The Latest: EPA head to visit New Mexico to address spill

1In this aerial photo taken Tuesday, Aug. 11, 2015, waste water continues to stream out of the Gold King Mine near Silverton, Colo.
2Frustration is mounting throughout the Four Corners region among officials and residents who say the EPA has moved too slowly and hasn't been forthcoming about the dangers of the spill.
3Water flows through one in a series of retention ponds built to contain and filter out heavy metals and chemicals from the Gold King mine wastewater accident, in the spillway about 1/4 mile downstream from the mine, outside Silverton, Colo., Wednesday, Aug. 12, 2015.
4The Environmental Protection Agency has taken full responsibility for the mine waste spoiling rivers downstream from Silverton, but people who live near the idled and leaking Gold King mine say local authorities and mining companies spent decades spurning federal cleanup help.
5The water of the Cement Creek flows down a valley a few miles downstream from the Gold King mine, where a wastewater accident several days earlier has raised alarm, outside Silverton, Colo., Wednesday, Aug. 12, 2015.
6Richard Charley delivers water to a ranch along the San Juan River on the Navajo Reservation, Wednesday, Aug. 12, 2015, in Shiprock, NM.
7Toxic wastewater from the Gold King Mine in Silverton, Colo., has contaminated the San Juan River in Northern New Mexico from the runoff of the Animas River due to an accidental breach by a mining a safety team working for the Environmental Protection Agency last week.
8A 100-mile-long plume has since traveled for hundreds of miles, through parts of Colorado, New Mexico and Utah on the way to Lake Powell, a key source of water for the Southwest.
9Richard Charley, right, and Melvin Jones deliver water to a ranch along the San Juan River on the Navajo Reservation, Wednesday, Aug. 12, 2015, in Shiprock, NM.
10An Environmental Protection Agency contractor works on the clean up in the aftermath of the accident at the Gold King mine, overseeing water flowing from the mine into a series of sediment retention ponds, mitigating damage from the spill of toxic wastewater, outside Silverton, Colo., Wednesday, Aug. 12, 2015.
11EPA Administrator Gina McCarthy, on a visit Wednesday to Durango, downstream of the spill site, said she had ordered agency personnel across the country to cease field investigation work on abandoned mines while the spill was investigated.
12Wildflowers grow at tree-line above the site of the blowout at the Gold King mine outside Silverton, Colo., Wednesday, Aug. 12, 2015.
13Toxic waste that gushed from the Colorado mine and threatened downstream water supplies in at least three states will continue to be dangerous when contaminated sediment gets stirred up from the river bottom.
14Environmental Protection Agency contractors repair damage at the site of the Gold King mine spill of toxic wastewater, outside Silverton, Colo., Wednesday, Aug. 12, 2015.
15Toxic waste that gushed from the mine and threatened downstream water supplies in at least three states will continue to be dangerous when contaminated sediment gets stirred up from the river bottom, authorities said.
16Environmental Protection Agency Administrator Gina McCarthy speaks during a news conference, Wednesday, Aug. 12, 2015, in Durango, Colo.
17Toxic waste that gushed from a Colorado mine and threatened downstream water supplies in at least three states will continue to be dangerous when contaminated sediment gets stirred up from the river bottom, authorities said Wednesday.
18DURANGO, Colo.
19The head of the Environmental Protection Agency says she will visit Farmington, New Mexico, downstream from where millions of gallons of mine waste spilled into a southwest Colorado river.
20EPA Administrator Gina McCarthy is scheduled to address the agency's response in Farmington on Thursday.
21On Wednesday, she spoke with residents of Durango, Colorado, as well as state, local and tribal officials.
22An EPA-supervised cleanup crew accidentally unleashed 3 million gallons of wastewater from an old mine that flowed into southwest Colorado's Animas River.
23McCarthy said Wednesday that "no agency could be more upset about the incident happening, and more dedicated in doing our job to get this right. We couldn't be more sorry."
24A Colorado-based Bureau of Reclamation spokeswoman says the agency isn't currently concerned with the water quality at Lake Powell or downstream.
25Justyn Liff says the heavy-metal laced wastewater spill is the size of 4 1/2 Olympic-size swimming pools, while Lake Powell contains enough water to fill about 6.4 million similar pools.
26National Parks officials said the spill hadn't reached the reservoir by Wednesday.
27Liff says her agency is monitoring the water quality, but "right now we don't have any cause for concern."
28U.S. House Speaker John Boehner says the Colorado mine wastewater spill is serious and so is the EPA's slow response.
29The Ohio Republican called on the Obama administration Wednesday to do everything in its power to protect people in the affected states of Colorado, New Mexico and Utah.
30Boehner said in a statement Wednesday that the House will monitor the Environmental Protection Agency's damage assessments, cleanup efforts and its response to the concerns of affected Native American tribes.
31The EPA has been criticized by local officials for delayed notifications about the spill and for not saying when it will release its own water-testing results a week after the spill.
32Utah Gov. Gary Herbert has declared an emergency for parts of the state affected by mine wastewater from Colorado.
33Herbert says the designation will help free up public money to help people and businesses in southern Utah who depend on water from the San Juan River deal with the long-term effects of contamination from the spill.
34Governors in New Mexico and Colorado, as well as the Navajo Nation, have made similar declarations.
35Utah officials said Wednesday that weekend tests showed the presence of metals in the state's river water, but the plume has since assimilated into the river water and lost its distinctive yellow color.
36The top prosecutors from three Western states say it's too early to say whether they'll pursue legal action against the federal government for a massive spill at a Colorado mine that polluted two rivers in the Four Corners region.
37Colorado Attorney General Cynthia Coffman said during a news conference Wednesday that the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency deserves a chance to prove it will be accountable for the Aug. 5 spill caused by one of its crews.
38Still, she and the attorneys general from New Mexico and Utah say they stand ready to protect the rights of their states' residents and ensure they are compensated for immediate and long-term damage caused by the spill.
39Coffman acknowledged that it could be years before the effects are known.
40New Mexico Attorney General Hector Balderas says he and his counterparts will be monitoring the claims process to ensure federal funds get to the areas that have been affected.
41Colorado health officials say the city of Durango can resume using drinking water treatment facilities that draw from the river affected by a mine spill.
42The Colorado Department of Health and Environment made the announcement Wednesday, one week after an EPA-supervised crew accidentally unleashed 3 million gallons of wastewater from an old mine that flowed into the Animas River.
43Water treatment facilities in Durango stopped using water from the river after the spill, which contains heavy metals including arsenic and lead.
44Dr. Larry Wolk, the state's chief medical officer, says his department will keep monitoring water sample testing.
45He says technicians will be sent to test water from private drinking wells within a mile of the river, although there's no indication that the private wells were contaminated.
46The head of the Environmental Protection Agency has ordered agency offices nationwide to stop field investigation work for mine cleanups while they reassess the work to ensure there's no potential for spills similar to the one in Colorado.
47EPA Administrator Gina McCarthy announced the change Wednesday on a visit to Durango, but it's not clear whether the stoppage applies to cleanups already underway or how many projects would be affected.
48It came a week after an EPA-supervised crew accidentally unleashed 3 million gallons of wastewater from an old mine that flowed into the Animas River.
49McCarthy says the latest water testing results show that the river in Durango has returned to its former condition.
50She didn't release further details.
51That announcement could signal an end to a dispute between the agency and Colorado, which wants to reopen the river to boating and fishing, key parts of the area's tourism economy.
52New Mexico's attorney general says communities affected by contaminated wastewater that spilled from a Colorado mine have anywhere from seven to 50 days of drinking water in storage tanks and reservoirs.
53Hector Balderas says the towns are anxious for the release of sampling results from the Animas and San Juan rivers.
54He spoke Wednesday after meeting with local officials in Farmington, New Mexico.
55He was headed to Durango, Colorado, to meet with his counterparts from that state and Utah.
56Communities in northwestern New Mexico and on the Navajo Reservation have made plans to access other sources of water, but Balderas said his office is among those pressuring federal officials to get better data and release it in a timely manner.
57Balderas says that because there are questions about the safety of the river, it's too early to guess at the true costs of what he called an unfortunate disaster.
58Federal officials say 3 million gallons of waste that spilled from an old Colorado mine hasn't arrived at Lake Powell yet, but it will be further diluted in the massive body of water when it does.
59The Bureau of Reclamation says the reservoir on the Utah-Arizona border holds about 4.2 trillion gallons of water, dwarfing the spill.
60The breach last week sent a plume of metal-laden water coursing into the Animas and San Juan rivers.
61At Lake Powell, the San Juan meets the Colorado River, which provides water to parts of California, Arizona, Nevada, New Mexico and Utah.
62Contaminants settling into sediment could end up at the deltas of the rivers as they empty into Lake Powell and be stirred up again as water levels rise or during flooding.
63Katie Wood, a spokeswoman for Glen Canyon National Recreation Area, says it's a possibility officials will monitor.
64Colorado wildlife officials will test more than 100 fish caught along the Animas River at the height of a mine waste spill that turned the water orangey-yellow.
65Parks and Wildlife spokesman Matt Robbins said Wednesday that biologists in Denver will determine whether the spill's heavy metals accumulated in the fingerling trout.
66Results won't be known for at least two weeks.
67The pollution has passed through parts of Colorado, New Mexico, Utah and the Navajo Nation.
68Of the 108 fish placed in underwater cages during the worst of the spill, only one died.
69It's unknown whether the death stemmed from pollution or other reasons.
70The agency also plans a survey of wild fish in the Animas and will compare it to a survey done last year.
71Colorado and federal officials are at odds over whether it's safe to reopen the Animas River to recreation after 3 million gallons of mine waste spilled and turned the water orangey-yellow.
72The shocking color seen last week is gone, and Colorado says its tests show the concentration of metals in the water, including arsenic and lead, are decreasing.
73Gov. John Hickenlooper wants the river reopened to boating and fishing, both important to the region's economy.
74The Durango Herald newspaper (http://bit.ly/1UD32FF ) reports that local EPA administrator Shaun McGrath told Hickenlooper during a meeting to stop making comments about the health of the river.
75McGrath says more data are needed to know whether the river is back to baseline conditions.
76That angered Hickenlooper, who, echoing others, said the EPA has been too slow in responding to the disaster overall.
77New Mexico Gov. Susana Martinez says she still has concerns about the federal government's response to the spill of millions of gallons of wastewater from a mine in southwestern Colorado.
78The breach last week at the Gold King Mine near Silverton sent a flood of yellow, metal-laden water coursing into the Animas and San Juan rivers.
79The plume has since passed through parts of Colorado, New Mexico, Utah and the Navajo Nation.
80Martinez says EPA Administrator Gina McCarthy's visit Wednesday will be important, so McCarthy can see firsthand the potentially devastating effects the spill can have on downstream communities.
81Martinez's office says the governor spoke with McCarthy on Tuesday evening.
82The New Mexico Environment Department has been conducting its own sampling along the river and results are expected Wednesday.
83The head of the Environmental Protection Agency will meet with state, local and tribal officials and community members when she visits Colorado on Wednesday to see the impact of a 3 million-gallon mine waste spill.
84EPA Administrator Gina McCarthy also plans to visit Farmington, New Mexico, on Thursday.
85She says the agency takes full responsibility after an EPA-led crew accidentally released the wastewater laced with heavy metals, including lead and arsenic.
86The pollution turned part of the Animas River in Colorado mustardy yellow last week.
87It washed down the river and is believed to have passed into Utah, but it's difficult to detect because it's been diluted.
88The EPA has said the flows are moving too fast for the contaminants to pose an immediate health threat and that the heavy metals will likely be diluted over time so they don't pose a longer-term threat.
89However, local and tribal officials are concerned about river sediment being contaminated and the potential long-term effects.
90The head of the Environmental Protection Agency plans to visit Colorado and New Mexico sometime Wednesday to see the impact of a 3 million gallon mine waste spill triggered during an agency-led cleanup.
91EPA Administrator Gina McCarthy says the spill that turned part of the Animas River in Colorado a shade of mustardy yellow last week "pains me to no end" and her department takes full responsibility.
92The pollution washed down the river and is believed to have passed into Utah but it's difficult to detect because it has been diluted and no longer has the bright color.
93The EPA has said the current flows are too fast for the contaminants to pose an immediate health threat, and that the heavy metals will likely be diluted over time so they don't pose a longer-term threat, either.