EPA Poisons The Animas River With Over 3 Million Gallons of Deadly Toxic Mine Water – Then Covers Up Severity of Spill

The EPA has poisoned the Animas River by releasing over 3 million gallons of deadly toxic water, containing a deadly toxic soup of lead, arsenic, zinc, copper and iron into the river water, turning the Animas River into a dark shade of greenish-orange.

EPA Poisons The Animas River With 3 Million Gallons of Deadly Toxic Mine Water - Then Covers Up Severity of Spill

EPA Poisons The Animas River With 3 Million Gallons of Deadly Toxic Mine Water – Then Covers Up Severity of Spill

You haven’t heard anything about it on the news though, have you? Why do you think that is?
It’s because the EPA, along with the corrupt liberal media, have been trying to cover up the deadly toxic soup spill.

Leave it up to Obama’s EPA to poison Americans and the wildlife in the United States, but it also seems that the EPS had tried to cover up their poison spill into the river, by downplaying the severity of the spill, and hiding the deadly toxic contents of their spill.

There needs to be an independent investigation into the EPA Poisoning of the Animas River, and the subsequent cover-up attempts by the EPA to hide the disaster they caused.

The Animas River spill is “tragic,” the EPA regional director said, after the agency accidentally released one million gallons of wastewater into the otherwise pristine waters.

It is indeed tragic to see the photos of the now-orange-looking Animas River after the spill was triggered by EPA workers Wednesday morning. The workers were investigating a concerning acid discharge from Gold King and three other mines in the mountains north of Silverton, according to the Denver Post.

Before the spill reached the Animas River, it entered the Cement Creek at 10:30 a.m. and moved downstream close to Silverton, where both bodies of water meet. The EPA workers were using a heavy digging machine, said EPA’s on-scene coordinator, Hayes Griswold.

“We were investigating where we could put in a pipe to try to drain rising waters inside the mine. The EPA crew had stopped working momentarily.

“We had found the hard rock I wanted to find overhead. All of a sudden, there was a little spurt from the top.”

EPA officials flew in on Friday and determined the Animas River spill was not handled properly in its initial stage and the severity of the situation was downplayed. This resulted in the failure to anticipate the impact the spill would have downstream.

Angry residents were voicing their opinion after their beloved Animas River was poisoned by the spill and turned orange. During this time of the year, residents of Durango enjoy fishing, swimming, tubing, and entertaining tourists along the river.

As previously reported by the Inquisitr, the Animas River spill has forced local authorities to close a 126-mile-long stretch, and testing is underway to determine just how bad the contamination is. Results were expected on Friday night (August 7).

Some images of the devastating effects of the Animas River spill have been posted to social media showing the soupy-orange waters now seen in the area.

Even though the EPA has apologized to residents over the Animas River spill — which reportedly has the toxic elements arsenic, lead, cadmium, aluminum, and copper — they didn’t go into detail about how this will affect the area in the future.

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