Contact: Dave
Tomten,
EPA/Boise,
208-378-5763,
tomten.dave@epa.gov
- Mark
MacIntyre,
EPA/Seattle,
206-553-7302,
macintyre.mark@epa.gov
(Boise, ID –
December 1,
2009) P4
Production LLC,
a southeast
Idaho phosphate
mining company,
has reached
agreement with
five federal and
state agencies,
as well as the
Shoshone-Bannock
Tribes, to
develop
comprehensive
cleanup plans
for three
phosphate mines
near Soda
Springs, Idaho.
The
agreement
requires P4
Production (a
subsidiary of
the Monsanto
Company) to
complete
remedial
investigations
and feasibility
studies for the
Ballard, Henry,
and Enoch Valley
mines. The
Ballard Mine was
operated from
1951 to 1969,
the Henry Mine
was operated
from 1969 to
1989, and Enoch
Valley Mine was
operated from
1989 until
recently. They
are all
currently
inactive.
"After years of
hard work, we’ve
gotten everyone
signed-on to
create a
comprehensive,
in-depth look at
the risks these
mines pose,"
said Lori Cohen,
acting director
of EPA’s
Superfund
Cleanup office
in Seattle.
"This new
agreement will
build on work
already
completed by the
Company and give
us a clearer
picture of the
health risks
posed to the
area’s people,
livestock and
wildlife."
Signing the
agreement with
the Company
were: the U.S.
Environmental
Protection
Agency, the
Idaho Department
of Environmental
Quality, the
U.S. Forest
Service, the
Bureau of Land
Management, the
U.S. Fish and
Wildlife Service
and the
Shoshone-Bannock
Tribes. Each
will provide
oversight and
support to the
project.
Data already
collected by P4
shows that
selenium and
other pollutants
are being
released from
waste rock dumps
and
contaminating
nearby soil,
water, and
vegetation. EPA
will use this
and other
information
captured about
the site to
develop proposed
plans of how to
clean them up.
EPA will seek
formal comment
on proposed
cleanup plans
from interested
parties before
making final
decisions. The
first proposed
cleanup plan is
expected to be
completed in the
next two to
three years.