And now:"Save Ward Valley" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:

Go to http://dawnwatch.org for lots of information.  Following is the basic
story on this proposed waste site.  Once again Native American people and
lands are the target area.  Once again money is more important than the
lives of people and the life of this planet.

Molly

THE DAWN STORY
Dawn Mining Company started mining uranium on the Spokane Indian Reservation
in the late 50s. The ore was made into yellow cake at DMC�s mill at Ford,
Washington which lies along State Route 231 in Stevens County. The company
ceased operations in 1982 and now that the mill has outlived its usefulness
the company must reclaim the area according to applicable regulations.
Sufficient funds for reclamation were not set aside during its years of
operation and the company claims it is broke. DMCs parent, the wealthy and
powerful Newmont Gold Company (www.newmont.com) says it is not financially
responsible for the reclamation although Dawn was reported to the SEC as a
liability.
Since the mid 80s, despite considerable local opposition, DMC has persisted
in a plan to convert a 28-acre below-grade tailings impoundment (TDA-4) into
a dump for various radioactive waste products including, radium-tainted dirt
from New Jersey, NORM, "select material" and 11.e(2) material. The company
says it has no idea how much money has been spent promoting the dump.
However, Bogle and Gates of Seattle, one of the most prestigious law firms
in Washington, and Linda Hull, the highest paid lobbyist in the state, have
been retained to assist with the effort. The dump project is supposed to
raise enough money for reclamation of the mill, which by the early 90s was
estimated at $20 million. Any additional money raised will go towards clean
up of the mine on the Reservation, which may cost over $160 million.

The company�s disposal proposal triggered the State Environmental Policy Act
(SEPA) review. In 1991, the Final Environmental Impact Statement was
published by the Washington State Department of Health (lead agency). In it,
then- Secretary of Health Kristine Gebbie wrote her �clean fill decision,�
saying that no imported radioactive products were to be used to fill TDA-4.
She ordered the company to resubmit a closure plan that would outline how
reclamation would be accomplished utilizing only clean dirt as fill. The
company did not comply. Instead, they submitted a revised proposal, (see
Sept 1992 Clark to Slagle, Sept 1992 Technical Advisory Committee, April
1993 Clark to Miyahara) which the state eventually accepted. Newmont's plan
was finally accepted under a new administration (Governor Lowry), and a new
Secretary of Health (Miyahara). In spite of Washington�s policy to limit the
amount of radioactive waste flowing into the state, a national dump for
11.e(2) FUSRAP materials was established by amending the company's
Radioactive Materials Handling License.

FUSRAP is an acronym for Formerly Utilized Sites Remedial Action Program.
Previously managed by the Department of Energy, the program was transferred
to the Department of the Army, Army Corps of Engineers in October 1997. The
mission of FUSRAP is to clean up contaminated sites around the nation that
contracted with the federal government for nuclear weapons production and
nuclear energy. FUSRAP sites are located in many states including, New York,
New Jersey, Ohio, and Missouri. While Dawn Watch is sympathetic to other
communities� desires to rid themselves of their radioactive rubble, we
contend that the Ford site is not an adequate location for any of the
nation's radioactive waste.

The new dump is located in an impoverished rural area forty miles northwest
of Spokane, Washington. It is located on the border of the Spokane Indian
Reservation, next to a creek that drains into the Columbia River. The site
is directly above the Walker's Prairie Aquifer which has been polluted by
the company's activities. In 1992 Dawn began to pump water out of the
aquifer in order to remove radionuclides and sulfates. This water is now
evaporating in plastic-lined pools constructed by the company on over 100
acres. The process is expected to take about twenty years, depending on
local weather conditions.

Dawn Watch representatives believe the new dump was chosen solely on the
basis of DMC�s financial requirements. Had a responsible team of experts
been commissioned to identify and establish the nation�s next FUSRAP
repository, this site would never have been considered.

Dawn Watch was founded in 1994 by a local farmer who became alarmed at the
company�s influence on Washington State's decision makers (see especially,
Clark at Wellpinit and "Blackmail Memo"). Dawn Watch is recommending the use
of clean fill at the company�s expense to achieve reclamation. The group
monitors the situation and disseminates information. We have been
challenging the disposal proposal in court since it was approved by DOH in
1995.

Both the Spokane County Commissioners and the Spokane City Council passed
resolutions asking newly-elected Governor Gary Locke to rescind the license
that paved the way for a radioactive caravan of 50,000 waste haulers to pass
through Spokane to the millsite at Ford. While the resolutions do not hold
any legal weight, they do reflect the will of communities that will be
impacted by the project.

One of the main concerns revolves around the transportation of the FUSRAP
wastes to the DMC site. The TDA-4 pit can hold 44 million cubic feet of
material. The company has been reticent to say exactly how much radioactive
waste they will import. Through the years the figures have fluctuated from
12 to 40 million cubic feet. In attempting to determine the impact of the
haul on transportation infrastructure, the figures of 38 trucks per day,
carrying 400 cubic feet each, 260 days per year, for five to seven years,
has been consistently utilized in EIS documents. This figure is based on
experience with past hauling out of FUSRAP sites.

A great deal of discussion has revolved around the transportation impacts
and the Washington State Department of Transportation has performed two
studies to figure out how much the resulting road degradation will cost. The
primary concern is the destruction of SR-231, a two lane rural collector
route that connects the communities of Springdale, Ford, Wellpinit (on the
Spokane Indian Reservation) and Reardan. This is a main route people from
these communities use to access major highways and Spokane, the nearest
urban center. The road is a school bus route for these communities and it is
regularly used by businesses to move goods to and from the area.

While the community is primarily concerned with the danger, stigma and
inconvenience of having the materials transported to Ford, there are other
serious, albeit more subtle issues raised by the disposal proposal. Dawn has
promoted the dump as a �self-funding closure plan� because instead of
walking out and leaving the $20 million mess at the mill site to Washington
state taxpayers, and leaving the contamination on the Reservation
unresolved, DMC would sell space in the impoundment. Yet, the federal
contracts the company hopes to win are funded by federal tax dollars. If
this conversion of a defunct uranium mill to a radioactive waste dump is
completed, other companies will likely find such "self-funding" (that is
citizen-funded) closure plans highly attractive.

This concern was exressed during the EIS scoping but DOH and DMC insisted
the scenario in Ford was not only innovative, but also unique. Secretary of
Health Bruce Miyahara told Dawn Watch representatives he had no knowledge of
it being replicated anywhere else, however, several other jurisdictions have
considered, and are considering disposal proposals.

In November 1997 Dawn Mining sent a notice to members of the Local Citizens
Monitoring Committee saying U.S. Ecology of Oak Ridge, Tennessee, a
subsidiary of American Ecology Corporation, the oldest, most experienced
commercial low-level radioactive waste management company in the country,
will be the site operator at the Dawn Millsite, in charge of receipt and
disposal of the 11.e(2) materials. U.S. Ecology serves private businesses
and public agencies including colleges and universities, hospitals and
medical laboratories, industrial facilities, biotechnology firms, power
generating companies and government agencies. U.S. Ecology serves the
Northwest and Rocky Mountains Compacts, operating the low-level radioactive
waste repository on the Hanford reservation.

Save Ward Valley
107 F Street
Needles, CA  92363
ph. 760/326-6267
fax 760/326-6268

http://www.shundahai.org/SWVAction.html
http://earthrunner.com/savewardvalley
http://www.ctaz.com/~swv1
http://banwaste.envirolink.org
http://www.alphacdc.com/ien/wardvly4.html
http://www.greenaction.org

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