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Colorado Attorney General Cynthia Coffman questioned over Gold King

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Monday, April 4, 2016 2:49 AM

DENVER – Colorado Attorney General Cynthia Coffman is preparing defensive and offensive strategies to legal disputes in the wake of the Gold King Mine spill.

“We haven’t foreclosed the option of litigation,” Coffman, a Republican, told The Durango Herald this week in an interview at her Denver office.

The downstream states of New Mexico and Utah have put Colorado and the Environmental Protection Agency on notice that a lawsuit could come.

The impetus is a toxic spill, in which an estimated 3 million gallons of mining sludge poured into the Animas River on Aug. 5, 2015, flowing into the San Juan River in New Mexico and Utah. The Animas River tested for initial spikes in heavy metals, including arsenic, lead, copper and aluminum.

While the EPA has acknowledged fault in the incident, Colorado could bear responsibility as the spill, north of Silverton, occurred within the state’s boundaries.

Some observers wonder why Coffman hasn’t sued the EPA, which admits that excavation during restoration work led to the blowout. Also, there are accounts that the agency knew a blowout was possible.

Coffman says she is not shy about suing federal agencies, having joined the state in three lawsuits, including most recently over implementation of EPA carbon standards, known as the Clean Power Plan.

“What we have here is a totally different animal because we have an environmental incident, whether accidental or intentional, whatever you want to call it, that requires a totally different approach,” Coffman said.

A litany of questions remain unanswered, including the state’s role in the blowout.

Conflicting reports have cast shadows over the conversation, and a fact-finding mission by Congress has at times become controversial, resulting in the House Committee on Natural Resources issuing subpoenas to federal officials.

An internal investigation by the EPA, released on Aug. 24, determined that the Colorado Division of Reclamation, Mining and Safety agreed to put drainage piping through the entrance of the mine, contributing to the spill.

But former Colorado Department of Natural Resources Director Mike King wrote in response: “DRMS did not have any authority to manage, assess, or approve any work at the Gold King Mine ... Operations at Gold King were entirely under EPA management using EPA contractors on an EPA response action.”

“Part of what we’re experiencing right now with different folks giving different accounts is probably typical of human nature,” Coffman said. “Everybody was at the same scene, but they saw different things and experienced it in a different way.”

It may come down to depositions to collect all the facts, she said.

“Am I prepared to apportion who has what liability? I’m not. I don’t feel like we know enough,” Coffman said.

If lawsuits are filed, they’re likely to drag on for years, if not decades, Coffman said, pointing to the complicated nature of environmental cases, the long list of parties involved and leaking mines in the area.

Hanging over the process is a potential Superfund listing, which would inject large amounts of cash into permanent restoration efforts at as many as 50 mining-related sites in the Gladstone area that have contaminated the Upper Animas River, Mineral Creek and Cement Creek for more than a century.

A Superfund listing itself could result in a lawsuit from environmental groups, who may fear that restoration efforts don’t go far enough.

Coffman said Superfund lawsuits are tricky, and there is a lack of institutional knowledge because Superfund listings are relatively rare. The attorney general’s office downsized its Superfund unit several years ago.

“You have a new generation of attorneys in this office who may not have seen a Superfund case,” she said.

Coffman said after receiving the two Notice of Intent to sue letters from New Mexico and Utah, her office assembled a 10-person Gold King Mine team, including environmental attorneys and governmental immunity and civil litigation experts.

The attorney general’s office also has held weekly conversations with the governor’s office. Coffman said Gold King Mine is “near the top of the list.”

“Litigation, it’s an important tool that attorneys have, but negotiation is equally important,” Coffman said. “Once you start litigation, the tone automatically changes, and sometimes irrevocably.”

Democratic Gov. John Hickenlooper is optimistic that he can reach resolution with the two states out of court. But he said: “If they sue us, I think that unifying effort will be diminished.”

Coffman said she is not surprised that New Mexico and Utah have put the state on notice, because they are protecting themselves. She said her office might consider filing a counter claim to address any lawsuit that comes. Still, she says the issue has not prevented the states from working together.

2 Images

Durango resident Kathryn Bucher, right, told Attorney General Cynthia Coffman, who was in Durango on Aug. 12, 2015, that the cleanup from the Gold King Mine spill was taking “so damn long.” When contacted Friday for her response to Coffman’s efforts since August, Bucker said, “I think she’s been really cautious all along, especially with that meeting, that’s been the thought that I had, that she’s gonna be conservative ... I mean, the claims definitely need to be paid ... anyone who lost money because what the EPA did needs to be paid, absolutely. In terms of suing the EPA because they caused it, I’m not really sure what my opinion is on that as of yet ... I’m not sure what my opinion is on that yet.”
Sean Reyes, left, Utah attorney general; Cynthia H. Coffman, near right, Colorado attorney general; Craig Anderson, center, director of the Utah Environment & Health Division; and Allen Sorenson, right, a geo-engineer with the Colorado Division of Reclamation and Mining Safety, discuss a map that shows all of the mine shafts in the mountain near the Gold King Mine on Aug. 19 during a tour of the mine that caused the spill earlier that month.
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