From Deseret News archives:

Mine rebuilds trust a pile at a time

Kennecott aims to ease safety concerns through tailings tours

Published: Saturday, April 19, 2008 12:49 a.m. MDT
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Twenty years ago, then company president Frank Joklik declined to inform the public about a report that said the corner was seismically unstable. There was a risk back then that, if a magnitude 7.25 earthquake struck, the corner could rupture and send a flow of tailings into homes.

"It was not built as an engineered dam to hold materials," Doughty said. The opposite, however, is true of the north impoundment, where she and Bennett said the dam has been built to the highest state and federal standards.

A generation ago Joklik quietly set in motion measures to shore up the south impoundment while also buying up homes and property in what could have been the affected area in a major quake.

"He did everything right from an engineering and geotechnical standpoint," Doughty, a geologist, said about Joklik's actions to fix the problem with the pond.

But when news of the 20-year-old report surfaced only last month, residents cried foul and demanded to know more. Kennecott's Andrew Harding, president for just a few months, put himself on the firing line during meetings with residents, apologizing for Joklik's public relations sins and saying the company is much more transparent today.

The relationship rebuilding continued.

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The Salt Lake County Council recently formed a committee to pick an engineering firm to do a new study of the southeast corner of the old impoundment. Harding gave the council $250,000 to pay for the study, emphasizing the need to keep Kennecott out of the investigation for the sake of public confidence.

And now, they are doing the public tours of the tailings pond, another step in regaining people's trust.

"I think that's the whole point ... to show we're not hiding anything," Doughty said.

People on the tours will see a good view of Magna, the golf course owned by Kennecott and lots of vacant land that forms a buffer between the piles and people who live in Magna. They'll see cattle and horses below as they climb higher up the waste impoundments.

Some of the answers to their questions will be visible — no water on the south impoundment. In fact, it's so dry right now that the 99.9 percent of the impoundment that Doughty said supports vegetation, most planted by Kennecott, looks brown, with some green starting to show. The wheat, rye and fescue haven't yet taken off this year.

A few critics of Kennecott have said in recent meetings that a big issue is the chemicals in the dust that, despite Kennecott's best efforts, still blows around in high winds. Doughty said Kennecott stopped using cyanide in 2005 to help extract gold from rock and that any waste would break down in sunlight.

"The chemicals are not the issue," she said.

For certain, the issues are trust, what has or might happen to property values because of the old report and Joklik's reaction to it. Bennett hopes the tours and a new study will help.

"It will ease people's minds," he said about the study.

On the tours people will get an earful from Kennecott about accelerometers, piezometers, wick drains, setback dikes and deflections berms and how Kennecott believes that, because of all of that, Magna residents living near the south impoundment are much more safe today than 20 years ago.


E-mail: sspeckman@desnews.com

Recent comments

How long has Kennecott been mining there?
It depends on how you...

Anonymous | April 25, 2008 at 4:07 p.m.

How long has kennecott been mining there??? People start building...

Just a Guy | April 20, 2008 at 7:45 a.m.

Kansas is a lot cleaner than Kennecott.
Trust? For the folks who...

Mahonri | April 19, 2008 at 8:25 a.m.

Image

Paula Doughty of Kennecott Utah Copper, driving across mine-waste fields on Friday, says of the upcoming tours, "I think that's the whole point ... to show we're not hiding anything."

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