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TOXIC SITE: Uranium from mine found in wells

New tests show dangerous levels

YERINGTON

Peggy Pauly lives in a robin-egg blue, two-story house not far from acres of onion fields that make the Northern Nevada air smell sweet at harvest time.


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  • But she can look through the window from her kitchen table, just past her backyard with its swing set and pet llama, and see an ominous sign on a neighboring fence: "Danger: Uranium Mine."

    For almost a decade, people who make their homes in this rural community in the Mason Valley 65 miles southeast of Reno have blamed that enormous abandoned mine for the high levels of uranium in their water wells.

    They say they have been met by a stone wall from state regulators, local politicians and the huge oil company that inherited the toxic site: BP PLC. Those interests have insisted uranium naturally occurs in the region's soil and there's no way to prove that a half-century of processing metals at the former Anaconda pit mine is responsible for the contamination.

    That has changed. A new wave of testing by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency has found that 79 percent of the wells tested north of the World War II-era copper mine have dangerous levels of uranium or arsenic or both that make the water unsafe to drink.

    And -- more importantly to the neighbors -- that the source of the pollution is a groundwater plume that has slowly migrated from the 6-square-mile mine site.

    The new samples likely never would have been taken if not for a whistle-blower, a preacher's wife, a tribal consultant and some stubborn government scientists who finally helped crack the toxic mystery that has plagued this rural mining and farming community for decades.

    "They have completely ruined the groundwater out here," said Pauly, the wife of a local pastor and mother of two girls who organized a community action group five years ago to seek the truth about the pollution.

    "It almost sounds like we are happy the contamination has moved off the site," she said. "But what we are happy about is ... they have enough data to now answer our questions."

    "Prior to this, we didn't really have an understanding of where water was moving," said Steve Acree, a highly regarded hydrogeologist for the EPA in Oklahoma, who was brought in to examine the test results. "My interpretation at this stage of the process is yes, you now have evidence of mine-impacted groundwater."

    The tests found levels of uranium more than 10 times the legal drinking water standard in one monitoring well a half mile north of the mine. Though the health effects of specific levels are not well understood, the EPA says long-term exposure to high levels of uranium in drinking water may cause cancer and damage kidneys.

    At the mine itself, wells tested as high as 3.4 milligrams per liter -- more than 100 times the standard. That's in an area where ore was processed with sulfuric acid and other toxic chemicals in unlined ponds.

    Moving north toward the mine's boundary and beyond, readings begin to decline but several wells still tested two to three times above health limits.

    "The hot spots, the treatment areas on the site, are places you totally expect to see readings like that," said Dietrick McGinnis, an environmental consultant for the neighboring Yerington Paiute Tribe. "But this shows you have a continuous plume with decreasing concentration as you move away from the site."

    The new findings are no surprise to Earle Dixon, the site's former project manager for the U.S. Bureau of Land Management, which owns about half of the property.

    An administrative judge ruled last year that the BLM illegally fired Dixon in 2004 in retaliation for speaking out about the health and safety dangers at the mine.

    "The new data depicts the story that I had tried to hypothesize as a possibility," Dixon said.

    "It was speculation, because I didn't have the dramatic evidence they have now. You just had all the symptoms," he said from New Mexico, where he is now a state geologist.

    "The way the state has been telling the story and BP and Lyon County ... is this is mostly all natural. Well, no it's not," he said. "We now know for a fact that most of this uranium as far as 2 miles out from the mine comes from the mine.

    "This site becomes a poster child for mining pollution."

    Officials for BP, formerly known as British Petroleum, and its subsidiary Atlantic Richfield have insisted until now that the uranium could not be tied to the mine. They maintained the high concentrations were due to a naturally occurring phenomenon beneath Nevada's mineral-laden mountains.

    The new discovery has Pauly, McGinnis and others renewing a call for the EPA to declare the mine a Superfund site -- something the state and county have opposed despite a new potential source of money to help cover cleanup costs that could reach hundreds of millions of dollars.

    Jill Lufrano, spokeswoman for the Nevada Department of Environmental Protection, said an investigation into the source of contamination is continuing but "the new finding does put scientific confirmation behind the theory that this would migrate off site."

    She said the new evidence doesn't change the state's opposition to Superfund listing. Nevada has a long tradition of supporting mining and now produces more gold than anywhere in the world except China, South Africa and Australia.

    Copper first was discovered around Yerington in 1865. Anaconda bought the property in 1941 and -- fueled by demand after World War II -- produced nearly 1.75 billion pounds of copper from 1952-78.

    A mineral firm launched a then-secret plan to produce yellowcake uranium from the mine's waste piles in the 1970s. An engineer reported in 1976 that they weren't finding as much uranium as anticipated in the processing ponds. "Where could it be now?" he wrote. "Should we continue to look for it?"

    Had they continued the search outside the processing area, Wyoming Mineral Corp. likely would have detected the movement of the contamination. But the market for uranium dipped and the company scuttled the venture.

    Pauly never suspected the mine was leaking contamination when she and her husband finished building their home in 1990. They drank water from their well until 2003 -- and used it to mix formula for a baby from 1996-98 -- before becoming suspicious as rumors swirled about the contaminated mine.

    "Everybody said it was fine," she said. "Legally they didn't have to disclose anything because technically there was nothing definitive then that showed the contamination was moving off the site."

    BP and Atlantic Richfield, which bought Anaconda Copper Co. in 1978, have stopped claiming there is no evidence the mine caused contamination, but they aren't conceding anything about how much.

    "We know the mine has had an impact but to what extent is not really known at this time," Tom Mueller, spokesman for BP America in Houston, told The Associated Press in a recent e-mail. He said the sampling "remains inconclusive regarding relative impacts from the mine" compared with other potential sources.

    Yerington Paiute Tribe Chairman Elwood Emm said he hopes the new findings help expedite cleanup. "In the meantime, we continue to lose our water resource," he said.

    So who will pay for the cleanup?

    "That is the million-dollar question," Dixon said. "Every Superfund site needs an advocate or two or three and in my view there are none for Yerington except for Peggy Pauly."

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    Van Sickle wrote on December 17, 2009 02:54 PM: "That is the million-dollar question," Dixon said. "Every Superfund site needs an advocate or two or three and in my view there are none for Yerington except for Peggy Pauly."

    WOW, reading the Earle Dixon case online was a real eye opener! Why do I get this sick feeling when I reading the names of Bob Abbey, Allen Biaggi and Jim Gibbons? Why did Gibbons tell the press right before the election that he never met Dixon. Did it have anything to do with the fact that Dixon had just won his job back?


    Linda Morrissey wrote on November 24, 2009 12:12 AM: we have been looking for a home in the northern nevada area, specifically, Gardnerville, Minden and Dayton Nevada. I have already heard some bad things about the water in Dayton and the area outside of Gardnerville concerning arsenic in the groundwater. this brings to light that a lot more research has to be done for homeowners there. Thanks to this woman for her bravery in pursueing this matter.


    HELEN WEILS wrote on November 23, 2009 09:53 AM: IF THE LEVELS ARE 4.0 OR LESS THEY ARE ACTUALLY GOOD FOR YOU. IN FACT, IN MONTANA THEY HAVE RADON MINES THAT BUILD IMMUNITY AND ARE RESPONSIBLE FOR
    MANY CURES. I WAS THERE MYSELF THIS SUMMER. AFTER ONE WEEK I HAD THE ENERGY I HAD 20 YEARS AGO.
    THE MIRACLE HEALING WATERS IN EUROPE HAVE SINCE BEEN DISCOVERED TO HAVE LOW LEVELS OF RADIATION.
    THE SURVIVORS HUMAN AND ANIMAL ON THE OUTLYING AREAS OF JAPAN WHERE THE BOMBS WENT OFF LIVED LONGER THAN PEOPLE
    EVER EXPECTED. COWS LIVED INTO THEIR LATE TEENS. A LITTLE IS A MIRACLE, A LOT IS DEADLY.


    patrick wrote on November 23, 2009 09:13 AM: Have a nice big glass of cool refreshing aqua unrainia.


    douglas wrote on November 23, 2009 07:03 AM: where did the uranium come from ? was it trucked in by some *evil* business ? or was it there naturally ?

    no doubt silver is toxic to humans in some concentration. perhaps all nevadans must move lest they expire from "silver state" silver leached into groundwater.