A6 NATION East Oregonian Thursday, February 21, 2019 Toxic metals pouring out of former mines Water carries arsenic, lead and other metals into lakes and streams By MATTHEW BROWN Associated Press RIMINI, Mont. — Every day many millions of gallons of water loaded with arsenic, lead and other toxic metals flow from some of the most contaminated mining sites in the U.S. and into sur- rounding streams and ponds without being treated, The Associated Press has found. That torrent is poison- ing aquatic life and tainting drinking water sources in Montana, California, Col- orado, Oklahoma, Oregon and at least four other states. The pollution is a legacy of how the mining industry was allowed to operate in the U.S. for more than a cen- tury. Companies that built mines for silver, lead, gold and other “hardrock” min- erals could move on once they were no longer profit- able, leaving behind tainted water that still leaks out of the mines or is cleaned up at taxpayer expense. Using data from public records requests and inde- pendent researchers, the AP examined 43 mining sites under federal oversight, some containing dozens or even hundreds of individual mines. The records show that at average flows, more than 50 million gallons of contam- inated wastewater streams daily from the sites. In many cases, it runs untreated into The Durango Herald/Jerry McBride, File In this Aug. 6, 2015, file photo, Dan Bender, with the La Plata County Sheriff’s Office, takes a water sample from the Animas River near Durango, Colo., after the accidental release of an estimated 3 million gallons of waste from the Gold King Mine. nearby groundwater, riv- ers and ponds — a roughly 20-million-gallon daily dose of pollution that could fill more than 2,000 tanker trucks. The remainder of the waste is captured or treated in a costly effort that will need to carry on indefinitely, for perhaps thousands of years, often with little hope for reimbursement. The volumes vastly exceed the release from Col- orado’s Gold King Mine disaster in 2015, when a U.S. Environmental Protec- tion Agency cleanup crew inadvertently triggered the release of 3 million gallons of mustard-colored mine sludge, fouling rivers in three states. At many mines, the pol- lution has continued decades after their enlistment in the federal Superfund cleanup program for the nation’s most hazardous sites, which faces sharp cuts under Pres- ident Donald Trump. Federal officials have raised fears that at least six of the sites examined by AP could have blowouts like the one at Gold King. In mountains outside the Montana capital of Hel- ena, about 30 households can’t drink their tap water because groundwater was polluted by about 150 aban- doned gold, lead and copper mines that operated from the 1870s until 1953. The community of Rimini was added to the Superfund list in 1999. Con- taminated soil in residents’ yards was replaced, and the EPA has provided bottled water for a decade. But pol- luted water still pours from the mines and into Upper Tenmile Creek. “The fact that bottled water is provided is great,” said 30-year Rimini resi- dent Catherine Maynard, a natural resources analyst for the U.S. Department of Agriculture. “Where it falls short is it’s not piped into our home. Water that’s piped into our home is still con- taminated water. Washing dishes and bathing — that metal-laden water is still running through our pipes.” Estimates of the num- ber of such abandoned mine sites range from 161,000 in 12 western states to as many as 500,000 nationwide. At least 33,000 have degraded the environment, accord- ing to the Government Accountability Office, and thousands more are discov- ered every year. Officials have yet to com- plete work including basic risk analyses on about 80 percent of abandoned min- ing sites on federal lands. Most are controlled by the Bureau of Land Manage- ment, which under Trump is seeking to consolidate mine cleanups with another program and cut their com- bined 2019 spending from $35 million to $13 million. Problems at some sites are intractable. At northern Califor- nia’s Iron Mountain Mine, cleanup teams battle to con- tain highly acidic water that percolates through a former copper and zinc mine and drains into a Sacramento River tributary. The mine discharged six tons of toxic sludge daily before an EPA cleanup. Authorities now spend $5 million a year to remove poisonous sludge that had caused massive fish kills, and they expect to keep at it forever. In Colorado’s San Juan Mountains, site of the Gold King blowout, some 400 abandoned or inactive mine sites contribute an estimated 15 million gallons of acid mine drainage per day. AP also found mining sites where untreated water harms the environment or threatens drinking water supplies in North and South Carolina, Vermont, Mis- souri and Oregon. This landscape of pol- luted sites occurred under mining industry rules largely unchanged since the 1872 Mining Act. State and federal laws in recent decades have held companies more account- able than in the past, but critics say huge loopholes all but ensure that some of today’s mines will foul waterways or require per- petual cleanups. To avoid a catastrophe like Gold King, EPA offi- cials now require advance approval for work on many mining sites. But they acknowledge they’re only dealing with a small portion of the problem. “We have been trying to play a very careful game of prioritization,” said Dana Stalcup, deputy director of the Superfund program. “We know the Superfund program is not the answer to the hundreds of thousands of mines out there, but the mines we are working on we want to do them the best we can.” Fed officials noted number of rising threats By MARTIN CRUTSINGER AP Economics Writer AP Photo/Manuel Balce Ceneta President Donald Trump gestures as visiting Austrian Chan- cellor Sebastian Kurz leaves the White House in Washington following their meeting on Wednesday. Dems’ measure blocking Trump will come Friday By ALAN FRAM Associated Press WASHINGTON — House Democrats will file a resolution on Friday aimed at blocking the national emergency declaration that President Donald Trump has issued to help finance his wall along the South- west border, teeing up a clash over billions of dol- lars, immigration policy and the Constitution’s separation of powers. Though the effort seems almost certain to ultimately fall short — perhaps to a Trump veto — the votes will let Democrats take a defiant stance against Trump that is sure to please liberal vot- ers. They will also put some Republicans from swing districts and states in a dif- ficult spot. Formally introducing the measure sets up a vote by the full House likely by mid-March, perhaps as soon as next week, because of a timeline spelled out by law. Initial passage by the Dem- ocratic-run House seems assured. The measure would then move to the Republican-con- trolled Senate, where there may be enough GOP defec- tions for approval. The law that spells out the rules for emergency declarations seems to require the Sen- ate to address the issue too, but there’s never been a con- gressional effort to block one and some procedural uncertainties remain. Should the House and Senate initially approve the measure, Congress seems unlikely to muster the two- thirds majorities in each chamber that would be needed later to override a certain Trump veto. Even so, Republican sen- ators facing tough re-elec- tion fights next year in competitive states like Ari- zona, Colorado and North Carolina would have to take stances that could risk dividing the GOP’s pro- Trump and more moderate voters. Moderate Sen. Susan Collins, R-Maine, said Wednesday she would back a resolution block- ing the emergency decla- ration, making her the first Republican to publicly state her support for the effort to thwart the emergency. WASHINGTON — Federal Reserve policy- makers last month noted greater threats to the U.S. economy, ranging from adverse effects of the gov- ernment shutdown to rising trade tensions, and decided to emphasize that they would be “patient” in rais- ing interest rates. Minutes of the Fed’s Jan- uary discussions, released Wednesday, showed that Fed officials also felt that further rate hikes might only be needed if inflation were to accelerate. Fed officials also appeared close to agreeing on a plan to stop reducing their enormous bond port- folio before year’s end — a step intended to help ease upward pressure on bor- rowing rates. The minutes showed that Fed officials believe a “patient approach” to rate hikes would give them more time to assess the economic impact of President Donald Trump’s trade battles with China and other countries, as well as the severity of a developing slowdown in global growth. In response to the global slowdown, several Fed offi- cials trimmed their eco- nomic outlooks while acknowledging that down- side risks had increased. Analysts said the min- utes indicated that the bar for restarting rate increases seemed to be quite high. “The upshot is we now expect the Fed to leave rates unchanged throughout this year,” said Paul Ashworth, chief U.S. economist at Capital Economics. Ashworth said he thinks the Fed’s next rate move would be cuts next year as U.S. growth slows further. The minutes covered the Fed’s Jan. 29-30 meet- ing where the central bank left its key policy rate unchanged and signaled a major pivot away from steadily raising rates. Instead, the Fed’s state- Winter storm snarls travel in much of the U.S. NEW YORK (AP) — A sprawling storm dumped several inches of snow from the Midwest to the East Coast and deluged the South with rain Wednesday as it closed schools, snarled air travel and littered high- ways with crashes. Only a few inches of snow fell along the Inter- state 95 corridor from New York to Washington, but it was enough to put a scare into an area that has seen little of it this winter. Schools and government offices around the region closed early. New Jersey’s gover- nor declared a state of emergency, even though only 4 inches of snow was expected before turning to rain Wednesday night. State and local government offices in Delaware closed early, and so did local offices in Philadelphia. But the evening com- mute started out on a good AP Photo/Gene J. Puskar A pedestrian strolls past a statue of Pittsburgh Pirates Hall of Famer Willie Stargell outside PNC Park as snow falls Wednesday morning in Pittsburgh. note. A spokesperson for AAA Mid-Atlantic had said earlier in the after- noon it appeared motorists heeded warnings to stay off roads. Nationwide, more than 2,200 flights were can- celed and more than 5,500 were delayed, according to the flight-tracking website FlightAware. The mid-At- lantic region was espe- cially hard hit as airlines pulled flights ahead of the storm. Washington’s Rea- gan National Airport led the pack. “Travel anymore is not easy, so you expect the unexpected,” said Stacy Flye, trying to get home to ENJOY 3 EXCEPTIONAL SERVICES FROM AT&T. Pay one price for two great services: high-speed Internet Serious speed! and a full-featured home phone This is real dental insurance from Physicians Mutual Insurance Company Simply Broadband Max BROADBAND ULTRA + PHONE + SECURE 19 99 Per Month With Qualifying Phone Service 6 Mbps + Free Wi-Fi Router + 1 Year Price Lock Call Call today today and and pay pay less less 67 97 that helps pay for over 350 procedures – cleanings, fillings, crowns, even dentures. • No annual maximum, no deductible • See any dentist you want – including your own • Over 50? Coverage as low as $1 per day Per Month WIRELESS • The best network according to America’s biggest test. and Mexico. 1 Call now to get this FREE Information Kit 1-844-239-9335 855-972-6641 855-972-6641 You You can’t You can’t get can’t get BS BS get from from BS a from a buffalo. buffalo. a buffalo. *Internet *Internet access access service service and charges and charges not included. not included. Frontier does Frontier not does warrant not that warrant the service that the will service be error-free will be or error-free uninterrupted. or uninterrupted. Nest products: Nest Additional products: $9 Additional shipping fee $9 per shipping Nest device. fee per Nest Nest products device. must Nest be products purchased must with be new purchased Internet with service new or Internet eligible service Frontier or Secure eligible axes, services. governmental Frontier Taxes, Secure governmental and services. Frontier-imposed Taxes, and Fr governmental surcharges, and Frontier-imposed surcharges, minimum minimum system system requirements requirements and other and terms other and terms conditions and conditions apply. Nest®, apply. Nest Nest®, Learning Nest Thermostat™, Learning Thermostat™, Nest Protect™, Nest Nest Protect™, Cam™ Nest and the Cam™ Nest and logo the are Nest trademarks logo are or trademarks service marks or of service Nest Labs, marks Inc. of Nest ©2017 Labs, Frontier Inc. Communications ©2017 Frontier Communications Corporation Corporation dental50plus.com/25 *Individual Plan. Coverage not available in all states. Acceptance guaranteed for one insurance policy/ certificate of this type. Contact us for complete details about this insurance solicitation. This specific offer is not available in CO, NY; call 1-800-969-4781 or respond for similar offer. Certificate C250A (ID: C250E; PA: C250Q); Insurance Policy P150 (GA: P150GA; NY: P150NY; OK: P150OK; TN: P150TN) AW19-1034 6197 HIGH SPEED INTERNET • Consistently fast speeds. Connection with over 99% reliability. Based on GWS OneScore Sept. 2018. Excludes crowd sourced studies. • Unlimited calls to Canada • Unlimited texts to 120+ countries. 1 12 Mbps + Free Wi-Fi Router + 2 Year Price Lock Protect Your Identity, Devices & Files Florida. “And you know, we knew the weather was going to be bad, but some- times you just have to take your chances.” Amtrak made changes to its Keystone service between New York and Harrisburg, Pennsylvania. Multiple crashes, including a jackknifed tractor-trailer, shut down westbound lanes of the Pennsylvania Turn- pike in Lancaster County. Farther west, snow forced Minneapolis and St. Paul schools and scores of other districts in Minnesota and Wisconsin to cancel classes as up to 10 inches of snow fell on the region. Schools, businesses and government offices in Kan- sas closed or announced plans to start late. Several school districts closed in Missouri, where officials said many roads across the northern half of the state were partially or com- pletely snow covered. SCORE THE ULTIMATE LINEUP Save with Frontier Internet Bundles Bundle and save today ment said it would be “patient” in determining when to hike rates again. The statement cited the global economy, which has been slowing, and financial developments including a plunge in stock prices, as reasons for the change. The minutes said that participants believed “a patient posture would allow time for a clearer picture of the international trade pol- icy situation and the state of the global economy to emerge and, in particular, could allow policymakers to reach a firmer judgment about the extent and per- sistence of the economic slowdown in Europe and China.” and a wired connection to Gateway. • AT&T Internet is #1 in customer satisfaction over other major cable Internet providers. Claim based on 2018 ACSI survey of customers rating their own Internet provider’s performance. CALL NOW and ask about Next Day Installation. Iv Support Holdings LLC DIRECTV • Get access to 155+ live and local channels, with thousands of shows and movies on demand. 2 With SELECT™ Package. • Stream on up to 5 screens at the same time with the DIRECTV App. 3 Content/channels/ functionality vary. Data usage charges may apply. 2 • One HD DVR connects your whole home. 4 Add'l equip. req'd. Add'l & Advanced Receiver fees apply. 855-502-2578 Geographic and service restrictions apply to U-verse services. Call or visit att.com/uverse to verify eligibility. 1 UNLIMITED TALK: Phones only. Includes calls from and to DCA, Mexico and Canada. Other Countries: Per-minute pay-per-use rates apply unless you have an International Long Distance service package. Rates subject to change w/o notice. For rates, see att.com/worldconnect. UNLIMITED TEXT: Standard Messaging – Phones only. Requires compatible device. Includes unlimited messages up to 1MB in size within DCA to more than 190 countries for text messages and 120 countries for picture & video messages. AT&T may add, change & remove included countries at its discretion w/o notice. Messages sent through applications may incur data or other charges. See att.com/text2world for details. Advanced Messaging: Sender and recipient(s) must be AT&T postpaid wireless customers with HD Voice accounts, capable devices, have their devices turned on & be within AT&T-owned and -operated DCA (excludes third-party coverage & use in Mexico/Canada). Includes unlimited messages up to 10MB in size. Other restrictions apply & can be found at att.com/advancedmessaging. GEN. WIRELESS SVC: Subj. to Wireless Customer Agmt (att.com/wca). Credit approval required. Svcs not for resale. Deposit: May apply. Limits: Purch. & line limits apply. Prices may vary by location. Taxes, fees, monthly and other charges, usage, speed, coverage & other restr's apply per line. See att.com/additionalcharges for details on fees & charges. Promotions, terms & restr's subject to change & may be modified or terminated at any time without notice. International and domestic off-net data may be at 2G speeds. AT&T service is subject to AT&T network management policies. See att.com/broadbandinfo for details. 2 Access to available DIRECTV On Demand programming based on package selection. Actual number of shows and movies will vary. Additional fees apply for new releases and certain library titles. Compatible equipment and broadband Internet service with speeds of 750 Kbps or higher required. Downloading On Demand content may count against your data plan allowance. Visit directv.com/movies for details. 3 Live streaming and On Demand channels vary according to TV package, location and device. Additional fees apply for new releases. Out-of-home viewing requires High Speed Internet connection. Channels/additional features available for live streaming at home when connected to an HD DVR with High Speed connection. All functions and programming subject to change at any time. Visit directv.com/streamdirectv to get a list of compatible devices (sold separately) and details. 4 Whole-Home HD DVR functionality req’s an HD DVR connected to one television and a Genie Mini, H25 HD Receiver(s) or a DIRECTV Ready TV/Device in each additional room. Limit three remote viewings per HD DVR at a time. Visit directv.com/genie for complete details. Exclusions: Does not include taxes, $19.95 activation fee, Regional Sports fee of up to $7.49/mo. (which is extra & applies to CHOICE and/or MÁS ULTRA and higher pkgs), applicable use tax expense surcharge on retail value of installation, equipment upgrades/add-ons and certain other add’l fees & charges. DIRECTV SVC TERMS: Subject to Equipment Lease & Customer Agreements. Must maintain a min. base TV pkg of $29.99/mo. Programming, pricing, terms and conditions subject to change at any time. Some offers may not be available through all channels and in select areas. Visit directv.com/legal or call for details. ©2018 AT&T Intellectual Property. All Rights Reserved. AT&T, Globe logo, DIRECTV, and all other DIRECTV marks contained herein are trademarks of AT&T Intellectual Property and/or AT&T affiliated companies. All other marks are the property of their respective owners.