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National Priorities List (NPL) History

Proposed Date
10/15/1984

Final Date
6/10/1986

Construction Completion
9/17/2001

 

Superfund Program

Eagle Mine

Eagle Mine site map
Click here for an interactive map
Site Type: Completed NPL
City: Minturn/Redcliff
County: Eagle
Street Address: W of US Hwy 24
Zip Code: 81657
EPA ID#: COD081961518
Site ID#: 0800159
Site Aliases: Gilman, New Jersey Zinc - CO, Eagle Mine
Congressional District(s): 03

Site Status & Updates

The 2008 Five Year Review Report is Complete
EPA and the Colorado Department of Public Health and the Environment (CDPHE) conducted the third five year review at the Eagle Mine Superfund site this year. The Five Year Review Report is now complete and available for public review. Overall results of the review show that the remedy continues to be protective of human health. However, the remedy is not currently protective of the environment because the site does not comply with the new water quality standards adopted by the Water Quality Control Commission and will not comply in the future without further actions to reduce zinc loading. To view the 2008 Five Year Review Report, please see the Site Documents section of this page, or contact one of the representatives listed in the Contacts section of this page.

Ginn Battle North has approached EPA and CDPHE with a proposed plan to develop the North Property of the Eagle Mine Superfund site into a residential golf course community. The North Property historically received the waste (tailings) from the ore benefication (crushing, grinding, washing, extraction) operations during mining operations at the Eagle Mine.

This proposed new use of the site as residential and recreational requires that additional cleanup actions are taken to ensure that residents, workers, and visitors are protected. EPA and CDPHE created a new operable unit--OU3--that reflects the boundaries of the proposed development, including the North Property of the Eagle Mine Superfund site, the Highlands area, and the Bolts Lake area. EPA and CDPHE are requiring that Ginn Battle North take the steps required in the Superfund Process to allow for recreational and residential use of OU3.

Important pieces of that process include the remedial investigation, the Human Health Risk Assessment, and the Feasibility Study. Please refer to these documents in the documents section of this page.


Site Description

One hundred years of mining near Vail left metals that killed fish in the Eagle River, and threatened drinking water wells in Minturn. The site includes the now-flooded Eagle Mine, the abandoned town of Gilman and 8 million tons of mine wastes.

Miners began working the Eagle Mine in the 1880s, searching for gold and silver. The Eagle Mine later became a mainly zinc mining operation, leaving high levels of arsenic, cadmium, copper, lead and zinc in the soil, and in surface and ground water. Copper-silver production continued at Eagle Mine until the mine workings were allowed to flood and the mine closed in 1984.

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Site Risk

Media Affected Contaminants Source of Contamination
Groundwater, surface water, solid waste, soil, liquid waste, debris, sediment Arsenic, cadmium, copper, lead, zinc Metals mining

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Cleanup Progress

EPA placed the mine on its National Priority List (NPL) in 1986. The Colorado Department of Public Health and Environment (CDPHE) and the Responsible Party, Viacom, implemented a cleanup plan in 1988 to: In 1989, EPA became more involved in the project, resulting in additional cleanup measures: Since then, EPA and CDPHE have cooperated on long-term actions. In 1996 the two Agencies and Viacom signed an agreement requiring evaluation and possible reconstruction of the groundwater extraction system.

Results are encouraging: fish populations in the Eagle River have improved; testing shows that risks to human health have been diminished or do not exist.

EPA, CDPHE and the community have been working together to develop long-term water-quality standards for the Eagle River. Standards will be based on the river's ability to sustain biologically improved and healthy fish and aquatic life.

In cooperation with CDPHE, EPA completed the first Five-Year Review of the site in September 2000. A Five-Year Review evaluates whether cleanup efforts are protective of public health and the environment. The review concluded that public health risks have been removed, and that significant progress has been made in restoring the Eagle River. The Eagle River trout fishery, in particular, has achieved a significant recovery.

In October 2001, EPA declared that construction of the required elements of the remedy is complete, and the site is now in the operations and maintenance phase.

In 2005 and 2006, with EPA and CDPHE oversight, Ginn Battle North conducted a remedial investigation, Human Health Risk Assessment and Feasbility Study. These are important steps required in the Superfund process in order for Ginn Battle North to be protective of human health and the environment should they proceed with their development plans on OU3.

EPA and CDPHE conducted a third Five-Year Review at the Eagle Mine site in 2008. Overall results show that the remedies implemented continue to be protective of human health and the environment.

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Community Involvement

EPA provides Technical Assistance Grants (TAGs) to community groups so that community residents can hire a technical advisor for independent review of the cleanup. The Eagle River Watershed Council, Eagle Mine, Ltd., is the current TAG recipient. EPA is committed to working with members from this group and the broader community surrounding theEagle Mine Superfund site.

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Site Documents

Note: most of the files below are Adobe PDF files
About PDF files

OU3 Human Health Risk Assessment (PDF, 237 pp, 3 MB)

OU3 Feasibility Study OU3 Remedial Investigation Five-Year Review

Record of Decision (ROD) List

The table below lists all available documents for this site.  All full-text RODs are in PDF format.  To download a full-text ROD, right click on the link below and select Save Link As.  To view a full-text ROD or abstract, click the appropriate link below.  Please note that download time may be extended given the size of the full-text document.  File size is noted in kilobytes (K) or megabytes (M) next to each download link.   If file size exceeds 15 M, please request a customized RODS report.

ROD
Fiscal Year
ROD Type ROD Date Operable Unit(s)
1998 ROD 09/03/98 02 Abstract Full-text [26K]
1993 ROD 03/29/93 01 Abstract Full-text [87K]

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Contacts

EPA

Mike Holmes, Project Manager
U.S. EPA Region 8 (EPR-SR)
1595 Wynkoop Street
Denver, CO 80202-1129
(303) 312-6607 or
1-800-227-8917 x 6607 (Region 8 only)
Email: holmes.michael@epa.gov

Jennifer Chergo
EPA Community Involvement Coordinator
U.S. EPA Region 8 (EPR-SR)
1595 Wynkoop Street
Denver, CO 80202-1129
(303) 312-6601 or
1-800-227-8917 x 6601 (Region 8 only)
Email: chergo.jennifer@epa.gov

Colorado

Wendy Naugle
On-Site Coordinator
CDPHE
(303) 692-3394
Email: wendy.naugle@state.co.us

Warren Smith
Community Involvement Manager
CDPHE Hazardous Materials Division
(303) 692-3373
1-888-569-1831 x3373
warren.smith@state.co.us

View Documents at:

EPA Superfund Records Center
1595 Wynkoop Street
Denver, CO 80202-1129
(303) 312-6473

Colorado Dept. of Public Health & Environment (CDPHE)
Hazardous Material and Waste Management Division
4300 Cherry Creek Drive South
Denver, CO 80246-1530
(303) 692-3331

Minturn Town Hall
P.O. Box 309
Minturn, CO 81645
(970) 827-5645

 

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