Santa Fe New Mexican

EPA: Mine spill didn’t severely harm river fish

- By Dan Elliott

DENVER — Fish and other aquatic life did not suffer severe or long-lasting damage from a mine waste spill three years ago that polluted rivers in three states, the U.S. Environmen­tal Protection Agency said.

An EPA report released last week analyzed the 2015 spill at the inactive Gold King Mine in southweste­rn Colorado, which an EPA-led contractor inadverten­tly triggered. Rivers in Colorado, New Mexico and Utah were polluted with a bright yellow-orange plume carrying iron, aluminum and other metals.

Part of the Animas River in Colorado closest to the spill was already so polluted by decades of waste spilling from inactive mines that the most vulnerable fish, insects and other aquatic life were already gone, the EPA said.

Further downstream, the spill appeared to have little impact on fish numbers, probably because the pollution was diluted and kept moving, so the exposure did not last long, the report said.

Another factor was that most of the metals in the plume remained in particulat­e form rather than dissolving in the water, the report said. Particulat­es are less harmful.

The EPA’s conclusion­s appear to be sound, said Jason Willis, manager of Trout Unlimited’s Colorado Abandoned Mine Land Program. Willis helped gather some of the samples used in the report but was not involved in analyzing them or drawing conclusion­s.

Wastewater was already pouring out of the Gold King Mine at a rate of about 3 million gallons a week, the same amount released in one day by the EPA-triggered spill, Willis said.

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