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Judge Hands Down $2 Million Fine to Mining Company

July 20, 2012 | Boise State Public Radio/Idaho Public Television
CONTRIBUTED BY:
Aaron Kunz

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  • This is where Atlanta Gold captures water runoff heading to a nearby creek. The court found this isn't enough to prevent arsenic from contaminating the water. credit: Idaho Conservation League
  • This is an overhead of the remote land where Atlanta Gold hopes to mine gold. credit: Idaho Conservation League
This is where Atlanta Gold captures water runoff heading to a nearby creek. The court found this isn't enough to prevent arsenic from contaminating the water. | credit: Idaho Conservation League | rollover image for more

A U.S. District Judge handed down a penalty Friday and issued a warning to a company trying to mine gold in Idaho.

U.S. District Judge Mikel Williams has ordered Atlanta Gold Company to pay $2 million dollars in fines for not following clean water laws. Judge Williams also ordered it to comply with the federal Clean Water Act by the end of October or face even more penalties.

John Robinson works for the Idaho Conservation League, one of the two conservation groups that filed the lawsuit against Atlanta Gold. “What the Judge found is that Idaho’s rivers are one of the most precious resources around. And that Idahoans are simply not going to tolerate any type of pollution in our rivers.”

Atlanta Gold, a Canadian company, has been working to open a mine near the town of Atlanta, Idaho. In January, Judge Williams ruled Atlanta Gold was responsible for natural arsenic leaking into Montezuma Creek that runs into the Boise River.

Attempts to contact Atlanta Gold were unsuccessful.

© 2012 Boise State Public Radio/Idaho Public Television
cleanwater pollution gold Clean Water Act mining
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