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The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Navajos seek $500 million for mine effort

Judy Pasternak Los Angeles Times

WASHINGTON – Navajo tribal officials asked Congress on Tuesday for at least $500 million to finish cleaning up contamination on the Navajo reservation in the American Southwest from Cold War-era uranium mining, an industry nurtured by its only customer until 1971: the U.S. government.

The tribe also sought a moratorium on new mining in Navajo country, which extends beyond the formal reservation borders into New Mexico, until the environmental damage from the last round is repaired.

The requests came at a hearing of the House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform marked by angry exchanges between the members and officials from five federal agencies with varying degrees of responsibility for protecting Navajo health and the environment.

Committee chairman Henry Waxman, D-Calif., instructed the agencies – the Environmental Protection Agency, the Department of Energy, the Nuclear Regulatory Commission, the Indian Health Service and the Bureau of Indian Affairs – to return in December with a list of the money and authority they need to finish the job.

“It’s been a bipartisan failure for over 40 years,” Waxman said. “It’s also a modern American tragedy.”

Waxman scheduled the hearing in response to a Los Angeles Times series, published last year, which detailed the impact of mine waste on Navajos who built their homes with it, played in it and drank toxic water every day for decades. Exposure continues today, while cleanup efforts remain fitful and incomplete.

The nation’s largest tribal homeland, encompassing parts of Arizona, Utah and New Mexico, contains some 1,000 abandoned uranium mines and four old processing mills. From 1944 to 1986, 3.9 million tons of uranium ore were blasted from Navajo soil, nearly all of it for atomic bombs. After 1971, utilities also bought uranium for nuclear power plants.

The mine operators often left behind open tunnels, shafts and piles of radioactive waste. Federal inspectors knew of the hazards but seldom intervened.

Tuesday’s hearing came almost 14 years after the House Natural Resources Committee heard a plea from the tribe’s frustrated environment director for “speedy, thorough and permanent remediation of all sites.”