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Leave it to the Professionals
EPA workers accidentally spill toxic water into Animas River, a source of drinking water.
Magnitude of EPA spill: 'You can't even describe it' | KSL.com This reminds me of when I was remodeling my house in the SF Bay Area and had a city inspector over to inspect/sign off on some electrical work. This guy was constantly talking about how experienced he was at his job. He went to read the gauge off of a wire that fed the electrical panel in the garage but couldn't. So he got out his screwdriver and proceeded to pry at the cable when all of the sudden sparks were flying everywhere! I jumped back and asked him if he was OK. With a quiver in his voice he told me that that's never happened before and that I'll have to get it fixed before he signs it off.:D |
So it's not just the park service I guess...
I was on the receiving end of this one a few years back: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cerro_Grande_Fire |
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We're your government and we're here to help...........
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How do you accidentally spill 3 million gallons?
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Are they going to fine themselves?
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I hope the EPA will do something to protect us from that Yellowstone Caldera.
I'm against Calderas. Arsenic, lead, sulfuric acid in the Colorado river ain't nothin'. It's carbon dioxide in the air that we should be worried about. |
While I don't much care for much of hat the EPA does, the EPA leadership and the direction this administration has taken the Agency; the general employees just do what they are told to do.
According to the report, it was an accident. People have accidents every day..,even EPA employees or other officials. Let's hope this doesn't do much damage. Nature seems to be able to heal itself quite well. There was a time when that stuff was routinely pumped out of mines and into streams. |
EPA spill turns Animas River in Colorado a toxic orange - CNN.com
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EPA crew accidentally turns Animas River orange - CNN.com Quote:
I'm under the impression that there were holding ponds made of earth berms, perhaps similar to the one I pulled off the Internet (see below - unrelated). Newton Consultants, Inc. http://www.newtonconsultants.com/Ima...trDam_XSec.gif I figure that a bulldozer running along side or on the top of the berm caved in the side and the toxic water (3-million gallons of it) poured out. That is just a guess. Does anyone have aerial photos of the incident area? To be clear, the Gold King Mine is a strip mine and not a hole/cave in a mountain, right? |
In an attempt to answer my own questions I found this below.
Waste water from Gold King Mine reaches NM, Durango declares State of Local Emergency - 7NEWS Denver TheDenverChannel.com http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1439296282.jpg Quote:
And this explains why different reports were talking about different rivers. http://www.thedenverchannel.com/news/local-news/waste-water-from-gold-king-mine-reaches-new-mexico Quote:
Question is why would anyone be using heavy equipment in that environment? Sounds like delicate work to me. |
So here we are again, fint; pumping arsenic, lead and sulfuric acid into the rivers and streams. Lots of progress over the decades, right? This wasn't just an accident like bumping into a kid with a grocery cart in isle 7. This is an environmental disaster, the severity of which has not yet been determined. One thing is for sure; the EPA is not telling us how bad it is and definitely not how bad it can be. Arsenic and lead? The damn river is orange!
It is beautiful, though. Much like Gauguin's 1897 masterpiece* in the synthetist style just prior to his suicide attempt. Blue sky, green trees and an orange river where neither form nor color dominate the other: a precursor to abstraction with a muted application of the theory of complimentary colors. What beautiful effects arsenic has just as the syphilitic Gauguin's open sores were treated with arsenic. *"Where do we come from? What are we? Where are we going?"-Boston Museum of Fine Arts. |
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Waste water from Gold King Mine reaches NM, Durango declares State of Local Emergency - 7NEWS Denver TheDenverChannel.com Quote:
Don't let the color mislead you, let the testing of the waters determine the severity. |
Good to know the orange is not as bad as it looks. I admit, the color was shocking to me.
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Not one person at EPA will lose their job over this.
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Anyway, that article quotes the EPA as saying they are following official procedure/ policy which is already in place as far as getting the waivers signed. I'm not sure that getting people to sign legal documents without legal representation being present is going to help them any in court. Might just make things worse. |
There will likely be a few promotions involved actually - in government it's often "eff up, move up". It's a way of "reassigning" people. Go figure.
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