'Dodged a bullet'

'Dodged a bullet'

Hickenlooper praises EPA response to mine spill during visit to Ute Mountain Ute mill
Sam Green/Cortez Journal

Gov. John Hickenlooper talks with Paul Evans at the Bow and Arrow Brand mill on Sunday, Aug. 23.
Sam Green/Cortez Journal

Gov. John Hickenlooper listens to Simon Martinez describe the layout of the Ute Mountain Ute Farm and Ranch facilities on Sunday, Aug. 23.
Sam Green/Cortez Journal

Gov. John Hickenlooper talks with Ute Mountain Ute Chairman Manuel Heart at the Ute Mountain Ute Farm and Ranch on Sunday, Aug. 23.

'Dodged a bullet'

Sam Green/Cortez Journal

Gov. John Hickenlooper talks with Paul Evans at the Bow and Arrow Brand mill on Sunday, Aug. 23.
Sam Green/Cortez Journal

Gov. John Hickenlooper listens to Simon Martinez describe the layout of the Ute Mountain Ute Farm and Ranch facilities on Sunday, Aug. 23.
Sam Green/Cortez Journal

Gov. John Hickenlooper talks with Ute Mountain Ute Chairman Manuel Heart at the Ute Mountain Ute Farm and Ranch on Sunday, Aug. 23.
Shiprock Navajos vote to prohibit irrigation

Duane 'Chili' Yazzie, president of the Shiprock Chapter on the Navajo Nation, reported via Facebook on Saturday, Aug. 22, that chapter officials voted unanimously, 104-0, to prohibit using San Juan River water to irrigate Native farmlands.
'It was one of the hardest decisions we have ever had to make,' said Yazzie.
Yazzie explained the sacrifice was made to ensure that farmlands weren't contaminated by arsenic, mercury and lead released in the Gold King Mine spill on the Animas River, a tributary to the San Juan River.
The decision impacts some 20,000 acres of farmland worked by nearly 1,000 separate families.
According to Yazzie, Navajo officials in Shiprock are working to host a benefit concert for area farmers on Aug. 30, as well as a future water summit to help protect against corporate pollution.