EPA's gross negligence at Gold King Mine includes disappearing 191 incident photos from their website

WUWT contributor Russell Cook notes:

EPA has scrubbed all 191 photos off their photo log / list view pages http://www.epaosc.org/site/image_listview.aspx?site_id=11082 . If the #1 item at this page is an accurate indicator, the scrub took place on Sunday.

I had visited that site last week when the event first happened and I wrote my first report, and I can confirm that the photos below, plus many more, are now gone.

What could have rendered all those photos, which were previously labeled “Security Level: Public“, as now not for public viewing?

GoldKing blowout eyewitness

What is the EPA hiding with this unwarranted action? – Anthony Watts


 

Fear-mongering, pollution standards and negligence rules don’t apply when EPA is at fault

Guest essay by Paul Driessen  

On August 5, an Environmental Restoration company crew, supervised by US Environmental Protection Agency officials, used an excavator to dig away tons of rock and debris that were blocking the entrance portal of Colorado’s Gold King Mine, which had been largely abandoned since 1923. Water had been seeping into the mine and out of its portal for decades, and the officials knew (or could and should have known) the water was acidic (pH 4.0-4.5), backed up far into the mine, and laced with heavy metals.

But they kept digging – until the greatly weakened dam burst open, unleashing a 3-million-gallon (or more) toxic flood that soon contaminated the Animas and San Juan Rivers, all the way to Lake Powell in Utah. To compound the disaster, EPA then waited an entire day before notifying downstream mayors, health officials, families, farmers, ranchers, fishermen and kayakers that the water they were drinking, using for crops and livestock, or paddling in was contaminated by lead, cadmium, mercury and arsenic.

Three million gallons of turmeric-orange poisonous water and sludge is enough to fill a pool the size of a football field (360×160 feet) seven feet deep. Backed up hundreds of feet above the portal into mine adits, stopes, rooms and other passageways that begin at 11,458 feet above sea level, the flash-flooding water had enough power to rip out a road and propel its toxic muck hundreds of miles downstream. (You can review EPA’s incompetence and gross negligence in these project photos* and post-disaster images.)

Anyone who follows mining, oil spill and power plant accidents knows the EPA, Obama White House and Big Green environmentalist rhetoric: There is no safe threshold for chemicals. They are toxic and carcinogenic at parts per billion. The water will be unsafe for years or even decades. Wildlife will die. Corporate polluters are criminals and must pay huge fines. We will keep our boots on their necks.

This time the White House was silent, and Democrats and eco-activists rushed to defend EPA and shift the blame to mining and mining companies. EPA officials made statements they would never use if a private company had caused the blowout: EPA had simply “miscalculated” how much water had backed up. It was just trying to stick a pipe into the top of the mine to safely pump liquid out for treatment. We were “very careful.” Contaminants “are flowing too fast to be an immediate health threat.” The river is already “restoring itself” back to pre-spill levels, EPA Administrator Gina McCarthy insisted.

The evidence strongly suggests that EPA never studied or calculated anything, had no operations plan vetted and approved by state officials or mining experts, was not trying to install a pipe – and was grossly careless and negligent. Toxic sludge was carried and deposited along hundreds of miles, contaminating water and riverbeds, where it will be stirred up for years during every heavy rainfall and snowmelt.

Mining engineers told me the prudent approach would have been to push or drill a 4-inch pipe through the rubble into the mine, to determine the water pressure, toxicity and extent of water backup in the mine – and then build a strong cofferdam below the portal – before proceeding. Simply removing the debris was stupid, dangerous and negligent, they said. It will take years now to correct the damage and assess costs.

A week after the great flood, EPA finally built a series of retention ponds to contain and filter out heavy metals and chemicals. But the August 5 surge and sludge are still contaminating Colorado, Utah, Arizona and New Mexico rivers, in arid regions where water is scarce and precious. The Navajo Tribal Unity Authority says meeting EPA standards for clean drinking water could double the tribe’s costs for building a new treatment plant and cost millions more in testing and operating expenses.

EPA says it will pay for testing, property damage, human injuries and hauling safe drinking water. But will it pay to truck in safe water for livestock and irrigation, and pay for crops and livestock lost because there is no water in the meantime, and cover millions in lost incomes for outfitters and hotel operators during what would have been their peak tourist seasons? Exxon paid such costs after the Valdez spill in Alaska; BP did likewise after its Macondo spill in the Gulf of Mexico; so have coal companies.

Shouldn’t EPA do likewise, instead of asserting “sovereign immunity” despite its gross negligence? Shouldn’t it cover these costs out of the millions of dollars it uses for employee bonuses and to payenvironmental activists and public relations firms to promote its image and agenda – instead of sticking taxpayers with the tab via special appropriations? Will EPA reimburse state and local governments and private charities for assistance they have already rendered? Will it fire the irresponsible officials, or at least demote and discipline them? Will Environmental Restoration pay its fair share?

Under standards that EPA and environmentalists apply to the private sector, Gold King was a disaster. However, the accident could also be an impetus for reflection and responsible regulatory reform.

Anti-mining pressure groups and factions within EPA will use this accident to press for new layers of mining rules, bonds, payments and liabilities. They are unnecessary – and will only restrict the jobs, expertise and revenues needed to ensure that exploration, mining, reclamation and repair of abandoned (orphan) mines are done properly. Modern mining, processing and pollution prevention methods are vastly superior to those employed even 50 years ago, and do not cause the exaggerated impacts alleged by Earthwatch EarthJustice and others. Moreover, the metals and minerals are essential for the wondrous technologies and living standards, the health, housing, transportation and recreational pursuits, that we enjoy today.

The Gold King blowout was predictable and preventable. The mine was leaking slightly polluted water, but the problem was not serious and was being addressed, and the former mining town of Silverton, CO had repeatedly asked EPA not to intervene or make Gold King a Superfund site. Mining engineers and other experts were available, and some had offered their insights and expertise. EPA ignored them.

EPA – and all government agencies – should end their We-know-best and We-know-what-we’re-doing attitudes … and seek outside advice from real experts in the trenches. They should also develop careful operating plans, assess worst-case scenarios, and take steps to ensure that the worst doesn’t happen. Sometimes they just need to do nothing, get out of the way, and let the private sector handle problems.

But they should support Clean Water Act and other revisions to make it easier, less costly and less fraught with potential liability for companies or coalitions of dedicated parties to fix pollution discharge problems at the relatively few abandoned mines that are leaking contaminated water at worrisome levels.

EPA’s new view that these pollutants are not as toxic as previously claimed – and that nature can and does clean things up – is refreshing, even if self-serving. (My use of “toxic” in this article mostly reflects currently prevailing agency, activist and public health industry attitudes and safety standards.)

Standards for maximum contaminant levels and maximum safe exposures are often absurdly low, and the concept of “linear no threshold” (that there is no safe exposure or blood or tissue level for lead, cadmium, arsenic and other metals) is outdated and wrong, Dr. Edward Calabrese and other experts argue.

Pollution, exposure and blood levels are often safe at significantly higher levels than regulations currently allow. Moreover, low levels of exposure to radiation and many chemicals can actually provide protection from cancer, disease and pollutants. While this concept of hormesis is generally ignored by current regulations, we know that a little alcohol improves heart functions, whereas a lot causes multiple problems; an 80 mg aspirin can prevent strokes, but a bottleful can kill; and many vaccinations inject disease strains that cause a person’s immune system to produce antibodies and prevent the disease.

The Obama EPA is already using WOTUS rules on water and a Clean Power Plan on electricity generation and climate change to control virtually everything we make, grow and do. Congressional committees, presidential candidates, businesses and citizens need to get involved, debate these issues, ask tough questions, and work to implement appropriate reforms. Our courts and Congress must not allow another collusive sue-and-settle lawsuit – or a new regime of government controls and mine closures that would drive yet another nail into the coffin of western state and local economies … and cleanup efforts.

Gold King presents a teachable moment. Let’s make sure we learn the correct lessons.

Paul Driessen is senior policy analyst for the Committee For A Constructive Tomorrow, author of Eco-Imperialism: Green power – Black death, and coauthor of Cracking Big Green: Saving the world from the Save-the-Earth money machine.

* It appears that EPA deleted its entire photo album, so that people can no longer view them. We are trying to find a citizen archive of the images and will link to it, if possible. Again we have “the most transparent administration in history” (quoting President Obama) at your service.

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August 19, 2015 12:56 am

Who oversees the overseer?

pat
August 19, 2015 1:05 am

not sure about the figures in the following, but putting it up for others to critique:
18 Aug: Washington Examiner: John Siciliano : Cost of EPA’s toxic spill could soar to nearly $30 billion
The cost of cleaning up a major toxic waste spill in the West caused by an Environmental Protection Agency contractor could soar as high as $27.7 billion.
That’s the conclusion of study released Tuesday morning by the right-leaning American Action Forum…
http://www.washingtonexaminer.com/cost-of-epas-toxic-spill-could-soar-to-nearly-30-billion/article/2570378#!

hengav
Reply to  pat
August 19, 2015 10:32 am

I think a pretty good resource for specific mine site details can be found here:
http://jonathanpthompson.blogspot.ca/2015/08/the-nitty-gritty-context-behind-gold.html?m=1
I downloaded pictures up until Sunday as well. If you follow the blog spot above there is a lot of good stuff on the mine clean-up and how the accident was likely human error.

August 19, 2015 2:48 am

EPA: Environmental Pollution Agency

graphicconception
August 19, 2015 3:01 am

Have you seen this at Bishop Hill? http://bishophill.squarespace.com/blog/2015/8/13/is-there-a-backstory-to-the-epa-pollution-incident.html
One of the comments has a link to this site with a more readable version of the letter from a mining engineer who predicts what will happen. Unlike climate predictions, this one took place before the event happened: http://www.thegatewaypundit.com/2015/08/letter-to-editor-predicted-colorado-epa-spill-one-week-before-catastrophe-so-epa-could-secure-superfund-cash/

observa
Reply to  graphicconception
August 19, 2015 4:25 am

Wow I can’t beat that incisive predictive warning but we all need to understand the need to create Green jobs (hat tip to Tim Blair)
http://www.washingtonexaminer.com/no-one-showed-up-for-californias-green-jobs-rush/article/2570363
or orange ones as the case may be

Greg
August 19, 2015 3:45 am

I guess it’s OK then, if the Gulf of Mexico simply “restores itself” after the BP spill…

Ed Wolfe
August 19, 2015 4:46 am

Photogate?

Catcracking
August 19, 2015 6:42 am

Michelle Malkin describes the EPA multiple problems besides the toxic spill in the river
http://www.realclearpolitics.com/articles/2015/08/19/obamas_toxic_environmental_pollution_agency_127814.html

trafamadore
August 19, 2015 7:07 am

Does anyone know if , in fact, you could drink the water from the Animas and San Juan to start with? I have hiked for many years in the Colorado area and the general advice is to not drink the water because you don’t know which mine is leaking into the source.

Reply to  trafamadore
August 19, 2015 8:46 am
trafamadore
Reply to  dbstealey
August 19, 2015 9:32 am

That’s the point. It can _look_ wonderful. You can’t see As or Cd or whatever in beautiful clear water. But many many streams in the Rocky Mt states are contaminated with mining leakage, which is why the EPA was there in the first place.

Reply to  trafamadore
August 19, 2015 10:00 am

traffy says:
…many streams in the Rocky Mt states are contaminated with mining leakage, which is why the EPA was there in the first place.
Obviously you haven’t followed this story very closely. The main reason the EPA was on that river was explained in detail in a ‘letter to the editor’ of the local paper, the month before the disaster.
The same geologist predicted exactly what would happen. The EPA was not there to prevent a disaster, they were there to cause a disaster, which is what they did. (See his letter in Henry Bowman’s post below.)
The EPA is thoroughly corrupt from the top down. EPA chief administrator McCarthy turned a blind eye to her subordinate’s ongoing corruption. As his direct boss, McCarthy either knew what he was doing, or she should have known. She deserves to lose her job. Why is she still employed at taxpayer expense?
McCarthy’s subordinate is going to jail for years — but she skates?? That is wrong. The guy was the highest paid EPA employee. And how did he spend his time? He says he was…
…”trying to find ways to fine tune the capitalist system”
He’s probably better than a lot of them. Plenty of EPA employees are trying to destroy our system.

trafamadore
Reply to  dbstealey
August 19, 2015 10:14 am

right. got it.

trafamadore
Reply to  dbstealey
August 19, 2015 8:53 pm

wink wink

skeohane
Reply to  trafamadore
August 19, 2015 10:06 am

No you don’t drink the water out of streams here in the mountains because of giardia.

trafamadore
Reply to  skeohane
August 19, 2015 3:38 pm

We use filters. giardia doesn’t matter. but heavy metals do.

Reply to  trafamadore
August 19, 2015 6:17 pm

Don’t blame mines for everything. Mountain water runoff is often naturally contaminated, to some degree, with metals and metal oxides; this is the case with Animas river, Beaver creek, and many other rivers in Rocky Mountains. Natural contamination can be serious pp for example, there is no fish in parts of Beaver creek (flowing East from the Wolf Creek pass toward San Louis valley).
The really clean “mountain water” is glacier runoff water. This is why Iceland has, probably, the best cold water in the world, though their geothermally heated hot water stinks with H2S, no matter how they try to prevent it. Rocky Mountains don’t have permanent glaciers; snow cover and groundwater tables here in Colorado vary wildly year-to-year.

trafamadore
Reply to  Alexander Feht
August 19, 2015 8:41 pm

You might just try the run off from the Cascades. You can use it to fill your battery instead of distilled water.
But, for the mountain states, how do you know that mines are not responsible? They are everywhere.

August 19, 2015 7:34 am

I have a contact who works at EPA. I mentioned this to him. EPA has issued a “legal hold” on all related documents related to the spill, and operations leading up to it.
I don’t know how common it is to retract documents already made public when a legal hold is issued.
It certainly is a convenient excuse.

Resourceguy
Reply to  John
August 19, 2015 8:38 am

Put Hillary in charge of the servers, off site of course.

Henry Bowman
August 19, 2015 7:42 am

Below is a copy of a letter to the editor of the Silverton Standard published July 30, 2015, six days before the release. I have not followed the link provided by graphicconception above, but the letter may be the same. The author is apparently a retired geologist.
Editor:
I came to Silverton this summer to enjoy my retirement, appreciate nature and prospect the mountains for unique minerals. I came here to enjoy a simple life with no TV and no politics, but unfortunately that has changed. Your EPA dilemma has caused my blood to boil.
Based on my 47 years of experience as a professional geologist, it appears to me that the EPA is setting your town and the area up for a possible Superfund blitzkrieg.
In regards to your meeting with the EPA on June 23, Mr. Hestmark’s (EPA representative) statement “we don’t have an agenda” is either ignorant naivety or an outright falsehood. I am certain Mr. Hestmark’s hydrologists have advised him what’s going to happen when the Red & Bonita portals and plugged and the “grand experiment” begins with unknown and foreseeable results and possible negative consequences.
Here’s the scenario that will occur based on my experience: Following the plugging, the exfiltrating water will be retained behind the bulkheads, accumulating at a rate of approximately 500 gallons per minute. As the water backs up, it will begin filling all connected mine workings and bedrock voids and fractures. As the water level inside the workings continues to rise, it will accumulate head pressure at a rate of 1 PSI per each 2.31 feet of vertical rise. As the water continues to migrate through and fill interconnected workings, the pressure will increase. Eventually, without a doubt, the water will find a way out and will exfiltrate uncontrollably through connected abandoned shafts, drifts, raises, fractures and possibly from talus on the hillsides. Initially it will appear that the miracle fix is working.
“Hallelujah!”
But make no mistake, with in seven to 120 days all of the 500 gpm flow will return to Cement Creek. Contamination may actually increase due to disturbance and flushing action within the workings.
The “grand experiment” in my opinion will fail. And guess what Mr. Hestmark will say then?
Gee, “Plan A” didn’t work so I guess we will have to build a treatment plant at a cost to taxpayers of $100 million to $500 million (who knows).
Reading between the lines, I believe that has been the EPA’s plan all along. The proposed Red & Bonita plugging plan has been their way of getting a foot in the door to justify their hidden agenda for construction of a treatment plant. After all, with a budget of $8.2 billion and 17,000 employees, the EPA needs new, big projects to feed the best and justify their existence.
I would recommend that anyone who owns a home, property water well or spring in the Cement Creek drainage take water samples ASAP to protect themselves from groundwater changes that may be caused by the EPA plugging operation!
God bless America! God bless Silverton, Colorado. And God protect us from the EPA.
— Dave Taylor, Farmington

trafamadore
Reply to  Henry Bowman
August 19, 2015 8:43 pm

You might just try the run off from the Cascades. You can use it to fill your battery instead of distilled water.
But, for the mountain states, how do you know that mines are not responsible? They are everywhere.

trafamadore
Reply to  Henry Bowman
August 19, 2015 8:47 pm

first off, it should be obvious that he did not predict what happened, not even close.
“But make no mistake, with in seven to 120 days all of the 500 gpm flow will return to Cement Creek. ”
So the way I read this, is that the flow was already continuously been going to Cement Creek.
Which was why the EPA was there in the first place.

Resourceguy
August 19, 2015 8:36 am

Forget Walmart Watch by the unions, we need Agency Watch with many branches and coordinated connections. That also means Administration Watch because they are placing the many thousand unqualified political appointees in the agencies.

Resourceguy
August 19, 2015 9:43 am

Does Hickenlooper also drink brown water? I suppose so if it involves payments and favors from DC in return.

rw
August 19, 2015 12:50 pm

This reminds me of the environmental cock-ups that used to happen in the good old Soviet Union. Same mentality, same outcomes, I guess.

Reply to  rw
August 19, 2015 9:26 pm

Environmental disasters were a regular modus operandi in the USSR but most of them went under the radar of the Western media. Europeans and Americans knew about the disappearance of the Aral sea, some journalists heard something about the Brezhnev’s infamous plan to turn great Siberian rivers into the Kazakh steppes using nuclear explosions (even Soviet scientists were so outraged that some of them started to write collectively signed letters about it to the UN). Drinking vodka while shooting hundreds of deer from helicopter with a military Gatling gun was Brezhnev’s idea of relaxation in the wild.
But known disasters were just the tip of the bloody iceberg. I remember walking in the forest near Iskitim, in Western Siberia, where every step would raise a choking cloud of cement dust from the nearby factory. This dust covered hundreds of square kilometers of the pine forest. Exhaust pipes of the biological weapon factories would stick above ground in the fields of Koltsovo, north of the Siberian Academy Town (Soviet imitation of Los Alamos) — everyone knew not to go near those places. And how could one forget bright green sunsets over Cherepovets, in St. Petersburg area, where copper compounds made air especially colorful!
Please, don’t forget that a large and influential part of the American Academia still consists of unapologetic, convinced Marxists (the kind of people young Obama messed around). Subversion of humanities is complete; now they expand into natural sciences. Americans are far too lenient with these virulent social disease carriers.

Martin A
August 19, 2015 2:19 pm

Presumably the disappeared photos are FOI-able?

Richard Barraclough
August 19, 2015 3:24 pm

Pedant language alert !!!
Since when has “disappear” been a transitive verb??

clipe
Reply to  Richard Barraclough
August 19, 2015 7:23 pm

Well, this being the English language, whenever it came into common usage.
First Known Use of INCENTIVIZE
1970

clipe
Reply to  clipe
August 19, 2015 7:31 pm

Since when…more than one exclamation point?

clipe
Reply to  clipe
August 19, 2015 7:34 pm

Or question mark?[?]

Tom Crozier
Reply to  Richard Barraclough
August 20, 2015 10:21 am

Por lo menos desde que se desaparecieron los desaparecidos de Argentina y Chile. ¿Hace como 35 años?

Ted G
August 19, 2015 6:59 pm

EPA, IPPC, the UN and the Obama administration CROOKS AND LIARS………..

David Trimble
August 20, 2015 2:36 am

Anthony and Paul,
The thing I haven’t seen posted anywhere is, “What’s going to happen when this load of poison reaches Lake Mead, Southern California’s and Las Vegas’ water supply? Are we suppose to think this stuff won’t impact those people for some reason? Those 20+ Million people?
Your thoughts please!
Davet916

tadchem
August 20, 2015 8:28 am

In a related development, the EPA announced today that they will no longer be posting their incident reports on the private email server of the former Secretary of State. /sarcoff

Resourceguy
August 25, 2015 6:36 am

EPA also needs a technical review Board, and not one that is stacked by advocacy groups.
An example from Katrina levee failure review….
http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2015/08/150824212258.htm

August 31, 2015 3:33 pm

Structural evaluation can be utilized to foretell the eventual profitability of an industry.