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L<B>and<B> <B>mine<B> Page 19 of 20 <br /> "There was hardly any place you could look on the <br /> site that wasn't generating acid rock drainage," said <br /> Hays Griswold, who led the EPA rescue effort. <br /> "Wherever rainfall, snowfall would hit, you would <br /> get puddles of it." <br /> The snow was 50 inches deep and 150 percent of <br /> normal on the peaks above Summitville, Griswold <br /> said. <br /> "So we were expecting a huge spring runoff," <br /> Griswold recalls. "We weren't disappointed when <br /> spring came either." <br /> The solution was to get the water treatment plant to <br /> work, but EPA and a private subcontractor were <br /> hardly more successful than Galactic had been, and <br /> much of the polluted water was released to <br /> streams. But the federal agency was able to fashion <br /> an additional water treatment plant out of the <br /> equipment that had been used to extract gold from <br /> the cyanide solution. <br /> The water levels stabilized behind the dike. <br /> • Drainage from the old mine workings were plugged <br /> to halt the flow of acid water into creeks, and the <br /> water was routed through the treatment plants. <br /> Then, in a campaign of massive earth-moving, the <br /> mounds of acid-forming waste rock were piled back <br /> into the pit from which they had been dug and <br /> covered with clay. Other areas have been <br /> revegetated. <br /> But Victor Ketellapper, the EPA official who now <br /> heads the cleanup, said that the treatment plants <br /> can't handle the huge spring runoff, and that some <br /> acidic water still gets into creeks. <br /> Wyman, the Galactic executive, has concluded that <br /> the mine was doomed from the start. <br /> "You could fiddle with it all you wanted, but you <br /> never got over the problem that it was a dumb idea <br /> to start (the mine) high up in the Rocky Mountains," <br /> he said. <br /> http://www.denver-rmn.com/news/0507smmtl.shtml 5/7/00 <br />