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~ III IIIIIIIIIIIII III <br />~ CLIMAX MOLYBDENUM COMPANY <br />J a sunsm~aw of aneios ooaae nn~n~na comoa~~ <br />'~CEIVEL~ <br />January 21, 2000 ,IAN ~ V 1U~U <br />Henderson Ooerations <br />a0. a°x s9 <br />Eripire, Colorado 80438 <br />Metro f3031 271-0107 <br />Out of :~cace (3031 569-3221 <br />Fax (3031569-0930 <br />Mc Allen Sorenson ~~ cf ,rolineral~ & Geology <br />Environmental Protection Specialist <br />Colorado Division of Minerals and Geology <br />1313 Sherman Street, Room 215 <br />Denver, Colorado 80203 <br />RE: Rule 8 Notification -Henderson Mill Process Water Circuit <br />Dear Mr. Sorenson: <br />The letter is provided as required by Rule 8 of the Colorado Division of Minerals; and <br />Geology (DMG). Minerals Program, Rules and Regulations. Rule 8.2.3 requires a <br />written report to follow-up verbal notification to the DMG regarding the failure of an <br />environmental protection facility (EPF). Verbal notification was made to Mr. Carl Mount <br />of the DMG at approximately 3:45 PM on January 19, 2000. Previous attempts to contact <br />you were unsuccessful. This letter serves as that report. <br />Although notification was required, at no point during this upset vas there any d;inger of <br />a major environmental impact. The 36" emergency bypass line on the mill water decant <br />system is equipped with a small dart valve where this line surfaces near the toe of 1 Dam. <br />This dart valve serves to drain the small amount of process water that seeps into this line <br />as it passes under the tailings impoundment. This dart valve became clogged allowing <br />this water to Clow out the end of the emergency bypass line into our dischazge cabal. The <br />flow was impeded by a large ice plug that had formed due to cold weather behind a <br />plywood cover at the end of the pipe. The water backed up behind this plywoodiice plug <br />until the recent warm weather melted the ice enough to allow water to begin spraying out <br />from behind the plywood. The line and canal are visually inspected at least once during <br />every shifr, so when the line began to leak, a pond operator saw the problem immediately <br />and took action. The dart valve was located and cleaned [o stop any more water from <br />escaping. Three temporary earthen dams were built to retain the water in the canal and <br />the water was then pumped back into our normal seepage collection system. <br />Approximately 12,700 gallons of water was pumped back into our system of which we <br />estimated 9,000 gallons to be process water. The remaining snow in the discharge canal <br />was removed and placed within containment as well. We estimate that we recaptured <br />close to 100% of the process water due to the dams and frozen ground conditions. Upon <br />investigation, no process water made it all the way down the dischazge canal and <br />therefore, no water left our property. We do not know of or anticipate any adverse <br />impacts to human health, property, or the environment from this release. It should also <br />a <br />