The Mercury News

Officials knew potential of blowout at inactive gold mine

Cursory plan was prepared to deal with massive spill

- By Michael Biesecker and Matthew Brown Associated Press

WASHINGTON — U. S. officials knew of the potential for a catastroph­ic “blowout” of poisonous waste- water from an inactive gold mine, yet appeared to have only a cursory plan to deal with such an event when a government cleanup team triggered a 3- million- gallon spill, according to internal documents released by the Environmen­tal Protection Agency.

The EPA released the documents late Friday following weeks of prodding from The Associated Press and other media organizati­ons. While shedding some light on the circumstan­ces surroundin­g the accident, the newly disclosed informatio­n also raises more questions about whether enough was done to prevent it.

The Aug. 5 spill came as workers excavated the entrance to the idled Gold King Mine near Silverton, Colorado, unleashing a torrent of toxic water that fouled rivers in three states.

A June 2014 work order for a planned cleanup noted the mine had not been accessible since 1995, when the entrance partially collapsed.

“This condition has likely caused impounding of water behind the collapse,” the report said.

“Conditions

may

exist that could result in a blowout of the blockages and cause a release of large volumes of contaminat­ed mine waters and sediment from inside the mine.”

A May 2015 action plan produced by an EPA contractor, Environmen­tal Restoratio­n LLC, also noted the potential for a blowout. It was not clear what additional precaution­s were taken to prepare for such a release.

Much of the documents were redacted. Among the items blacked out was a line specifying whether workers were required to have phones that could work at the remote site, at an elevation of 11,000 feet.

A 71- page safety plan for the site included only a few lines describing what to do if there was a spill: Locate the source and stop the flow, begin containmen­t and recovery of the spilled materials, and alert downstream drinking water systems as needed.

EPA spokesman David Gray said Saturday that the work order outlined steps that should have been followed, but he did not directly address whether those steps were followed, citing ongoing investigat­ions into the accident.

Colorado Attorney General Cynthia Coffman said after reviewing the documents that she remained frustrated with the EPA’s lack of answers.

“The plan indicates there was an understand­ing of what might happen and what the potential consequenc­es were. We don’t know whether they followed the plan,” Coffman told The Associated Press. “I want to give the EPA the benefit of the doubt here. I really want to do that. It’s getting harder.”

The wastewater flowed into a tributary of the Animas and San Juan rivers, turning them a sickly yelloworan­ge color and tainting them with lead, arsenic, thallium and other heavy metals that can cause health problems and harm aquatic life.

The toxic plume traveled roughly 300 miles through Colorado, New Mexico and Utah, to Lake Powell on the Arizona- Utah border.

EPA water testing

has shown contaminat­ion levels returning to pre- spill levels, though experts warn some of the contaminan­ts likely sunk and mixed with bottom sediments and could someday be stirred back up.

The documents released at about 10: 30 p. m. EDT Friday did not account for what happened immediatel­y before or after the spill.

Elected officials have been critical of the EPA’s response. Among the unanswered questions is why it took the agency nearly a day to inform downstream communitie­s that rely on the rivers for drinking water.

 ?? JERRY MCBRIDE/ DURANGO HERALD ?? Engineers and state leaders from Utah and Colorado go over a map of mine shafts in the mountain near the Gold King Mine in Colorado, where a cleanup team triggered a catastroph­ic spill on Aug. 5.
JERRY MCBRIDE/ DURANGO HERALD Engineers and state leaders from Utah and Colorado go over a map of mine shafts in the mountain near the Gold King Mine in Colorado, where a cleanup team triggered a catastroph­ic spill on Aug. 5.

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