This article was provided by the Ontario Mining Association (OMA), an organization that was established in 1920 to represent the mining industry of the province.
To people inside the mining industry, this headline will perhaps be viewed as a rhetorical question. Those involved in the mineral sector know about the large capital investments, the thousands of direct jobs, the proliferation of indirect jobs providing supplies and services to mines, the provincial infrastructure constructed by and supported by mining, the communities it builds and the taxes companies and well paid employees pay to support all Ontarians – and Canadians.
However, to those less familiar with mining, this will seem like a fair question that deserves an answer. Let’s try this approach. The Ministry of Northern Development and Mines confirms that within the past 10 years, there have been 24 mines open in Ontario. There is a broad geographic dispersion of the location of these mines but many are in the Sudbury, Timmins, Wawa and Kirkland Lake areas – all traditional mining communities in this province.
While a small number of these two dozen mines can’t show continuous production, the vast majority are busy with development plans and projects to ensure their futures. Space does not allow a detailed look at all of these operations but let’s single out a few as examples.