Amid
Toxic Waste, a Navajo Village Could Lose Its Land
19
February, 2014
CHURCH
ROCK, N.M. — In this dusty corner of the Navajo reservation, where
seven generations of families have been raised among the arroyos and
mesas, Bertha Nez is facing the prospect of having to leave her land
forever.
The
uranium pollution is so bad that it is unsafe for people to live here
long term, environmental officials say. Although the uranium mines
that once pocked the hillsides were shut down decades ago, mounds of
toxic waste are still piled atop the dirt, raising concerns about
radioactive dust and runoff.
And
as cleanup efforts continue, Ms. Nez and dozens of other residents of
the Red Water Pond Road community, who have already had to leave
their homes at least twice since 2007 because of the contamination,
are now facing a more permanent relocation. Although their village
represents only a small sliver of the larger Navajo nation, home to
nearly 300,000 people, they are bearing the brunt of the
environmental problems.
“It
feels like we are being pushed around,” said Ms. Nez, 67, a retired
health care worker, who recalled the weeks and months spent in motel
rooms in nearby Gallup as crews hauled away radioactive soil from the
community’s backyards and roadsides.
“This
is where we’re used to being, traditionally, culturally” she
said. “Nobody told us it was unsafe. Nobody warned us we would be
living all this time with this risk.”
These
days, this sprawling reservation, about the size of West Virginia, is
considered one of the largest uranium-contaminated areas in United
States history, according to officials at the Environmental
Protection Agency. The agency has been in the throes of an expansive
effort to remove waste from around this tiny and remote Navajo
village, and clean up more than 500 abandoned mine areas that dot the
reservation.
Federal
officials say they have been amazed at the extent of the uranium
contamination on the reservation, a vestige of a burst of mining
activity here during the Cold War. In every pocket of Navajo country,
tribal members have reported finding mines that the agency did not
know existed. In some cases, the mines were discovered only after
people fell down old shafts.
“It
is shocking — it’s all over the reservation,” said Jared
Blumenfeld, the E.P.A.’s regional administrator for the Pacific
Southwest. “I think everyone, even the Navajos themselves, have
been shocked about the number of mines that were both active and
abandoned.”
Between
2008 and 2012, federal agencies spent $100 million on the cleanup,
according to the E.P.A.; an additional $17 million has been spent by
energy companies determined to be responsible for some of the waste.
But
the scope of the problem is worse than anyone had thought. The E.P.A.
has said that it could take at least eight years to dispose of a huge
pile of uranium mine waste that has sat near Red Water Pond Road
since the 1980s — waste that must be removed before the area can
finally be free of contamination.
“The
community is frustrated, I know I’m frustrated — we’d like it
to go quickly,” Mr. Blumenfeld said.
But
before the latest round of cleanup can begin, an application to
remove the waste pile must be submitted to the Nuclear Regulatory
Commission, which will then conduct environmental and safety reviews.
That process will probably take two years, and there is the
possibility that public hearings on the plan could extend the process
several more years, said Drew Persinko, a deputy director for the
commission.
That
time frame seems unreasonably long for tribal members, who said that
spending so long living away from the reservation has been difficult.
So far, the E.P.A. has spent $1 million on temporary housing for
residents of Red Water Pond Road; much of that cost will be
reimbursed by General Electric, which acquired the old Northeast
Church Rock Mine site in 1997, and also its subsidiary company,
United Nuclear Corporation, which operated the mine.
As
in the past, the relocations will be voluntary. Some residents
wondered — as they have for years now — if the land will ever
really be clean.
“Our
umbilical cords are buried here, our children’s umbilical cords are
buried here. It’s like a homing device,” said Tony Hood, 64, who
once worked in the mines and is now a Navajo interpreter for the
Indian Medical Center in Gallup. “This is our connection to Mother
Earth. We were born here. We will come back here eventually.”
Residents
still remember seeing livestock drinking from mine runoff, men using
mine materials to build their homes and Navajo children playing in
contaminated water that ran through the arroyo. Today, the site near
Red Water Pond Road holds one million cubic yards of waste from the
Northeast Church Rock Mine, making it the largest and most daunting
area of contamination on the reservation.
The
waste does not pose any immediate health risk, Mr. Blumenfeld said,
but there are concerns about radioactive dust being carried by the
wind, runoff from rain, and the area’s accessibility to children,
who can slip in easily through a fence.
Under
a plan being developed by General Electric and the E.P.A., the waste
would be transported to a former uranium mill just off the
reservation — already considered a Superfund site — and stored in
a fortified repository. The estimated cost is nearly $45 million.
“General
Electric and United Nuclear Corporation are committed to continue to
work cooperatively with the U.S. government, Navajo Nation, state of
New Mexico and local residents to carry out interim cleanups and
reach agreement on the remedy for the mine,” said Megan Parker, a
spokeswoman for General Electric.
The
Navajo E.P.A., which is an arm of the tribe’s own government, for
years has been calling for a widespread cleanup of abandoned mines.
Stephen Etsitty, the executive director of the agency, said he was
hopeful that progress was finally being made, but acknowledged that
the scope and technical complexity of the operation at Red Water Pond
Road was unprecedented.
“We’re
pushing and doing as much as we can to keep the process going as fast
as we can,” Mr. Etsitty said. “It’s just taken so long to get
there.”
On
a recent day, Ms. Nez and several other residents stood on a bluff
near a cluster of small homes and traditional Navajo hogan dwellings
as the wind whipped across a valley that once bustled with mining
activity.
The
group talked of their grandparents — medicine men who were alive
when the mines first opened — and wondered what they would think
about Red Water Pond Road today.
“They
would say ‘How did this happen? They ruined our land,’ ” Ms.
Nez said. “ ‘How come you haven’t prayed to have this all fixed
up?’ ”
One more nail in our collective coffins. But, as I've said repeatedly, nobody cares.
ReplyDeleteThe lack of compassion, concern and care for this place we all cal "home" is appalling. The legacy we've inherited and will leave to the cockroaches is beyond comprehension.
We won't survive this level of stupidity. Nothing will.