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STATE OF COLORADO <br />DIVISION OF MINERALS AND GEOLOGY <br />Department of Natural Resources <br />1313 Sherman SL, Room 215 <br />Denver, Colorado 80203 <br />Phone: (303) 866-3567 <br />FAX: (303) 832-8106 <br />DIVISION OF <br />p`' Y <br />dl~~~ ~~ MIN&RALS <br />GEOLOGY <br />~~ RECLAMATION <br />MINING•SAFETY <br />Angust la, 2002 / CF/~~~ <br />/ AEG Bill Owens <br />James Bender 1/ 9 Governor <br />5529 US Hwy. 64 ~r~~+0° °t Mf ' ~~ Executive D rector <br />Fam7ngton,NM 87401 °E`~'=..utg Ronald w. wnany <br />°pf0by'Acting Division Director <br />Re: Incas Mine, Permit M-1986-076, Response to Corrective Actions, Inspection of my 19, 2002. <br />Deaz Mr. Bender, <br />Thank you for the response letter dated August 10, 2002; in which you discuss the activities performed toward <br />correcting the problems noted in my last inspection report. Your submittal has corrected the problem as it was <br />noted in the report. I will try to cover all the additional topics in your letter and answer the questions you raise, in <br />the following paragraphs. <br />Water Oualit~pling <br />We have noted the different lab (named on the chain-of-custody form) you aze dealing with for the surface water <br />sample analysis. This new lab, Inter Mountain Labs of Farmington, will be fine to use as long as they can perform <br />the analyses as required. This means that all the required tests of the complete suite can continue to be performed, <br />and that they are performed down to a sufficiently low detection level. ff you or they have questions about that, <br />please refer to the details shown on the prior analyses (from your files). <br />We have not heard from Bob Hill since his last annual report submittal on December 31, 2001. It is good you were <br />able to retrieve the records and discuss this permitted DMO operation with him; I believe that this will help make <br />the transition less problematic for everyone. Please try to ensure that he has forwarded all permit-related records to <br />you. <br />You stated that the water samples for 2000 and 2001 were taken, but that they were never analyzed. This is <br />unfortunate since one of the main parameters to monitor and regulate is cyanide, but cyanide quickly degrades in a <br />sample. It is known that the site was active during 2000 and 2001, making the event of a cyanide release a <br />possibility. Cyanide is regulated, and it is incumbent on a DMO operator to show that such releases did not occur. <br />There are no data in the record to show that a cyanide release did not occur, and now there is no chance to obtain <br />the missing information to fill the gap in the record. I will be discussing this item with my supervisor and will <br />inform you if further discussion or enforcement action is indicated. <br />Regarding your offer to retrieve the 2000 and 2001 samples from Bob Hill and have them analyzed, I have <br />discussed this question with our staff in Denver. We believe that getting the samples analyzed is still a worthwhile <br />endeavor, but there is a question as to whether any pazameters will still yield valid results after all this time in <br />storage. It is presumed that the samples are no longer "fresh" after being kept in storage for one to two yeazs, and <br />being subject to the variations inherent in outside ambient temperatures. <br />Required analysis of the samples is to include conductivity, cyanide, pH, sulfates, and total dissolved solids. We <br />can safely say at this time that all five parameters have potentially been affected by the long period of storage, <br />though perhaps in predictable ways, making it possible to infer certain limited conclusions from the results. It is <br />