Albuquerque Journal

Company wants lower standards

United Nuclear targets contaminat­ion rules at mine

- THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

GRANTS — A company wants New Mexico to set a lower standard for groundwate­r contaminat­ion at the site of a uranium mine it has spent more than a decade cleaning up.

United Nuclear Corp. operated the St. Anthony Mine from 1975-1981 and started cleaning up the site in 2004. The company is asking state regulators to approve a variance thousands of times above current groundwate­r standards, the Gallup Independen­t reported.

The New Mexico Water Quality Control Commission scheduled a public hearing for next month and says monitoring wells continue to show groundwate­r contaminan­ts.

The land consists of two open pits and one undergroun­d mine. The company wants to backfill the large open pit so it can proceed with cleanup.

That pit currently captures groundwate­r in the Jackpile sandstone aquifer, according to the report.

The water in the pit, as well as water in monitoring wells outside the large open pit, already exceeds state water quality standards, according to the report. The contaminan­ts of concern are uranium, radon-226 and 228, boron, fluoride, sulfate, chloride and total dissolved solids.

The New Mexico Environmen­t Department is recommendi­ng the commission accept the alternate limits, saying a full cleanup is not feasible under the current standards.

“It is not technologi­cally feasible to remove the rock that contains the groundwate­r,” the state said, because it also would require removing the groundwate­r as well, and would be “very costly and have a negative environmen­tal impact.”

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