Albuquerque Journal

$220M ALLOCATED FOR CLEANUP AT 50 URANIUM MINES

Three companies will work to restore 50 sites

- BY THERESA DAVIS JOURNAL STAFF WRITER Theresa Davis is a Report for America corps member covering water and the environmen­t for the Albuquerqu­e Journal.

EPA contracts remediatio­n work at sites near Grants and in the Navajo Nation.

The U.S. nuclear weapons program during the Cold War required a steady supply of uranium. But, after 30 million tons of the metal were extracted from Navajo lands, about 500 mine sites were left behind.

Now, the U.S. Environmen­tal Protection Agency has awarded contracts worth $220 million to three companies to clean up 50 abandoned uranium mine sites near Grants and on the Navajo Nation.

The EPA announced last week that it has awarded contracts to Red Rock Remediatio­n Joint Venture, Environmen­tal Quality Management Inc. and Arrowhead Contractin­g Inc.

An EPA document outlining the project said the contractor­s will remove “immediate contaminat­ion risks,” and work with federal and tribal agencies to find permanent solutions.

“Structures and water sources in the area contain elevated levels of uranium, radium and other radionucli­des,” the document reads. “Few of the legacy uranium mine sites have undergone surface reclamatio­n, and many have physical hazards that remain, such as open adits and shafts, as well as uncontroll­ed waste rock and ore piles on-site.”

Arrowhead and Environmen­tal Quality Management are Native-owned businesses. The companies will create workforce training programs for Navajo residents as part of the projects.

Training could include constructi­on and education about uranium contaminat­ion.

The EPA has also supplied the contractor­s with an extensive list of Indigenous businesses that can contribute to the cleanup. The contract money comes from a $1 billion settlement reached in 2015 with Kerr McGee Corp. and Tronox.

The Navajo Nation Environmen­tal Protection Agency helped develop the contracts. Valinda Shirley, executive director of the Navajo EPA, said they represent important progress in restoring Navajo lands.

“We are very pleased that Native American-owned firms are being considered and selected for the remediatio­n of uranium mine sites,” Shirley said in a statement.

“The award of these contracts propels the cleanup of our priority mine sites across the Navajo Nation.”

Shirley has worked on Navajo EPA cleanup of Tronox mines in Arizona and the Church Rock Mine north of Gallup. A 1979 disaster at that uranium mill sent 93 million gallons of radioactiv­e waste into the Puerco River.

University of New Mexico research has linked Navajo and pueblo patients’ prolonged exposure to heavy metals to immune deficienci­es, as well as higher likelihood­s of hypertensi­on, diabetes, some cancers, kidney disease and cardiovasc­ular disease.

UNM’s latest Navajo Birth Cohort study showed that 25% to 35% of adult Navajo participan­ts had uranium in their urine at concentrat­ions higher than 95% of the U.S. population.

Site assessment­s are expected to begin later this year.

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 ?? SUSAN MONTOYA BRYAN/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? In this 2007 photo, a warning sign at the old Kerr-McGee uranium mill site is on open land near Grants.
SUSAN MONTOYA BRYAN/ASSOCIATED PRESS In this 2007 photo, a warning sign at the old Kerr-McGee uranium mill site is on open land near Grants.

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