Alaska
Gold settles with EPA for Clean Water Act violations at Nome Mine
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Suzanne
Skadowski, EPA Public Affairs, 206-553-6689, skadowski.suzanne@epa.gov
(Seattle – Sept. 19, 2012) The Alaska Gold
Company has paid a penalty for alleged Clean Water Act violations at the Rock
Creek mine near Nome, Alaska. According to a settlement announced today by the
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, the company allegedly violated permit
requirements for controlling storm water pollution during construction
activities.
In
addition to paying a $177,500 penalty, the company has already taken corrective
actions to comply by submitting and implementing an upgraded Stormwater
Pollution Prevention Plan and reclaiming a portion of the area disturbed during
construction.
“Polluted
runoff can damage important habitat and harm Alaska’s natural resources,” said
Jeff KenKnight, manager of EPA’s Clean Water Act Compliance Unit in Seattle.
“Companies need to plan for and manage stormwater runoff from their construction
sites, and investing the time and energy upfront is always better than repairing
damage and paying penalties later.”
EPA
and the Alaska Department of Environmental Conservation performed six
inspections at the mine between June 2009 and September 2011, which revealed
numerous alleged violations of federal construction stormwater regulations.
Infractions
included drainage channels without rock armoring, creating bank erosion, and
undercutting and sloughing of channel sidewalls. Inspectors also noted areas
where proper erosion control measures were not installed or maintained, which
caused the discharge of large amounts of silt and sediment to Rock Creek and
Lindblom Creek.
The
company also failed to create, maintain, and implement an adequate Stormwater
Pollution Prevention Plan that met all requirements of the National Pollutant
Discharge Elimination System General Permit for Storm Water Discharges from
Construction Activities.
Both
Rock Creek and Lindblom Creek are tributaries to the Snake River, which enters
the Bering Sea near Nome.
For
more about EPA’s work on reducing stormwater pollution, visit: http://cfpub.epa.gov/npdes/home.cfm?program_id=6
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