Printer Friendly
The Free Library
14,558,825 articles and books
Member login
User name  
Password 
 
Join us Forgot password?

A listing for Formosa.


Byline: The Register-Guard

The bright orange streambed streambed
 or stream channel

Any long, narrow, sloping depression on land that had been shaped by flowing water. Streambeds can range in width from a few feet for a brook to several thousand feet for the largest rivers.
 says it all. And so does a new federal Superfund listing for the poisons-spewing Formosa mine in Douglas County Douglas County is the name of twelve counties in the United States:
  • Douglas County, Colorado (Located in the Denver-Aurora Metropolitan Area)
  • Douglas County, Georgia (Located in the Atlanta Metropolitan Area)
  • Douglas County, Illinois
  • Douglas County, Kansas
.

As The Register-Guard's Diane Dietz reported Tuesday, the Formosa mine ranked high on the federal toxic hazards ranking system and is expected to be added to the national Superfund list today.

Neither the high ranking See Google bomb.  nor the listing is a surprise. Located on Silver Butte Butte, city, United States
Butte (byt), city (1990 pop. 33,336), seat of Silver Bow co., SW Mont.; inc. 1879. It is a trade, ranching, and industrial center.
 at the headwaters of an Umpqua River The Umpqua River (UHMP-kwah) is a river on the Pacific coast of Oregon in the United States, approximately 111 mi (179 km) long. One of the prinicipal rivers of the Oregon coast, it drains an expansive network of valleys in the mountains west of the Cascade Range and south of the  tributary, the abandoned mine releases 5 million gallons of water loaded with toxic metals each year. So far, the acid water has killed at least 15 miles of salmon-rearing stream around Silver Butte, posing what the EPA EPA eicosapentaenoic acid.

EPA
abbr.
eicosapentaenoic acid


EPA,
n.pr See acid, eicosapentaenoic.

EPA,
n.
 ominously describes as a "serious, ongoing threat" to humans and the environment.

The federal listing is welcome and comes more than a decade after the state shut down the mine where a Canadian firm, bankrolled by Japanese interests, dug and processed copper on the 76-acre site for 21/2 years in the 1990s. State officials acted after discovering that mining crews were digging nearly twice the permitted tonnage. Since then, the mine's maze of shafts, which the company stuffed with loose tailings Tailings (also known as tailings pile, tails, leach residue, or slickens[1]) are the materials left over[2] after the process of separating the valuable fraction from the worthless fraction of an ore.  before leaving, have become saturated with groundwater, releasing a steady stream of acid mine drainage Acid mine drainage (AMD), or acid rock drainage (ARD), refers to the outflow of acidic water from (usually) abandoned metal mines or coal mines. However, other areas where the earth has been disturbed (e.g.  that flows into the streams below.

Ideally, the cleanup should have begun within a few years after the mine's closure, and prompt action might have saved much of the once-pristine salmon habitat from destruction. But the state Department of Environmental Quality, which was well aware of the situation at Formosa, lacked the resources needed to make that happen.

The federal listing has the full support of the DEQ DEQ

Abbreviation for the Incoterm "Delivered Ex Quay."
 and Gov. Ted Kulongoski. After years of futile efforts to pursue the foreign companies that financed the Formosa operation, state officials understandably embrace the arrival of a federal agency with the money, manpower and political heft to make certain a cleanup is completed.

Portland environmental activist Larry Tuttle deserves primary credit for the EPA's involvement. Without the extensive efforts of his Center for Environmental Equity, which petitioned the federal government for a Superfund listing, the Formosa mine would have continued to fester fester /fes·ter/ (fes´ter) to suppurate superficially.

fes·ter
v.
1. To ulcerate.

2. To form pus; putrefy.

n.
An ulcer.
 for decades.

There may still be a need for center's - and the DEQ's and the governor's - advocacy in years to come. If the EPA is unable to force the corporations responsible for the Formosa operation to clean up the site themselves, then the Formosa project will have to compete with 1,200 other sites across the nations for a finite supply of federal cleanup dollars.

While EPA officials insist the Formosa site would be a funding priority because of its unique ecological focus, in particular the loss of salmon habitat, prompt federal completion of a Superfund cleanup would be an exception to the rule. It's revealing that Tuttle already plans to lobby Oregon's congressional delegation to seek a direct appropriation from the federal budget to expedite the cleanup.

Meanwhile, Congress should approve legislation reforming the nation's 135-year-old General Mining Act, which has left a legacy of polluted mine sites across the West. Sponsored by Rep. Nick Rahall, D-W.Va., the bill would bring the law into the 21st century, imposing an 8 percent royalty on the value of minerals extracted, closing environmentally sensitive areas such as roadless areas and wildernesses to mining, installing environmental requirements and creating a cleanup fund.

If the Rahall bill had been on the books in the 1990s, the Formosa nightmare might never have happened, and there would be no bright orange streambed on Silver Butte marking the spot for the federal cleanup to come.
COPYRIGHT 2007 The Register Guard
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2007, Gale Group. All rights reserved.

 Reader Opinion

Title:

Comment:



 

Article Details
Printer friendly Cite/link Email Feedback
Title Annotation:Editorials; Mine cleanup eligible for Superfund dollars
Publication:The Register-Guard (Eugene, OR)
Article Type:Editorial
Date:Sep 19, 2007
Words:601
Previous Article:Aviation tax could ground small business.(Editorials)(Editorial)
Next Article:Greenspan's candor.(Editorials)(Stating the obvious about the Iraq war)(Editorial)



Related Articles
Pollution-fighting funds are starved of cash.(Environment)
Mine may make Superfund list.(Environment)(The EPA is accepting comment on the Formosa mine, south of Roseburg, but cleanup isn't likely any time...
List the Formosa mine.(Editorials)(Its toxic stew kills once-thriving salmon streams)(Editorial)
U-visas finally arrive.(Editorials)(Program was approved by Congress in 2000)(Editorial)
Fix cross-border program.(Editorials)(Congress should address concerns, let trucks roll)(Editorial)
Oregon housing booms.(Editorials)(Values rise steeply, so far without a bust)(Editorial)
Playing `Sim-tsunami'.(Editorials)(Wave slams a miniature Seaside in OSU exercise)(Editorial)
Aviation tax could ground small business.(Editorials)(Editorial)
Greenspan's candor.(Editorials)(Stating the obvious about the Iraq war)(Editorial)
Mind Messaging and Subconscious Mind

Terms of use | Copyright © 2009 Farlex, Inc. | Feedback | For webmasters | Submit articles