The torrent of orange sludge that poisoned a Colorado river last month will be a hot topic again in Congress and the courts this week, the subject of at least one high-profile lawsuit and a series of hearings into how the Environmental Protection Agency accidentally triggered the deluge.
The saga began on Aug. 5, when the EPA tried to slurp out the poisoned water inside a dormant gold mine in southwestern Colorado. The crew misjudged the pressure, the EPA admits, and the result was an 80-mile ribbon of pollution, which flowed through three states and left a trail of heavy toxic metals in its wake.
Now, four separate congressional committees are scheduled to probe the disaster, starting Wednesday with the House Science Committee. At the same time, the Navajo Nation, which depends on 200-miles of river allegedly fouled by the spill, is expected to file a massive lawsuit against the agency.
They’ve hired a high-profile lawyer — the prosecutor who pinned fraud charges on former Enron executive Kenneth Lay — and they’re backed by a famous environmental activist: Erin Brockovich, the consumer advocate made famous by an Oscar-winning movie bearing her name.
Related: How did the Animas River spill really happen?
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On Tuesday, Brockovich toured Navajo country with tribe president Russell Begaye. “The Navajo Nation has been culturally and economically devastated by the impact of the Gold King Mine Spill and we need help to address this crisis,” Begaye said in a statement, thanking Brockovich for raising awareness of “the plight of our people.”
The EPA was not immediately available for comment on the hearings or the lawsuit, but it’s sought to ease fears in the weeks since the spill. The damaged river — known as the Animas — has been re-opened to boating, swimming, and even fishing. The EPA also says that the most worrisome pollutants — arsenic and lead, which respectively peaked at 300 times and 3,500 times the normal levels — have returned to “pre-event” conditions.
That’s not quite the same as saying the river is clean. Plus, the Navajo are skeptical of the federal claims. They point out that the EPA initially underestimated the spill by two million gallons. And they’re planning to run their own monitoring program until further notice.
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Congress is expected to take up the question of what caused the spill, and how the clean-up should be handled. The hearings will feature witnesses from the Navajos, the downstream town of Durango, Colorado, and the EPA itself, among other groups. Todd Henis, the owner of the mine that held the toxic water, is not scheduled to testify. But in an interview with MSNBC, he blamed the EPA and predicted even worse disasters to come.
“This is a story of massive regulatory failure over many years,” he said, warning of continued toxic build-up in the mines surrounding his own. “If there’s a seismic event or just too much pressure, we will have a blow-out that’s not three million gallons, as happened at Gold King, but an order of magnitude that’s a thousand times more water.”








