From EPA 2004 Progress Report:

In Arizona, two cases involved acidic runoff from mines polluting streams. Phelps Dodge Corp. agreed to pay $220,000 in penalties for discharges of contaminated water from the abandoned United Verde Mine in Jerome, Ariz., and spend about $11 million to build structures to prevent polluted runoff. In a typical year, thousands of pounds of toxic dissolved copper and zinc, and hundreds of pounds of cadmium, are discharged to an ephemeral stream bed and have the potential to wash down to the Verde River in wet years.

The same company also paid $105,000 to settle claims that it discharged polluted water containing toxic copper and sulfide from the Christmas Mine near Winkleman , Ariz., to the Dripping Springs Wash, tributary of the Gila River.

Details from Environmental News Service, San Fransisco, California.
February 20, 2003

Phelps Dodge Fined $105,000 for Water Pollution

The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency today announced a $105,000 settlement with Phoenix, Arizona based Phelps Dodge for discharging polluted water containing copper and sulfide from the Christmas Mine to a tributary of the Gila River.

The inactive copper mine near Winkleman, Arizona discharged pollutants at levels harmful to aquatic life into the Drippings Springs Wash in 2000 and 2001, the agency says. The Christmas Mine, located along the Gila River, mined and processed copper from the early 1900s until 1981.

The company failed to report monitoring results required by the discharge permit, failed to notify the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) of discharges endangering the environment and of facility changes that caused the permit violations.

"Inactive mines can pose serious environmental risks and permit holders must make sure that pollutants are not discharged from their facilities," said Catherine Kuhlman, the EPA's acting Water Division director for the Pacific Southwest region. "Phelps Dodge has an obligation to prevent mine drainage from impacting streams in Arizona."

Groundwater from mines becomes polluted when it comes into contact with mining waste, such as tailings or waste rock. The polluted water then flows to the surface and contaminates water bodies. Copper and sulfides are toxic to fish and the food sources fish depend on.

The wastewater discharge program, which was recently delegated to the Arizona Department of Environmental Quality, controls water pollution by regulating sources that discharge pollutants into waters of the United States. The permits contain limits on what can be discharged, monitoring and reporting requirements, and other provisions to ensure that the discharge protects human health and the environment.


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