Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Files show more EPA qualms about mine risk

- MATTHEW BROWN AND DAN ELLIOTT

DENVER — A probe of a mine-waste accident in Colorado that fouled rivers in three states has found further evidence that government workers knew a spill from the gold mine was possible, according to documents released Thursday by a U.S. House committee.

Hays Griswold, an Environmen­tal Protection Agency official in charge of the Gold King mine at the time of the August accident, said in an email that he “personally knew” the plugged, inactive mine could contain large volumes of water.

The email was sent Oct. 28 to other EPA officials. It was obtained Thursday as the House Natural Resources Committee released the findings of its Republican-led probe.

An EPA cleanup crew triggered the spill during excavation work at the mine’s entrance, unleashing a 3 million-gallon deluge that contaminat­ed rivers in Colorado, New Mexico and Utah and highlighte­d the dangers posed by tens of thousands of abandoned mines across the U.S.

The release dumped more than 880,000 pounds of heavy metals into Colorado’s Animas River, forcing the closure of public water systems downstream until the plume passed and raising concerns about long-term environmen­tal impacts.

“I personally knew it could be holding back a lot of water, and I believe the others in the group knew as well,” Griswold wrote in the email.

EPA spokesman Nancy Grantham said the agency was reviewing the House committee’s findings and had no further comment at this time.

The committee’s ranking Democrat, Rep. Raul Grijalva of Arizona, said Republican­s were using the EPA’s role in the accident to shift responsibi­lity away from the mining industry for toxic mines that have been abandoned by owners.

The spill occurred when workers for the EPA and its contractor, Environmen­tal Restoratio­n LLC, started excavation work that was intended to allow them to safely drain the mine.

An Interior Department investigat­ion pinned responsibi­lity on the EPA for not checking to see if the mine held pressurize­d water. EPA officials previously said workers on site determined there was no or low pressure from water backed up inside the mine.

The email from Griswold suggests that the determinat­ion of low water pressure was based in part on mistaken assumption­s about the location of the top of the mine’s buried entrance, known in mining as the brow.

The excavation work was intended to clear away debris blocking the entrance before the mine was to be drained at a later date, he wrote.

“We and or I particular­ly thought we were four or maybe five feet above the brow,” Griswold wrote. “However, as it turned out we inadverten­tly got to probably within a foot or two of the brow. That proved to be too close when rock at the exposed face crumbled out, providing an outlet for the water.”

Griswold’s email also raised new questions about the accuracy of the investigat­ion by the Interior Department’s Bureau of Reclamatio­n, which examined the causes of the spill. The email used such terms as “patently false” and “mischaract­erization of the facts” to describe parts of the report.

Griswold wrote that a Reclamatio­n report, released in October, incorrectl­y described what his crew was trying to do at the mine, and that it understate­d how much water Griswold thought was inside.

Griswold also wrote that bureau officials took soil samples from the wrong material at the mine site when they were investigat­ing the spill, and that a bureau official “slept through my interview and presentati­on” about the incident.

Colorado officials have also disputed key parts of the report.

Natural Resources Committee Chairman Rob Bishop of Utah said federal officials still have not turned over some informatio­n on Gold King requested by his committee, and the government appeared to be engaged in a “pattern of deception” about events surroundin­g the spill.

Reclamatio­n spokesman Dan DuBray said Thursday that the agency stands behind its report on the accident.

 ?? AP/BRENNAN LINSLEY ?? Water flows Aug. 12 through a series of retention ponds built to contain and filter out heavy metals and chemicals from the Gold King mine chemical accident in the spillway about one-quarter of a mile downstream from the mine outside Silverton, Colo.
AP/BRENNAN LINSLEY Water flows Aug. 12 through a series of retention ponds built to contain and filter out heavy metals and chemicals from the Gold King mine chemical accident in the spillway about one-quarter of a mile downstream from the mine outside Silverton, Colo.

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