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<br />J....... ~LJ- '.......u...... <br /> <br />Friedland made similar remarks In a private meeting with mine regulators, <br />who decided not to seek closure of the mine. <br /> <br />Anne Baldridge, the mine inspector assigned to Summitville, said in a <br />deposition that there was some sentiment to close the mine. But the leak <br />didn't seem great initially, and Friedland seemed willing to deal with it. <br /> <br />And like the Bank of America, regulators were not eager to inherit the mine. <br /> <br />"Quite frankly, the division did not have the resources to take over the <br />project and to deal with this problem," Baldridge said. "And I think there was <br />a concern that if the mine got shut down, the operator just might say, 'OK, <br />we're out of here,' and the division would be left holding the bag." <br /> <br />Galactic had been required to post a bond when mining began. But it was <br />only $1.3 million, far less than the cost of cleaning up the growing mess. <br /> <br />With little alternative, the board did nothing to halt mining, deciding only to <br />fine the company $3,600 for allowing mud to wash into the creeks. <br /> <br />I n the months before the cyanide leaks, the mud had been the chief concern <br />of regulators. Hay bales had been used to try to halt mudslides from the <br />denuded hills. <br /> <br />Baldridge said the general sloppiness of the site worried her during an initial <br />visit the summer before construction began. Mud was everywhere, with tree <br />branches sticking out of the mud and topsoil on top of trees. <br /> <br />"There's a lot to be said for housekeeping and the way a site visually looks, <br />in terms of how careful an operator is going to be," she said. "My first <br />impressions... were that this does not look like the operator is going to be <br />that careful." <br /> <br />After the winter construction, the place looked worse, Baldridge said. <br /> <br />Some of it was cleaned up after Galactic hired an environmental coordinator <br />for the site, Baldridge said. <br /> <br />Friedland's promise to engineer a Space Age solution to the cyanide leak <br />turned into talk about building a treatment plant so the polluted water could <br />be legally discharged. <br /> <br />But that plan wasn't pursued aggressively. <br /> <br />"We didn't have money," said Leonard. <br /> <br />So workers continued to pump the polluted groundwater back into the pool <br />of cyanide solution. <br /> <br />When the pumps failed, cyanide escaped into the creeks. <br /> <br />At least eight spills occurred in 1987. <br /> <br />But by that time, the state mining division was in no position to regulate <br />Summitville - or anything else. In a dispute having nothing to do with <br />Summitville, the Colorado legislature cut all funds to the agency as of July 1, <br />1987 <br /> <br />The money was restored later in the year, but demoralized regulators had <br /> <br />http://www.denver-rmn.com/news/0507smmtl.shlml <br /> <br /> <br />5/7 /00 <br />