Former Gorsuch Law Clerk Pitches Something That Will Surely Infuriate Libs on Deportations
Police Arrest 30 Violent Anti-Israel Protesters After They Occupy University Building
Houthis Surrender After Trump’s Bombing Barrage — Red Sea Attacks to Stop
Supreme Court Issues Ruling on Trump's Transgender Military Ban
Trump Just Made This Nation Drop its Tariffs to Zero
There's a Reason Some People Oppose Gun Rights
Bessent Gives Another Update on the Trade War With China
Hegseth Launches Historic Purge of Top Brass: 'Fewer Generals, More Warfighters'
Donalds Schools NBC Host on Illegal Aliens
India Launches Military Strikes in Nine Sites in Pakistan
Historic Fentanyl Bust: Pam Bondi Reveals One of the Largest Seizures in U.S....
Liberals on CNN Keep Harping on Due Process for Illegal Immigrants, and Scott...
Sanctuary State Governors to Come Before House Oversight Committee
UPDATE: What Ever Happened to the Middle Eastern Illegal Immigrants Who Tried to...
WaPo Columnist Lauds JB Pritzker After Inflammatory Rhetoric
Tipsheet

EPA Causes Massive Waste Spill, Hurting Navajo Nation

Durango, Colorado declared a state of emergency yesterday after the EPA accidentally contaminated a local river with 3 million gallons of waste. The Animas River has turned orange, and residents living along its banks have been warned to avoid it.

Advertisement

The accident began Wednesday last week when EPA workers accidentally leaked a local mine, releasing concentrated minerals into a stream. The mine had been abandoned for about 10 years, and ground water had accumulated inside it. EPA workers were there to clean up the mine. Now, the mine is leaking at 500 gallons per minute. It still hasn't been contained, though workers are treating the nearby ponds where the minerals are leaking.

The EPA has tested the polluted water and reports arsenic levels at 300 times the normal level, and lead levels at 3,500 times the normal level. Both arsenic and lead pose significant dangers to humans when highly concentrated. The local sheriff has warned local residents to stay away from the river. The contaminants move along the river fairly quickly, they will not completely pass until the mine leak is plugged.

Many people who live along the Animas River depend on private wells for their water, but those are now threatened by the river's pollution. The EPA is sending materials to these residents so that they can test their well water for cleanness.

The water pollution has flowed straight into the territory of the Navajo Nation, a semi-autonomous reservation Native American reservation spanning parts of northern Arizona, New Mexico, and southern Utah. The spill is already threatening the livelihoods of many Navajo residents, and the nation has declared its own state of emergency. It even looks to be preparing for a lawsuit against the EPA -- the Navajo Nation Commission on Emergency Management has directed the tribe's Attorney General to assemble a legal team to address the grievances of local residents:

Advertisement

Navajo Nation Council Speaker LoRenzo Bates told the Daily Times that residents were concerned about drinking water safety, river access, water for livestock and crops, and the possibility of compensation for failed crops. With irrigation canals shut off, many farmers are concerned about their next step, Bates said.

"If these farmers don't get water in the next week, they'll lose their crops," he said.

The plume of orange waste has already reached three states, and is expected to reach a fourth by Wednesday. As USA Today reports:

Mustard-colored water flowed this week into Cement Creek, a tributary that runs through Silverton [Colorado] and into the Animas River. In New Mexico, the plume of pollution entered Aztec early Saturday morning and Farmington later that morning. Officials said they expected it to reach the Utah border on Monday and Lake Powell, in Arizona, late Wednesday.

New Mexico Gov. Susana Martinez toured the damage in Farmington, NM over the weekend. She was stunned by the disaster:

"The magnitude of it, you can't even describe it," she said, CNN affiliate KRQE reported. "It's like when I flew over the fires, your mind sees something it's not ready or adjusted to see."
Advertisement

Equally stunning was the EPA's slow response in notifying states of the disaster. New Mexico officials got their first word of the disaster from Native American officials. By the time they heard from EPA officials, it was 24 hours after the spill had begun. Gov. Martinez commented:

"It's completely irresponsible for the EPA not to have informed New Mexico immediately."

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement