 12,000 tons per day. At that rate of extraction, Cliffs anticipates the open pit will operate for 30 years

Cross section of Black Thor Property showing chromium potential. Photo courtesy of Cliffs Natural Resources

Cross section of Black Thor Property showing chromium potential. Photo courtesy of Cliffs  Natural Resources

According to Persico, “One million tons per year of chromite concentrate will be produced at Cliffs’ concentrate processing facility located at the mine site and direct shipped to international ferrochrome producers.

The proposed Capreol ferrochrome production facility will produce 600,000 tons of ferrochrome per year for export to markets where stainless steel is produced. Persico explained the needs differ for the North American and Asian markets. In North America and Europe, ferrochrome is in demand, while in Asia where there is already ferrochrome processing facilities, it is demanding chromite concentrate.

 

 North-South All Season Road

A critical element in developing Cliffs’ Black Thor open pit mine and the ore processing facility will be the construction of a north-south road. It will be crucial for transporting supplies, materials and concentrate between existing infrastructure and the mine site.

The north-south road will facilitate the trucking of concentrate in sealed cargo containers from the ore processing plant to an existing rail network 340 km to the south of Black Thor via the combination of a new all-weather road and existing provincial resource roads.

The vehicles will travel 80 km of existing provincial resource roads on the southern end of the route to access the proposed transload facility located near an existing Canadian National Railway siding where the concentrate cargo containers will be transferred to rail cars and shipped to Capreol.

The Aroland First Nation is located west of the proposed transload facility. Over the summer, it was among the First Nations who threatened to issue eviction orders to companies doing exploratory work in the Ring.

Discussions between Cliffs and the Ontario government proceeded and agreement in principle was reached on key elements of the chromite mine development, including construction of an all-weather north-south road that will facilitate transportation to the transload facility.

At this time, Cliffs is engaged in discussions with the province of Ontario regarding a north-south All-weather Access Road that will connect the Project mine site to existing provincial road and rail infrastructure. It is anticipated that First Nations and other natural resource companies will be provided access to the All-weather Access Road. Cliffs expects that access to the All-weather Access Road will generally be managed in a manner similar to other provincial resource roads, although the exact terms of such access still need to be discussed between Cliffs, area First Nations and the Province. At present, Cliffs anticipates that it will design, construct, own, operate, and maintain the road. It is envisioned that the discussions with the province of Ontario will be completed in the near future.

Capreol Ferrochrome Facility

In May 2012, Cliffs announced, Capreol’s Old Moose Mountain as the location of its Ferrochrome Production Facility (FPF). In explaining its decision to choose the Sudbury location over other Ontario, Quebec and international locations, Cliffs said that the Sudbury area had greater potential due to various economic and technical factors, proximity to electricity supply, better transportation, and labour markets.

Cliffs produced a supplementary EA Terms of Reference for the environmental assessment on the FPF and released for public review. According to the Terms of Reference document, the FPF will use an enclosed electric arc furnaces to process approximately 3,000 to 4,000 tonnes of concentrate to produce about 1,250 and 1,750 tonnes of ferrochrome.

Cost of Developing and Operating the Mine

According to Persico, Cliffs estimates it will invest approximately $3 billion to develop the chromite mine and onsite processing facility, the transportation component and the Capreol FPF.

The mine is estimated to  cost $150 million and the near-mine processing facility $800 million. The ferrochrome facility in Capreol is slated to cost $1.8 billion and the transportation components $600 million.

Anticipated Benefits

Persico says the benefits to Northern Ontario include the creation of 1,200 jobs to construct the mine, processing plant and the ferrochrome facility. Another 1,200 jobs will be created once the mine, plant and facilities are operational.

The jobs would benefit Northern Ontario, including members of the First Nation communities. Additional benefits will arise through business opportunities for suppliers who will have the opportunity to bid on contracts both during the start up period and when the mine becomes operational.

Persico said that Cliffs is committed to ensuring the communities in the Ring of Fire, along the transportation route and near the ferrochrome facility benefit from its activities.

“Cliffs Natural Resources has a 160 year history in Michigan and Minnesota of successfully investing in the communities where it locates,” Persico said. “We are a sustainable company that invests generously in our communities.”

Working in Cooperation with First Nations

Before Cliffs chromite mine can be developed, it must receive approval for its environmental assessment, negotiate agreements with First Nation communities whose lands will be affected and reach a final agreement with the Ontario government on the provision of infrastructure that will make the mining project feasible.

Persico said Cliffs is working towards agreements with First Nations near the Project components.  There are multiple First Nation communities in the area and along the transportation route.

“Cliffs Resources is respectful of their heritage, lands, and traditional knowledge,” Persico said, “Negotiations are further along in some communities and others are evolving.”