Ho Chunk, Inc

Senior Mining Engineer

Ho Chunk, Inc$85K — $105K *
US-AnywhereRemote in Denver, CO
Energy & Utilities
5 - 7 years of experience
Job Overview by Ladders

Qualifications

  • Bachelor's in Mining Engineering or related field; Master's preferred.
  • 6-8 years of mine planning and economic evaluation experience.
  • Expertise in resource and reserve estimation for multiple commodities.
  • Leadership experience in mine design and engineering projects.
  • Strong communication and representation skills, particularly with Tribal stakeholders.
  • Knowledge of mining software, advanced Excel, and geotechnical packages.

Responsibilities

  • Lead day-to-day technical operations in mining engineering projects.
  • Prepare detailed mine and reclamation plans for mineral properties.
  • Conduct economic evaluations of mineral projects and cost estimates.
  • Act as a primary technical representative for negotiations and meetings.
  • Assist in grant proposal reviews and track compliance for Tribal organizations.
  • Make presentations on mining fundamentals and regulations to diverse audiences.
  • Supervise and mentor junior engineers and project teams.

Benefits

  • Comprehensive federal benefits package for full-time employees.
  • Health insurance coverage.
  • Paid time off for vacation and holidays.
  • Retirement plan participation.
Full Job Description
Summary

Summary

 

The Senior Mining Engineer serves in a leadership position within the mining engineering functional area, providing expert technical direction and advisory support for the development of solid minerals. This position involves a broad scope of engineering responsibilities, from formulating exploration strategies to preparing detailed mine and reclamation plans. The Senior Mining Engineer will act as a key technical representative for owners/agency in their dealings with mining companies, contractors, and government agencies. A key function of this role will be the evaluation of grant proposals, such as those under the Energy and Mineral Development Program (EMDP) and monitoring assigned grants throughout their entire lifecycle to support Tribal resource development.

 

COMPENSATION & BENEFITSSalary Range: $85,000 - $105,000Comprehensive federal benefits package available to full-time employees, including health insurance, paid time off, and retirement plan participation.

 

Essential Functions and Responsibilities

 

  • Serves as a leadership position within the mining engineer functional category and is responsible for the day-to-day direction of technical work as required by individual work orders.
  • Prepares comprehensive resource and reserve estimates for a variety of solid mineral deposits, including metal, coal, industrial minerals, and construction aggregates.
  • Develops detailed mine and reclamation plans for undeveloped mineral properties, specifying mining methods, equipment selection, staffing, production rates, and scheduling.
  • Conducts economic evaluations of solid mineral projects using methods like discounted cash flow rate of return and makes capital and operating cost estimates for proposed mining operations.
  • Acts as a primary mining technical representative, assisting them in dealings with mining companies, contractors, and other government agencies.
  • Assists Indian mineral owners with mineral lease contract negotiations and reviews proposed agreements, with particular attention to royalty terms and environmental protection clauses.
  • Reviews and evaluates grant proposals from Tribal organizations for mineral assessment and development projects, assessing technical merit, feasibility, and alignment with program goals.
  • Monitors assigned grants throughout their full lifecycle, ensuring compliance, tracking project progress, and providing technical assistance to grantees.
  • Make presentations on mining fundamentals, regulations, mineral agreement structures, and NEPA requirements.
  • May be expected to perform supervisory responsibilities, reporting to the On-Site Lead and Project Manager.

Reasonable accommodations may be made to enable individuals with disabilities to perform the essential functions.

 

Skills and Qualifications

 

  • Technical Capacity: In-depth knowledge of geology, solid mineral deposits, and resource/reserve estimation methods for various deposit types. Expertise in both open pit and underground mining methods.
  • Economic Analysis: Strong experience with making capital and operating cost estimates and performing economic evaluations of mineral projects using discounted cash flow rate of return spreadsheets.
  • Project Planning: Proven ability to prepare detailed mine and reclamation plans, including equipment selection, production scheduling, and staffing.
  • Software Proficiency: Familiarity with commercial software used for reserve estimation and mine planning. High proficiency with Microsoft Office, particularly Word and Excel.
  • Communication & Representation: Excellent presentation skills for communicating complex mining, regulatory, and economic information to diverse audiences, including tribal leaders and federal agencies. Ability to act as a technical representative in negotiations and meetings.
  • Leadership and Direction: Ability to provide day-to-day direction of technical work as required by specific work orders.

 

Education and Experience

 

  • Bachelor of Science (B.S.) in Mining Engineering or a closely related field (e.g., Geological Engineering); Master’s degree preferred (mining, geotechnical, or mineral economics). FE required; PE strongly preferred (or ability to obtain within 12 months).
  • 6-8 years of progressively responsible experience in mine planning, reserve estimation, and economic evaluation across surface and/or underground operations.
  • Demonstrated success in resource and reserve estimation (JORC/NI 43-101/SK-1300 familiar) across multiple commodities (metals, coal, industrial minerals, aggregates), including geostatistics, block modeling, and reconciliation.
  • Significant experience leading mine design and engineering: pit/UG layouts, phase design, haul road geometry, ventilation, dewatering, slope stability/ground control, drill-and-blast, materials handling, and backfill; creation of LoM plans, short-/mid-/long-range schedules, and production forecasts.
  • Reclamation and closure planning expertise, integrating geochemical considerations, water management, and post-mining land use into design and life-cycle cost models.
  • Economic evaluation & project finance support: cut-off grade analysis, pit optimization, sensitivities, NPV/IRR, cash-flow modeling, and contribution to prefeasibility/feasibility studies with defendable assumptions.
  • Experience representing mineral owners/operators in lease and royalty negotiations, surface use agreements, right-of-way, and regulatory processes (permit packages, NEPA/NHPA touchpoints), coordinating with legal, environmental, and governmental stakeholders.
  • Track record of executive-level presentations and clear decision memos for senior stakeholders (boards, Tribal leadership, investors, agencies), translating technical trade-offs and risk mitigations into actionable recommendations.
  • Supervisory/mentoring experience directing junior engineers/consultants and multi-disciplinary teams; establishing work plans, QA/QC of designs and calculations, and fostering safety-first culture.
  • Toolset proficiency: Deswik, Vulcan, MineSight/Hexagon, Surpac (or similar); Whittle/NPV optimizers; GIS familiarity; advanced Excel/Power BI; exposure to geotech packages (e.g., Slide, FLAC3D) a plus.
  • Safety & field readiness: strong MSHA knowledge, field auditing, contractor/OEM coordination, commissioning/start-up support, and willingness to travel to operating sites and community locations.

 

Supervisory Responsibility

This position may be expected to perform supervisory responsibilities, reporting to the On-Site Lead and Project Manager.

 

Work Environment

This job operates in a professional office environment and routinely uses standard office equipment such as computers and phones. Travel to and work at remote tribal sites for fieldwork is also required.

 

Position Type/Expected Hours of Work

This is a full-time position. Normal business hours align with DEMD’s core hours of 6:00 a.m. to 6:00 p.m. Mountain Time, Monday through Friday, excluding Federal holidays. Evening, weekend, or travel-related work may be required to meet project demands.

 

Travel Requirements

Travel is required to provide support at government or Tribal sites, attend meetings, conduct fieldwork, and perform grant site visits. All travel must be pre-approved by the Contracting Officer's Representative (COR) and will be reimbursed in accordance with Federal Travel Regulations (FTR).

 

Clearance/License Requirements

 

  • A Public Trust clearance is required for this position. A minimum background investigation (NACI) is required for access to DOI facilities and information systems.
  • Must maintain a valid Driver’s License and be insurable under the company insurance program.

Our Values: Native American Owned & Proud | Accountable | Team Focused | Innovative | Visionary | Excellence

 

About Ho Chunk, Inc

The Ho-Chunk, also known as Hooc?gra or Winnebago, are a Siouan-speaking Native American people whose historic territory includes parts of Wisconsin, Minnesota, Iowa, and Illinois. Today, Ho-Chunk people are enrolled in two federally recognized tribes, the Ho-Chunk Nation of Wisconsin and the Winnebago Tribe of Nebraska. The Winnebago Tribe of Nebraska have an Indian reservation in Nebraska. While related, the two tribes are distinct federally recognized sovereign nations and peoples, each having its own constitutionally formed government and completely separate governing and business interests. Since the late 20th century, both tribal councils have authorized the development of casinos. The Ho-Chunk Nation is working on language restoration and has developed a Hooc?k-language iOS app. Since 1988, it has pursued a claim to the Badger Army Ammunition Plant as traditional territory; the area has since been declared surplus, but the Ho-Chunk have struggled with changes in policy at the Department of the Interior. The department supported the Ho-Chunk claim in 1998, but in 2011 refused to accept the property on their behalf. In 1994, to build on its revenues from casinos, the Winnebago created an economic development corporation; it has been successful and received awards as a model of entrepreneurial small business. With a number of subsidiaries, it employs more than 1400 people. It has also contributed to housing construction on the reservation. Like more than 60% of federally recognized tribes, the Winnebago legalized alcohol sales on the reservation to secure revenues that previously went to the state in taxes.
Learn more about Ho Chunk, Inc
Industry
Founded
1994

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