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Toxic spill from Colorado mine creeps through US southwest

Published: 11 Aug 2015 - 11:43 pm | Last Updated: 12 Jan 2022 - 04:54 am

An EPA sampling point on the Animas River near Durango, Colorado. Workers from the EPA accidentally triggered a massive release of toxic waste from an old gold mine that sent about three million gallons of polluted water into a Colorado river, turning it orange.

 

Washington: Environ-mental biologists in Utah tested the waters of a key river yesterday for signs of a toxic waste spill from a botched Colorado mine clean-up operation that prompted a state of emergency in the desert Southwest.
What started as a three-million-gallon (11.4 million litre) orange-hued plume last Wednesday in the swift-moving Animas River dissolved from view as it made its way down the slower San Juan River in New Mexico.
No longer easily visible, it was nevertheless flowing on into Utah and the Lake Powell reservoir in the direction of the Colorado River and Grand Canyon, leaving behind questions as to its long-term impact.
“It’s so diluted, you can’t really see it,” Donna Spangler, a spokeswoman for the Utah Department of Environmental Quality, said.
Intensive water testing is nevertheless underway for signs of such cancer-causing toxins as lead and arsenic, with results expected in a matter of days.
The spill prompted states of emergency to be declared in Colorado, New Mexico and the vast Navajo Nation reservation that straddles state lines.
Towns along the Animas and San Juan stopped drawing water from the two rivers, and kayakers and rafters were told to stay on land until Monday at the latest.
The spill, estimated to be 130km long, was a major embarrassment for the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), the federal government agency tasked with combating pollution. 
It was supervising an attempt to halt a slow leak of toxic waste from the long-abandoned Gold King mine near the Colorado town of Durango when an earth-moving backhoe unleashed a deluge instead.
“It pains me to no end that this is happening,” said EPA director Gina McCarthy yesterday in her first public comments on the spill. “But we’re working tirelessly to respond, and we’ve committed to a full review of exactly what happened to ensure it can never happen again,” she said.
Initially, the EPA said one million gallons had spilled into the Animas, but then revised the figure upwards by three times, arousing local scepticism. “You’re lying to everyone about what’s going on. You really don’t know what’s going on,” said one angry resident at a Durango town hall meeting.
Mayor Tommy Roberts of Farmington, New Mexico, where the Animas joins the San Juan, said it was more than 24 hours before his town was alerted to the spill. “The initial response from the EPA was lacking, to say the least,” he said. The scale of the mishap was captured in a photo in the local Durango Herald newspaper of three kayakers floating amid the sludge.
It was taken a day after the spill, before the river was closed, and they thought it was harmless silt that regularly colors the river.
“It’s disturbing. The three of us obviously have some sort of health concerns down the road,” one of the kayakers, Dan Steaves, said.
Zach Frankel, executive director of the non-profit Utah Rivers Council, expected the spill to ultimately enter Lake Powell, a desert reservoir from which Las Vegas gets its water supply.
AFP