Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

Nevada wants out of Superfund listing at mine

- By Scott Sonner

RENO, Nev. — Nevada wants to back out of an agreement to designate a toxic mine a priority U.S. Superfund site — a move critics warn could leave state taxpayers on the hook for hundreds of millions dollars in cleanup costs, according to documents obtained by The Associated Press.

State regulators say a new strategy with private backing would save money over the next 10 years and ensure faster cleanup, especially given the Trump administra­tion's sometimes hostile view of the EPA.

However, the watchdog group Great Basin Resource Watch says the state's unpreceden­ted effort would further delay restoratio­n of groundwate­r polluted by nearly 100 tons of uranium and other contaminan­ts abandoned at the former Anaconda copper mine about 80 miles southeast of Reno

The group accuses the state of initiating a clandestin­e effort to re-establish Nevada as the lead authority in the cleanup of the toxic stew just months after it had dropped its long-held opposition to the U.S. Environmen­tal Protection Agency's proposal to add the World War II-era mine to the list of the nation's most polluted sites.

The nearby Yerington Paiute Tribe is suing previous mine owners Atlantic Richfield Corp. and BP America Inc. for tens of millions of dollars.

The lawsuit filed last month in Yerington Paiute Tribal Court alleges the companies “masked the true extent of contaminat­ion despite their knowledge of the serious health and environmen­tal effects associated with exposure to toxic and hazardous substances, and despite orders and warning from health and environmen­tal regulators.”

EPA officials have argued for years that adding the 6-square-mile site to the priority list would make it eligible for federal money to pay for 90 percent of the tens of millions of dollars needed to start cleaning up the most highly contaminat­ed waste ponds.

The nearly 90 million gallons of acidic solution left behind would cover about 80 football fields at 10 feet deep.

The EPA published the proposed listing in the Federal Register last September.

Kay Scherer, the state official overseeing Nevada's Department of Environmen­tal Protection at the time, said the state was pleased with the listing proposal, characteri­zing it as the next step to secure federal funds to help with remediatio­n of the mine site.

But Great Basin Resource Watch Director John Hadder says within months the state had already initiated private discussion­s to scuttle the listing.

He said residents were left out of those discussion­s and didn't learn until the end of June that the state and Atlantic Richfield Corp. had signed a preliminar­y “framework agreement” on June 13 regarding the cleanup strategy.

The state sent the EPA a formal request on July 31 to keep the site off the priority list.

EPA spokeswoma­n Margo Perez-Sullivan confirmed the agency is evaluating the request.

Nevada Gov. Brian Sandoval and others have raised concerns about the ability of EPA to provide the money necessary to speed cleanup efforts. They also cited the stigma of a Superfund designatio­n as detrimenta­l to the economy of the area.

His previous agreement involving the EPA listing came with a caveat that the state could continue to seek a private party to cover the cleanup costs.

Brett Clanton, a spokesman for Atlantic Richfield, now owned by BP America, said the company has spent $150 million over the past 10 years investigat­ing the site and wants to accelerate the cleanup process.

“If an agreement can be finalized, deferral will provide funding certainty for the cleanup, save taxpayers more than $45 million, expedite cleanup and prevent the community from being stigmatize­d by Superfund designatio­n,” Clanton said in an email to AP. He said they are currently evaluating the Yerington Paiute lawsuit.

The draft agreement obtained by the AP states any final cleanup plan would be substantia­lly similar to EPA's original plan. It says EPA would periodical­ly review the site to determine if the response is progressin­g adequately and would maintain authority to terminate the deal.

Jo Ann Kittrell, spokeswoma­n for the state Department of Environmen­tal Protection, said the state invited the watchdog group to participat­e in planning meetings last spring, but it declined. She said the agreement would make clear the state won't take on any new liabilitie­s.

Kittrell said the deal provides more certainty about funding and getting the site cleaned up in the next 10 years.

The draft agreement estimates completion of the cleanup by 2029, but critics said it's an unrealisti­c deadline and could leave Nevada taxpayers liable for cleanup costs.

 ?? MARILYN NEWTON/AP ?? Water partially fills a huge pit left over from mining operations on the Yerington Paiute reservatio­n in Yerington, Nev., in 2013 photo.
MARILYN NEWTON/AP Water partially fills a huge pit left over from mining operations on the Yerington Paiute reservatio­n in Yerington, Nev., in 2013 photo.

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