The Arizona Republic

Tribe files claim in spill:

- NOEL LYN SMITH DAILY TIMES (FARMINGTON, N.M.) Noel Lyn Smith covers the Navajo Nation for the Daily Times. She can be reached at 505-564-4636.

The Navajo Nation has filed a more than $160 million claim under the Federal Tort Claims Act for damages and ongoing injuries incurred from the Gold King Mine spill. The 2015 spill released gallons of toxic waste laden with heavy metals.

FARMINGTON, N.M. - The Navajo Nation has filed a more than $160 million claim under the Federal Tort Claims Act for damages and ongoing injuries incurred from the Gold King Mine spill.

The filing was announced Monday in a press release from the Navajo Nation Department of Justice, which stated the tribe instructed its lawyers from Hueston Hennigan LLP to submit the request.

Communitie­s along the San Juan River on the Navajo reservatio­n suffered in the wake of the August 2015 spill, which released millions of gallons of heavy metals-laden toxic waste from the Gold King Mine near Silverton, Colorado.

Navajo Nation Attorney General Ethel Branch said in the release that the spill transforme­d the river from a “life-giver and protector” to a “threat” to the Navajo people, crops and animals.

“In particular, it has impaired our ability to maintain the cultural, ceremonial and spiritual practices that undergird the Navajo way of life,” Branch said in the release. “Through this claim and our correspond­ing lawsuit, we are demanding that the U.S. government finally provide the Navajo Nation relief.”

A spokeswoma­n for the U.S. Environmen­tal Protection Agency’s Region 9 office said the federal agency cannot comment on pending litigation.

In August, the tribe sued the EPA and several others for causing the environmen­tal disaster. The EPA has claimed responsibi­lity for the spill.

A seven-page letter from the tribe to Kenneth Redden, a claims officer at the EPA’s Office of General Counsel in Washington, D.C., outlines the Navajo Nation’s claims.

The tribe is asking for about $3.2 million to cover expenses already submitted to the EPA that have yet to be reimbursed. The additional $159 million would cover additional damages.

“Due to the spill, the Navajo Nation will have to expend additional resources to ensure the safety and well-being of the Navajo people though medical monitoring, mental health counseling, ecological monitoring and other programs necessary to identify and address the near and long-term impacts on the environmen­t and Navajo people,” states the letter, which is signed by Branch and attorney John C. Hueston.

The request for additional damages would cover long-term ecological and groundwate­r monitoring, assessment­s on agricultur­al and livestock, an on-site laboratory, alternativ­e water supply reservoirs, additional water treatment, cultural preservati­on and developmen­t of a natural resource damages assessment plan.

The tribe’s filing also explains the significan­ce of the San Juan River for Navajos.

“Harm to the river has a profound impact on the Navajo Nation and its people, disrupting the principle of hozho, which encompasse­s beauty, order and balance in the Navajo universe,” the letter states.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States