By Avianne Tan
Navajo Nation Mourning, Pleading for Help After Toxic Mine Spill Contaminates Rivers
The Navajo Nation is mourning and pleading for help as clean storage water is depleting, after toxic spill from a mine has contaminated water flowing down the Animas River in Colorado into the San Juan River through Utah and New Mexico.
The spill happened Friday when a team of Environmental Protection Agency workers accidentally released 3 million gallons of wastewater containing heavy metals, including lead and arsenic, from the Gold King Mine in Silverton, Colorado, the agency said.
The Colorado Department of Public Health said Tuesday evening that the concentration of contaminants “continues to decrease” and the “department does not anticipate adverse health effects from incidental or limited exposure to metals detected in the water.
Though EPA administrator Gina McCarthy said at a news conference today that the agency’s slow response was out of caution, Navajo Nation President Russell Begaye said the slow response is frustrating the Navajo people, who are “weeping every day” and in “dire need of clean water,” not only for drinking, but also to sustain their organic farms and ranches.
- Three Million Gallons of Contaminated Water Turns River Orange in Colorado
- The Latest: Spill Prompts New Mexico to Declare Emergency
“Our soul is hurting,” Begaye told ABC News today. “I meet people daily that weep when they see me, asking me, ‘How do I know the water will be safe?’ The Animas River and the San Juan rivers are our lifelines. Water is sacred to us. The spirit of our people is being impacted.”

PHOTO: Navajo Nation President Russell Begaye makes an announcement on Aug. 8, 2015 about the Navajo Nation response to the release of mine waste into the Animas River which has impacted the Navajo Nation water supply.
He explained that “basic drinking water” is becoming scarce as clean storage water is depleting more rapidly than expected.
“Bottled water is becoming scarce, and my people want to know what we can drink after the clean supply runs out,” Begaye said. “We’re hauling water from wells outside the disaster area and using our own Navajo Nation funds to run these trunks back and forth. We desperately need help from outside to get good quality, safe drinking water.”

PHOTO: People kayak in the Animas River near Durango, Colo., Aug. 6, 2015, in water colored from a mine waste spill.
“We are in the middle of farming season, which is only four to five months of the whole year, and farmers are baking me to help them save their crops, many of which are not fully ripe yet,” he said. “The revenue from these crops is what our farmers need to live off for the rest of the year, so without irrigation water, they are doomed.
“Our ranchers, which have cattle, sheep, horses, goats and different livestock also graze and drink along the river,” Begaye added. “But right now, all the cattle are penned up, and these ranchers have to haul their water in, which they’re not prepared to do.”

PHOTO: The Animas River flows through the center of Durango, Colo. on Aug. 7, 2015.
Begaye explained that the Navajo are well known for their organic crops and meat, but now with the river contamination, farmers and ranchers are scared they can’t guarantee their consumers that their produce and products are going to be 100 percent organic.
Navajo tourism is also being affected because business owners of resorts and boating companies by the rivers now cannot fully operate until the water is cleared, the Navajo president added.
Begaye said the EPA sent two personnel — one who could help with any health issues and another who could help with water testing — but he said the Navajo Nation has yet to receive help from the EPA to get drinking water and more specific answers about what’s exactly in the orange-yellow waters now flowing in their sacred rivers.

PHOTO: Officials from Colorado Parks & Wildlife and a retired aquatic biologist check on cages with Rainbow trout fingerlings on Friday Aug. 7, 2015, on the Animas River in Durango, Colo.
Administrator McCarthy said today she understands the “frustration” but that the EPA has “researchers and scientists working around the clock” and is hustling to provide “alternative water supplies.”
She added there have not been any reported cases of “anyone’s health being compromised” and that the “EPA is taking full responsibility to ensure that the spill is cleaned up.”
McCarthy also mentioned that she expected there to be lawsuits against the EPA, and Begaye said in a news release Sunday that he planned to take legal action against the agency.

PHOTO: As the Animas River begins to recede it reveals a sludge left behind by the Gold King Mine spillage just north of Durango Colo. on Aug. 7, 2015.
“To recover from this from this will take a while,” Begaye told ABC News. “For our river to recover, it may take decades. But our people have faced disaster before, and as a nation, we’ll work together and do the best we can. As a nation of prayer, we are asking for prayers for our people right now, and I’d also just like to thank anyone who has reached out to us to volunteer help.”
ABC News, Posted: Aug 11, 2015
Source: http://abcn.ws/1TsHO0i
Where Is FMEA.. All of those tax dollars and we have a rather localize disaster and people need water? Are you kidding me? This just goes to show people that if anything major were to happen in this country, don’t look for the government to help. You will be on your own!
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Enough is enough America it’s about time the real indigenous people of your country should be counted and given every available aid they need haven’t you got enough skeletons in your closest on the way these special people have been and continue to be treated. It’s disgusting it needs to stop get a conscious and do what you know you should NOW you’ve stolen from these proud people give back and beg for their forgiveness and learn from them. Live with nature and stop destroying it. It’s not ours to destroy its loaned to us in the hope when you go back to the earth your leave it in a better way than you used it. Show the world you really care about the American Indians and do what is right. Now.
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“We are in the middle of farming season, which is only four to five months of the whole year, and farmers are baking me to help them save their crops, many of which are not fully ripe yet,” he said.
Pretty sure that should read “farmers are BEGGING me, not baking me”…
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This does a FEMA DISASTER make!!!
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