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HomeMy WebLinkAboutDRC-2017-005501 - 0901a068807346b7Attn: Scott Anderson Division Director, Utah Division of Waste Management and Radiation Control P.O. Box 144880 Salt Lake City, Utah 84114-4880 Div of Waste Management and Radiation Control 3 Dear Mr. Anderson, I am writing to express my concern about the threat that the White Mesa Uranium Mill poses to nearby communities and the environment, particularly to the groundwater that underlies the White Mesa Mill site. I am familiar with the pattern of groundwater contamination due to uranium milling activities across Northern Arizona and the Colorado Plateau, as exemplified by the Tuba City Mill, the Atlas tailings pile, and the Monticello Mill site. As an Arizona resident, I am also concerned that uranium ore milled at White Mesa is mined near the Grand Canyon and hauled 300 miles across Arizona and the Navajo Nation, putting our groundwater and our communities at risk. I am deeply concerned that the ongoing uranium mining and milling in our region will permanently contaminate surrounding groundwater and threaten Colorado Plateau communities, especially the Ute Mountain Ute tribe. Unless action is taken to implement rigorous pollution controls, White Mesa Mill could permanently contaminate the perched aquifer underlying the mill site, and threaten contamination of the deeper Navajo Aquifer. A serious cause of concern is the fact that monitoring wells penetrate both the perched aquifer and the Navajo Aquifer, and could act as contaminant pathways from the upper aquifer to the Navajo Aquifer. I urge you to address this issue by requiring the company to permanently dewater and close the legacy impoundments at the White Mesa Mill site - namely Cells 1, 2, and 3. Please exercise your full discretion as regulators by requiring the most rigorous pollution controls for the site. I do not want to see another Superfund site in the heart of the Colorado Plateau, as the region's scarce groundwater resources cannot afford to be compromised. You have the ability to protect this region and its communities from the toxic and radioactive contamination; please do everything in your power to protect our people and our water. Thank you for your consideration, Name: fteVvGm Address: •'I24Q5 (§) . CO V\AEmail: Attn: Scott Anderson Division Director, Utah Division of Waste Management and Radiation Control ^'v Waste Management 6 and Radiation Control P.O. Box 144880 Salt Lake City, Utah MAY 3 0 2017 84114-4880 Dear Mr. Anderson, I am writing to express my concern about the threat that the White Mesa Uranium Mill poses to nearby communities and the environment, particularly to the groundwater that underlies the White Mesa Mill site. I am familiar with the pattern of groundwater contamination due to uranium milling activities across Northern Arizona and the Colorado Plateau, as exemplified by the Tuba City Mill, the Atlas tailings pile, and the Monticello Mill site. As an Arizona resident, I am also concerned that uranium ore milled at White Mesa is mined near the Grand Canyon and hauled 300 miles across Arizona and the Navajo Nation, putting our groundwater and our communities at risk. I am deeply concerned that the ongoing uranium mining and milling in our region will permanently contaminate surrounding groundwater and threaten Colorado Plateau communities, especially the Ute Mountain Ute tribe. Unless action is taken to implement rigorous pollution controls. White Mesa Mill could permanently contaminate the perched aquifer underlying the mill site, and threaten contamination of the deeper Navajo Aquifer. A serious cause of concern is the fact that monitoring wells penetrate both the perched aquifer and the Navajo Aquifer, and could act as contaminant pathways from the upper aquifer to the Navajo Aquifer. I urge you to address this issue by requiring the company to permanently dewater and close the legacy impoundments at the White Mesa Mill site - namely Cells 1, 2, and 3. Please exercise your full discretion as regulators by requiring the most rigorous pollution controls for the site. I do not want to see another Superfund site in the heart of the Colorado Plateau, as the region's scarce groundwater resources cannot afford to be compromised. You have the ability to protect this region and its communities from the toxic and radioactive contamination; please do everything in your power to protect our people and our water. Thank you for your consideration, Name: ( Address:351^0 N ' Email: Attn: Scott Anderson Division Director, Utah Division of Waste Management and Radiation Control P.O. Box 144880 Salt Lake City, Utah Div of Waste Management and Radiation Control my 3 o 2817 84114-4880 Dear Mr. Anderson, I am writing to express my concern about the threat that the White Mesa Uranium Mill poses to nearby communities and the environment, particularly to the groundwater that underlies the White Mesa Mill site. I am familiar with the pattern of groundwater contamination due to uranium milling activities across Northern Arizona and the Colorado Plateau, as exemplified by the Tuba City Mill, the Atlas tailings pile, and the Monticello Mill site. As an Arizona resident, I am also concerned that uranium ore milled at White Mesa is mined near the Grand Canyon and hauled 300 miles across Arizona and the Navajo Nation, putting our groundwater and our communities at risk. I am deeply concerned that the ongoing uranium mining and milling in our region will permanently contaminate surrounding groundwater and threaten Colorado Plateau communities, especially the Ute Mountain Ute tribe. Unless action is taken to implement rigorous pollution controls, White Mesa Mill could permanently contaminate the perched aquifer underlying the mill site, and threaten contamination of the deeper Navajo Aquifer. A serious cause of concern is the fact that monitoring wells penetrate both the perched aquifer and the Navajo Aquifer, and could act as contaminant pathways from the upper aquifer to the Navajo Aquifer. I urge you to address this issue by requiring the company to permanently dewater and close the legacy impoundments at the White Mesa Mill site - namely Cells 1, 2, and 3. Please exercise your full discretion as regulators by requiring the most rigorous pollution controls for the site. I do not want to see another Superfund site in the heart of the Colorado Plateau, as the region's scarce groundwater resources cannot afford to be compromised. You have the ability to protect this region and its communities from the toxic and radioactive contamination; please do everything in your power to protect our people and our water. Thank you for your consideration, Name: ‘AG 0*3 ( Attn: Scott Anderson Division Director, Utah Division of Waste Management and Radiation Control P.O. Box 144880 Div of Waste Management and Radiation Control 3 0 2017 Salt Lake City, Utah 84114-4880 Dear Mr. Anderson, I am writing to express my concern about the threat that the White Mesa Uranium Mill poses to nearby communities and the environment, particularly to the groundwater that underlies the White Mesa Mill site. I am familiar with the pattern of groundwater contamination due to uranium milling activities across Northern Arizona and the Colorado Plateau, as exemplified by the Tuba City Mill, the Atlas tailings pile, and the Monticello Mill site. As an Arizona resident, I am also concerned that uranium ore milled at White Mesa is mined near the Grand Canyon and hauled 300 miles across Arizona and the Navajo Nation, putting our groundwater and our communities at risk. I am deeply concerned that the ongoing uranium mining and milling in our region will permanently contaminate surrounding groundwater and threaten Colorado Plateau communities, especially the Ute Mountain Ute tribe. Unless action is taken to implement rigorous pollution controls, White Mesa Mill could permanently contaminate the perched aquifer underlying the mill site, and threaten contamination of the deeper Navajo Aquifer. A serious cause of concern is the fact that monitoring wells penetrate both the perched aquifer and the Navajo Aquifer, and could act as contaminant pathways from the upper aquifer to the Navajo Aquifer. I urge you to address this issue by requiring the company to permanently dewater and close the legacy impoundments at the White Mesa Mill site - namely Cells 1, 2, and 3. Please exercise your full discretion as regulators by requiring the most rigorous pollution controls for the site. I do not want to see another Superfund site in the heart of the Colorado Plateau, as the region's scarce groundwater resources cannot afford to be compromised. You have the ability to protect this region and its communities from the toxic and radioactive contamination; please do everything in your power to protect our people and our water. Thank you for your consideration, Name: (jKlOe ftMAVer Address: 2^>2l La. Email: CKk)fp b(6> ^ 1 Div of Waste Management and Radiation Control Attn: Scott Anderson Division Director, Utah Division of Waste Management and Radiation Control P.O. Box 144880 3 0 2017 Salt Lake City, Utah 84114-4880 Dear Mr. Anderson, I am writing to express my concern about the threat that the White Mesa Uranium Mill poses to nearby communities and the environment, particularly to the groundwater that underlies the White Mesa Mill site. I am familiar with the pattern of groundwater contamination due to uranium milling activities across Northern Arizona and the Colorado Plateau, as exemplified by the Tuba City Mill, the Atlas tailings pile, and the Monticello Mill site. As an Arizona resident, I am also concerned that uranium ore milled at White Mesa is mined near the Grand Canyon and hauled 300 miles across Arizona and the Navajo Nation, putting our groundwater and our communities at risk. I am deeply concerned that the ongoing uranium mining and milling in our region will permanently contaminate surrounding groundwater and threaten Colorado Plateau communities, especially the Ute Mountain Ute tribe. Unless action is taken to implement rigorous pollution controls, White Mesa Mill could permanently contaminate the perched aquifer underlying the mill site, and threaten contamination of the deeper Navajo Aquifer. A serious cause of concern is the fact that monitoring wells penetrate both the perched aquifer and the Navajo Aquifer, and could act as contaminant pathways from the upper aquifer to the Navajo Aquifer. I urge you to address this issue by requiring the company to permanently dewater and close the legacy impoundments at the White Mesa Mill site - namely Cells 1, 2, and 3. Please exercise your full discretion as regulators by requiring the most rigorous pollution controls for the site. I do not want to see another Superfund site in the heart of the Colorado Plateau, as the region's scarce groundwater resources cannot afford to be compromised. You have the ability to protect this region and its communities from the toxic and radioactive contamination; please do everything in your power to protect our people and our water. Thank you fnr vnur rnnsiripratinn Address Email: Name: Attn: Scott Anderson Division Director, Utah Division of Waste Management and Radiation Control P.O. Box 144880 Div of Waste Management and Radiation Control 3 Salt Lake City, Utah 84114-4880 Dear Mr. Anderson, I am writing to express my concern about the threat that the White Mesa Uranium Mill poses to nearby communities and the environment, particularly to the groundwater that underlies the White Mesa Mill site. I am familiar with the pattern of groundwater contamination due to uranium milling activities across Northern Arizona and the Colorado Plateau, as exemplified by the Tuba City Mill, the Atlas tailings pile, and the Monticello Mill site. As an Arizona resident, I am also concerned that uranium ore milled at White Mesa is mined near the Grand Canyon and hauled 300 miles across Arizona and the Navajo Nation, putting our groundwater and our communities at risk. I am deeply concerned that the ongoing uranium mining and milling in our region will permanently contaminate surrounding groundwater and threaten Colorado Plateau communities, especially the Ute Mountain Ute tribe. Unless action is taken to implement rigorous pollution controls, White Mesa Mill could permanently contaminate the perched aquifer underlying the mill site, and threaten contamination of the deeper Navajo Aquifer. A serious cause of concern is the fact that monitoring wells penetrate both the perched aquifer and the Navajo Aquifer; and could act as contaminant pathways from the upper aquifer to the Navajo Aquifer. I urge you to address this issue by requiring the company to permanently dewater and close the legacy impoundments at the White Mesa Mill site - namely Cells 1, 2, and 3. Please exercise your full discretion as regulators by requiring the most rigorous pollution controls for the site. I do not want to see another Superfund site in the heart of the Colorado Plateau, as the region's scarce groundwater resources cannot afford to be compromised. You have the ability to protect this region and its communities from the toxic and radioactive contamination; please do everything in your power to protect our people and our water. Thank you for your consideration, Name: Address: AJ■ ^ Address: Email: //T? Attn: Scott Anderson Division Director, Utah Division of Waste Management and Radiation Control P.O. Box 144880 Salt Lake City, Utah Div of Waste Management and Radiation Control MAY 3 8 84114-4880 Dear Mr. Anderson, I am writing to express my concern about the threat that the White Mesa Uranium Mill poses to nearby communities and the environment, particularly to the groundwater that underlies the White Mesa Mill site. I am familiar with the pattern of groundwater contamination due to uranium milling activities across Northern Arizona and the Colorado Plateau, as exemplified by the Tuba City Mill, the Atlas tailings pile, and the Monticello Mill site. As an Arizona resident, I am also concerned that uranium ore milled at White Mesa is mined near the Grand Canyon and hauled 300 miles across Arizona and the Navajo Nation, putting our groundwater and our communities at risk. I am deeply concerned that the ongoing uranium mining and milling in our region will permanently contaminate surrounding groundwater and threaten Colorado Plateau communities, especially the Ute Mountain Ute tribe. Unless action is taken to implement rigorous pollution controls, White Mesa Mill could permanently contaminate the perched aquifer underlying the mill site, and threaten contamination of the deeper Navajo Aquifer. A serious cause of concern is the fact that monitoring wells penetrate both the perched aquifer and the Navajo Aquifer, and could act as contaminant pathways from the upper aquifer to the Navajo Aquifer. I urge you to address this issue by requiring the company to permanently dewater and close the legacy impoundments at the White Mesa Mill site - namely Cells 1, 2, and 3. Please exercise your full discretion as regulators by requiring the most rigorous pollution controls for the site. I do not want to see another Superfund site in the heart of the Colorado Plateau, as the region's scarce groundwater resources cannot afford to be compromised. You have the ability to protect this region and its communities from the toxic and radioactive contamination; please do everything in your power to protect our people and our water. Thank you for your consideration, Address: CfWvOvAo U* Email: Attn: Scott Anderson Division Director, Utah Division of Waste Management and Radiation Control P.O. Box 144880 ' Salt Lake City, Utah Div of Waste Management and Radiation Control 30 2017 84114-4880 Dear Mr. Anderson, I am writing to express my concern about the threat that the White Mesa Uranium Mill poses to nearby communities and the environment, particularly to the groundwater that underlies the White Mesa Mill site. I am familiar with the pattern of groundwater contamination due to uranium milling activities across Northern Arizona and the Colorado Plateau, as exemplified by the Tuba City Mill, the Atlas tailings pile, and the Monticello Mill site. As an Arizona resident, I am also concerned that uranium ore milled at White Mesa is mined near the Grand Canyon and hauled 300 miles across Arizona and the Navajo Nation, putting our groundwater and our communities at risk. I am deeply concerned that the ongoing uranium mining and milling in our region will permanently contaminate surrounding groundwater and threaten Colorado Plateau communities, especially the Ute Mountain Ute tribe. Unless action is taken to implement rigorous pollution controls, White Mesa Mill could permanently contaminate the perched aquifer underlying the mill site, and threaten contamination of the deeper Navajo Aquifer. A serious cause of concern is the fact that monitoring wells penetrate both the perched aquifer and the Navajo Aquifer, and could act as contaminant pathways from the upper aquifer to the Navajo Aquifer. I urge you to address this issue by requiring the company to permanently dewater and close the legacy impoundments at the White Mesa Mill site - namely Cells 1, 2, and 3. Please exercise your full discretion as regulators by requiring the most rigorous pollution controls for the site. I do not want to see another Superfund site in the heart of the Colorado Plateau, as the region's scarce groundwater resources cannot afford to be compromised. You have the ability to protect this region and its communities from the toxic and radioactive contamination; please do everything in your power to protect our people and our water. Thank you for your consideration, Address:^^ W ^ % W C.'^Address: Attn: Scott Anderson Division Director, Utah Division of Waste Management and Radiation Control P.O. Box 144880 Salt Lake City, Utah Div of Waste Management and Radiation Control 3 0 2017 84114-4880 Dear Mr. Anderson, I am writing to express my concern about the threat that the White Mesa Uranium Mill poses to nearby communities and the environment, particularly to the groundwater that underlies the White Mesa Mill site. I am familiar with the pattern of groundwater contamination due to uranium milling activities across Northern Arizona and the Colorado Plateau, as exemplified by the Tuba City Mill, the Atlas tailings pile, and the Monticello Mill site. As an Arizona resident, I am also concerned that uranium ore milled at White Mesa is mined near the Grand Canyon and hauled 300 miles across Arizona and the Navajo Nation, putting our groundwater and our communities at risk. I am deeply concerned that the ongoing uranium mining and milling in our region will permanently contaminate surrounding groundwater and threaten Colorado Plateau communities, especially the Ute Mountain Ute tribe. Unless action is taken to implement rigorous pollution controls, White Mesa Mill could permanently contaminate the perched aquifer underlying the mill site, and threaten contamination of the deeper Navajo Aquifer. A serious cause of concern is the fact that monitoring wells penetrate both the perched aquifer and the Navajo Aquifer, and could act as contaminant pathways from the upper aquifer to the Navajo Aquifer. I urge you to address this issue by requiring the company to permanently dewater and close the legacy impoundments at the White Mesa Mill site - namely Cells 1, 2, and 3. Please exercise your full discretfon as regulators by requiring the most rigorous pollution controls for the site. I do not want to see another Superfund site in the heart of the Colorado Plateau, as the region's scarce groundwater resources cannot afford to be compromised. You have the ability to protect this region and its communities from the toxic and radioactive contamination; please do everything in your power to protect our people and our water. Thank you for your consideration. Name: Address:: 3,5 73s S- Attn: Scott Anderson Division Director, Utah Division of Waste Management and Radiation Control P.O. Box 144880 Salt Lake City, Utah Div of Waste Management and Radiation Control 84114-4880 Dear Mr. Anderson, I am writing to express my concern about the threat that the White Mesa Uranium Mill poses to nearby communities and the environment, particularly to the groundwater that underlies the White Mesa Mill site. I am familiar with the pattern of groundwater contamination due to uranium milling activities across Northern Arizona and the Colorado Plateau, as exemplified by the Tuba City Mill, the Atlas tailings pile, and the Monticello Mill site. As an Arizona resident, I am also concerned that uranium ore milled at White Mesa is mined near the Grand Canyon and hauled 300 miles across Arizona and the Navajo Nation, putting our groundwater and our communities at risk. I am deeply concerned that the ongoing uranium mining and milling in our region will permanently contaminate surrounding groundwater and threaten Colorado Plateau communities, especially the Ute Mountain Ute tribe. Unless action is taken to implement rigorous pollution controls, White Mesa Mill could permanently contaminate the perched aquifer underlying the mill site, and threaten contamination of the deeper Navajo Aquifer. A serious cause of concern is the fact that monitoring wells penetrate both the perched aquifer and the Navajo Aquifer, and could act as contaminant pathways from the upper aquifer to the Navajo Aquifer. I urge you to address this issue by requiring the company to permanently dewater and close the legacy impoundments at the White Mesa Mill site - namely Cells 1, 2, and 3. Please exercise your full discretion as regulators by requiring the most rigorous pollution controls for the site. I do not want to see another Superfund site in the heart of the Colorado Plateau, as the region's scarce groundwater resources cannot afford to be compromised. You have the ability to protect this region and its communities from the toxic and radioactive contamination; please do everything in your power to protect our people and our water. Thank you for your consideration, Address: 1)100 <b sf Emall: l"?Email: Attn: Scott Anderson Division Director, Utah Division of Waste Management and Radiation Control P.O. Box 144880 Salt Lake City, Utah 84114-4880 Div of Waste Management and Radiation Control 3 0 Dear Mr. Anderson, I am writing to express my concern about the threat that the White Mesa Uranium Mill poses to nearby communities and the environment, particularly to the groundwater that underlies the White Mesa Mill site. I am familiar with the pattern of groundwater contamination due to uranium milling activities across Northern Arizona and the Colorado Plateau, as exemplified by the Tuba City Mill, the Atlas tailings pile, and the Monticello Mill site. As an Arizona resident, I am also concerned that uranium ore milled at White Mesa is mined near the Grand Canyon and hauled 300 miles across Arizona and the Navajo Nation, putting our groundwater and our communities at risk. I am deeply concerned that the ongoing uranium mining and milling in our region will permanently contaminate surrounding groundwater and threaten Colorado Plateau communities, especially the Ute Mountain Ute tribe. Unless action is taken to implement rigorous pollution controls, White Mesa Mill could permanently contaminate the perched aquifer underlying the mill site, and threaten contamination of the deeper Navajo Aquifer. A serious cause of concern is the fact that monitoring wells penetrate both the perched aquifer and the Navajo Aquifer, and could act as contaminant pathways from the upper aquifer to the Navajo Aquifer. I urge you to address this issue by requiring the company to permanently dewater and close the legacy impoundments at the White Mesa Mill site - namely Cells 1, 2, and 3. Please exercise your full discretion as regulators by requiring the most rigorous pollution controls for the site. I do not want to see another Superfund site in the heart of the Colorado Plateau, as the region's scarce groundwater resources cannot afford to be compromised. You have the ability to protect this region and its communities from the toxic and radioactive contamination; please do everything in your power to protect our people and our water. Thank you for your consideration, Name: V-Lc-^ ^^ Address: Attn: Scott Anderson Division Director, Utah Division of Waste Management and Radiation Control Div of Waste Management and Radiation Control p-o-Box 144880 my a i Salt Lake City, Utah 84114-4880 Dear Mr. Anderson, I am writing to express my concern about the threat that the White Mesa Uranium Mill poses to nearby communities and the environment, particularly to the groundwater that underlies the White Mesa Mill site. I am familiar with the pattern of groundwater contamination due to uranium milling activities across Northern Arizona and the Colorado Plateau, as exemplified by the Tuba City Mill, the Atlas tailings pile, and the Monticello Mill site. As an Arizona resident, I am also concerned that uranium ore milled at White Mesa is mined near the Grand Canyon and hauled 300 miles across Arizona and the Navajo Nation, putting our groundwater and our communities at risk. I am deeply concerned that the ongoing uranium mining and milling in our region will permanently contaminate surrounding groundwater and threaten Colorado Plateau communities, especially the Ute Mountain Ute tribe. Unless action is taken to implement rigorous pollution controls, White Mesa Mill could permanently contaminate the perched aquifer underlying the mill site, and threaten contamination of the deeper Navajo Aquifer. A serious cause of concern is the fact that monitoring wells penetrate both the perched aquifer and the Navajo Aquifer, and could act as contaminant pathways from the upper aquifer to the Navajo Aquifer. I urge you to address this issue by requiring the company to permanently dewater and close the legacy impoundments at the White Mesa Mill site - namely Cells 1, 2, and 3. Please exercise your full discretion as regulators by requiring the most rigorous pollution controls for the site. I do not want to see another Superfund site in the heart of the Colorado Plateau, as the region's scarce groundwater resources cannot afford to be compromised. You have the ability to protect this region and its communities from the toxic and radioactive contamination; please do everything in your power to protect our people and our water. Thank you for your consideration, Attn: Scott Anderson Division Director, Utah Division of Waste Management and Radiation Control P.O. Box 144880 Div of Waste Management and Radiation Control 3 0 2017 Salt Lake City, Utah 84114-4880 Dear Mr. Anderson, I am writing to express my concern about the threat that the White Mesa Uranium Mill poses to nearby communities and the environment, particularly to the groundwater that underlies the White Mesa Mill site. I am familiar with the pattern of groundwater contamination due to uranium milling activities across Northern Arizona and the Colorado Plateau, as exemplified by the Tuba City Mill, the Atlas tailings pile, and the Monticello Mill site. As an Arizona resident, I am also concerned that uranium ore milled at White Mesa is mined near the Grand Canyon and hauled 300 miles across Arizona and the Navajo Nation, putting our groundwater and our communities at risk. I am deeply-concerned that the ongoing uranium mining and milling in our region will permanently contaminate surrounding groundwater and threaten Colorado Plateau communities, especially the Ute Mountain Ute tribe. Unless action is taken to implement rigorous pollution controls, White Mesa Mill could permanently contaminate the perched aquifer underlying the mill site, and threaten contamination of the deeper Navajo Aquifer. A serious cause of concern is the fact that monitoring wells penetrate both the perched aquifer and the Navajo Aquifer, and could act as contaminant pathways from the upper aquifer to the Navajo Aquifer. I urge you to address this issue by requiring the company to permanently dewater and close the legacy impoundments at the White Mesa Mill site - namely Cells 1, 2, and 3. Please exercise your full discretion as regulators by requiring the most rigorous pollution controls for the site. I do not want to see another Superfund site in the heart of the Colorado Plateau, as the region's scarce groundwater resources cannot afford to be compromised. You have the ability to protect this region and its communities from the toxic and radioactive contamination; please do everything in your power to protect our people and our water. Thank you for your consideration, Name: ~[^J f C \ Address: a?/? Email: Attn: Scott Anderson Division Director, Utah Division of Waste Management and Radiation Control P.O. Box 144880 Salt Lake City, Utah Div of Waste Management and Radiation Control 84114-4880 Dear Mr. Anderson, I am writing to express my concern about the threat that the White Mesa Uranium Mill poses to nearby communities and the environment, particularly to the groundwater that underlies the White Mesa Mill site. I am familiar with the pattern of groundwater contamination due to uranium milling activities across Northern Arizona and the Colorado Plateau, as exemplified by the Tuba City Mill, the Atlas tailings pile, and the Monticello Mill site. As an Arizona resident, I am also concerned that uranium ore milled at White Mesa is mined near the Grand Canyon and hauled 300 miles across Arizona and the Navajo Nation, putting our groundwater and our communities at risk. I am deeply concerned that the ongoing uranium mining and milling in our region will permanently contaminate surrounding groundwater and threaten Colorado Plateau communities, especially the Ute Mountain Ute tribe. Unless action is taken to implement rigorous pollution controls, White Mesa Mill could permanently contaminate the perched aquifer underlying the mill site, and threaten contamination of the deeper Navajo Aquifer. A serious cause of concern is the fact that monitoring wells penetrate both the perched aquifer and the Navajo Aquifer, and could act as contaminant pathways from the upper aquifer to the Navajo Aquifer. I urge you to address this issue by requiring the company to permanently dewater and close the legacy impoundments at the White Mesa Mill site - namely Cells 1, 2, and 3. Please exercise your full discretion as regulators by requiring the most rigorous pollution controls for the site. I do not want to see another Superfund site in the heart of the Colorado Plateau, as the region's scarce groundwater resources cannot afford to be compromised. You have the ability to protect this region and its communities from the toxic and radioactive contamination; please do everything in your power to protect our people and our water. Thank you for your consideration. Name: o\'\wV)r Address:Address: ^ o \ 0 & s £ * Attn: Scott Anderson Division Director, Utah Division of Waste Management and Radiation Control P.O. Box 144880 Salt Lake City, Utah 84114-4880 Dear Mr. Anderson, I am writing to express my concern about the threat that the White Mesa Uranium Mill poses to nearby communities and the environment, particularly to the groundwater that underlies the White Mesa Mill site. I am familiar with the pattern of groundwater contamination due to uranium milling activities across Northern Arizona and the Colorado Plateau, as exemplified by the Tuba City Mill, the Atlas tailings pile, and the Monticello Mill site. As an Arizona resident, I am also concerned that uranium ore milled at White Mesa is mined near the Grand Canyon and hauled 300 miles across Arizona and the Navajo Nation, putting our groundwater and our communities at risk. I am deeply concerned that the ongoing uranium mining and milling in our region will permanently contaminate surrounding groundwater and threaten Colorado Plateau communities, especially the Ute Mountain Ute tribe. Unless action is taken to implement rigorous pollution controls, White Mesa Mill could permanently contaminate the perched aquifer underlying the mill site, and threaten contamination of the deeper Navajo Aquifer. A serious cause of concern is the fact that monitoring wells penetrate both the perched aquifer and the Navajo Aquifer, and could act as contaminant pathways from the upper aquifer to the Navajo Aquifer. I urge you to address this issue by requiring the company to permanently dewater and close the legacy impoundments at the White Mesa Mill site - namely Cells 1, 2, and 3. Please exercise your full discretion as regulators by requiring the most rigorous pollution controls for the site. I do not want to see another Superfund site in the heart of the Colorado Plateau, as the region's scarce groundwater resources cannot afford to be compromised. You have the ability to protect this region and its communities from the toxic and radioactive contamination; please do everything in your power to protect our people and our water. Thank you for your consideration, Name: filq I'flcf Address: Qq/'? /V Name: Div of Waste Management and Radiation Control Attn: Scott Anderson Division Director, Utah Division of Waste Management and Radiation Control P.O. Box 144880 Salt Lake City, Utah MAY 3 0 2017 84114-4880 Dear Mr. Anderson, I am writing to express my concern about the threat that the White Mesa Uranium Mill poses to nearby communities and the environment, particularly to the groundwater that underlies the White Mesa Mill site. I am familiar with the pattern of groundwater contamination due to uranium milling activities across Northern Arizona and the Colorado Plateau, as exemplified by the Tuba City Mill, the Atlas tailings pile, and the Monticello Mill site. As an Arizona resident, I am also concerned that uranium ore milled at White Mesa is mined near the Grand Canyon and hauled 300 miles across Arizona and the Navajo Nation, putting our groundwater and our communities at risk. I am deeply concerned that the ongoing uranium mining and milling in our region will permanently contaminate surrounding groundwater and threaten Colorado Plateau communities, especially the Ute Mountain Ute tribe. Unless action is taken to implement rigorous pollution controls, White Mesa Mill could permanently contaminate the perched aquifer underlying the mill site, and threaten contamination of the deeper Navajo Aquifer. A serious cause of concern is the fact that monitoring wells penetrate both the perched aquifer and the Navajo Aquifer, and could act as contaminant pathways from the upper aquifer to the Navajo Aquifer. I urge you to address this issue by requiring the company to permanently dewater and close the legacy impoundments at the White Mesa Mill site - namely Cells 1, 2, and 3. Please exercise your full discretion as regulators by requiring the most rigorous pollution controls for the site. I do not want to see another Superfund site in the heart of the Colorado Plateau, as the region's scarce groundwater resources cannot afford to be compromised. You have the ability to protect this region and its communities from the toxic and radioactive contamination; please do everything in your power to protect our people and our water. Thank you for your consideration, Name: C?1 Address .(*?l r Email: A ^ ‘ ^ 3 <KJ C'j /'-i tft-iV: J - Attn: Scott Anderson Division Director, Utah Division of Waste Management and Radiation Control P.O. Box 144880 Salt Lake City, Utah Div of Waste Management and Radiation Control 3 84114-4880 Dear Mr. Anderson, I am writing to express my concern about the threat that the White Mesa Uranium Mill poses to nearby communities and the environment, particularly to the groundwater that underlies the White Mesa Mill site. I am familiar with the pattern of groundwater contamination due to uranium milling activities across Northern Arizona and the Colorado Plateau, as exemplified by the Tuba City Mill, the Atlas tailings pile, and the Monticello Mill site. As an Arizona resident, I am also concerned that uranium ore milled at White Mesa is mined near the Grand Canyon and hauled 300 miles across Arizona and the Navajo Nation, putting our groundwater and our communities at risk. I am deeply concerned that the ongoing uranium mining and milling in our region will permanently contaminate surrounding groundwater and threaten Colorado Plateau communities, especially the Ute Mountain Ute tribe. Unless action is taken to implement rigorous pollution controls, White Mesa Mill could permanently contaminate the perched aquifer underlying the mill site, and threaten contamination of the deeper Navajo Aquifer. A serious cause of concern is the fact that monitoring wells penetrate both the perched aquifer and the Navajo Aquifer, and could act as contaminant pathways from the upper aquifer to the Navajo Aquifer. I urge you to address this issue by requiring the company to permanently dewater and close the legacy impoundments at the White Mesa Mill site - namely Cells 1, 2, and 3. Please exercise your full discretion as regulators by requiring the most rigorous pollution controls for the site. I do not want to see another Superfund site in the heart of the Colorado Plateau, as the region's scarce groundwater resources cannot afford to be compromised. You have the ability to protect this region and its communities from the toxic and radioactive contamination; please do everything in your power to protect our people and our water. Thank you for your consideration, Attn: Scott Anderson Division Director, Utah Division of Waste Management and Radiation Control P.O. Box 144880 Salt Lake City, Utah Div of Waste Management and Radiation Control 3 84114-4880 Dear Mr. Anderson, I am writing to express my concern about the threat that the White Mesa Uranium Mill poses to nearby communities and the environment, particularly to the groundwater that underlies the White Mesa Mill site. I am familiar with the pattern of groundwater contamination due to uranium milling activities across Northern Arizona and the Colorado Plateau, as exemplified by the Tuba City Mill, the Atlas tailings pile, and the Monticello Mill site. As an Arizona resident, I am also concerned that uranium ore milled at White Mesa is mined near the Grand Canyon and hauled 300 miles across Arizona and the Navajo Nation, putting our groundwater and our communities at risk. I am deeply concerned that the ongoing uranium mining and milling in our region will permanently contaminate surrounding groundwater and threaten Colorado Plateau communities, especially the Ute Mountain Ute tribe. Unless action is taken to implement rigorous pollution controls, White Mesa Mill could permanently contaminate the perched aquifer underlying the mill site, and threaten contamination of the deeper Navajo Aquifer. A serious cause of concern is the fact that monitoring wells penetrate both the perched aquifer and the Navajo Aquifer, and could act as contaminant pathways from the upper aquifer to the Navajo Aquifer. I urge you to address this issue by requiring the company to permanently dewater and close the legacy impoundments at the White Mesa Mill site - namely Cells 1, 2, and 3. Please exercise your full discretion as regulators by requiring the most rigorous pollution controls for the site. I do not want to see another Superfund site in the heart of the Colorado Plateau, as the region's scarce groundwater resources cannot afford to be compromised. You have the ability to protect this region and its communities from the toxic and radioactive contamination; please do everything in your power to protect our people and our water. Thank you for your consideration, Name: Address: Khostfnc^ 2.0(0 amcw l- COw* Div of Waste Management and Radiation Control Attn: Scott Anderson Division Director, Utah Division of Waste Management and Radiation Control P.O. Box 144880 Salt Lake City, Utah MAY 3 0 2017 84114-4880 Dear Mr. Anderson, I am writing to express my concern about the threat that the White Mesa Uranium Mill poses to nearby communities and the environment, particularly to the groundwater that underlies the White Mesa Mill site. I am familiar with the pattern of groundwater contamination due to uranium milling activities across Northern Arizona and the Colorado Plateau, as exemplified by the Tuba City Mill, the Atlas tailings pile, and the Monticello Mill site. As an Arizona resident, I am also concerned that uranium ore milled at White Mesa is mined near the Grand Canyon and hauled 300 miles across Arizona and the Navajo Nation, putting our groundwater and our communities at risk. I am deeply concerned that the ongoing uranium mining and milling in our region will permanently contaminate surrounding groundwater and threaten Colorado Plateau communities, especially the Ute Mountain Ute tribe. Unless action is taken to implement rigorous pollution controls, White Mesa Mill could permanently contaminate the perched aquifer underlying the mill site, and threaten contamination of the deeper Navajo Aquifer. A serious cause of concern is the fact that monitoring wells penetrate both the perched aquifer and the Navajo Aquifer, and could act as contaminant pathways from the upper aquifer to the Navajo Aquifer. I urge you to address this issue by requiring the company to permanently dewater and close the legacy impoundments at the White Mesa Mill site - namely Cells 1, 2, and 3. Please exercise your full discretion as regulators by requiring the most rigorous pollution controls for the site. I do not want to see another Superfund site in the heart of the Colorado Plateau, as the region's scarce groundwater resources cannot afford to be compromised. You have the ability to protect this region and its communities from the toxic and radioactive contamination; please do everything in your power to protect our people and our water. Thank you for your consideration, Attn: Scott Anderson Division Director, Utah Division of Waste Management and Radiation Control P.O. Box 144880 Salt Lake City, Utah Div of Waste Management and Radiation Control 2017 84114-4880 Dear Mr. Anderson, I am writing to express my concern about the threat that the White Mesa Uranium Mill poses to nearby communities and the environment, particularly to the groundwater that underlies the White Mesa Mill site. I am familiar with the pattern of groundwater contamination due to uranium milling activities across Northern Arizona and the Colorado Plateau, as exemplified by the Tuba City Mill, the Atlas tailings pile, and the Monticello Mill site. As an Arizona resident, I am also concerned that uranium ore milled at White Mesa is mined near the Grand Canyon and hauled 300 miles across Arizona and the Navajo Nation, putting our groundwater and our communities at risk. I am deeply concerned that the ongoing uranium mining and milling in our region will permanently contaminate surrounding groundwater and threaten Colorado Plateau communities, especially the Ute Mountain Ute tribe. Unless action is taken to implement rigorous pollution controls. White Mesa Mill could permanently contaminate the perched aquifer underlying the mill site, and threaten contamination of the deeper Navajo Aquifer. A serious cause of concern is the fact that monitoring wells penetrate both the perched aquifer and the Navajo Aquifer, and could act as contaminant pathways from the upper aquifer to the Navajo Aquifer. I urge you to address this issue by requiring the company to permanently dewater and close the legacy impoundments at the White Mesa Mill site - namely Cells 1, 2, and 3. Please exercise your full discretion as regulators by requiring the most rigorous pollution controls for the site. I do not want to see another Superfund site in the heart of the Colorado Plateau, as the region's scarce groundwater resources cannot afford to be compromised. You have the ability to protect this region and its communities from the toxic and radioactive contamination; please do everything in your power to protect our people and our water. Thank you for your consideration, Address:^ ^ /i^ 00 ^ Name Div of Waste Management and Radiation Control Attn: Scott Anderson Division Director, Utah Division of Waste Management and Radiation Control P.O. Box 144880 Salt Lake City, Utah 84114-4880 Dear Mr. Anderson, I am writing to express my concern about the threat that the White Mesa Uranium Mill poses to nearby communities and the environment, particularly to the groundwater that underlies the White Mesa Mill site. I am familiar with the pattern of groundwater contamination due to uranium milling activities across Northern Arizona and the Colorado Plateau, as exemplified by the Tuba City Mill, the Atlas tailings pile, and the Monticello Mill site. As an Arizona resident, I am also concerned that uranium ore milled at White Mesa is mined near the Grand Canyon and hauled 300 miles across Arizona and the Navajo Nation, putting our groundwater and our communities at risk. I am deeply concerned that the ongoing uranium mining and milling in our region will permanently contaminate surrounding groundwater and threaten Colorado Plateau communities, especially the Ute Mountain Ute tribe. Unless action is taken to implement rigorous pollution controls, White Mesa Mill could permanently contaminate the perched aquifer underlying the mill site, and threaten contamination of the deeper Navajo Aquifer. A serious cause of concern is the fact that monitoring wells penetrate both the perched aquifer and the Navajo Aquifer, and could act as contaminant pathways from the upper aquifer to the Navajo Aquifer. I urge you to address this issue by requiring the company to permanently dewater and close the legacy impoundments at the White Mesa Mill site - namely Cells 1, 2, and 3. Please exercise your full discretion as regulators by requiring the most rigorous pollution controls for the site. I do not want to see another Superfund site in the heart of the Colorado Plateau, as the region's scarce groundwater resources cannot afford to be compromised. You have the ability to protect this region and its communities from the toxic and radioactive contamination; please do everything in your power to protect our people and our water. Thank you for your consideration, Name: H-OCOO Address: -T8UO (0.2>a<k/ j ■PTL' <£\£>CO \ Email: Attn: Scott Anderson Division Director, Utah Division of Waste Management and Radiation Control P.O. Box 144880 Salt Lake City, Utah Div of Waste Management and Radiation Control 3 0 2017 84114-4880 Dear Mr. Anderson, I am writing to express my concern about the threat that the White Mesa Uranium Mill poses to nearby communities and the environment, particularly to the groundwater that underlies the White Mesa Mill site. I am familiar with the pattern of groundwater contamination due to uranium milling activities across Northern Arizona and the Colorado Plateau, as exemplified by the Tuba City Mill, the Atlas tailings pile, and the Monticello Mill site. As an Arizona resident, I am also concerned that uranium ore milled at White Mesa is mined near the Grand Canyon and hauled 300 miles across Arizona and the Navajo Nation, putting our groundwater and our communities at risk. I am deeply concerned that the ongoing uranium mining and milling in our region will permanently contaminate surrounding groundwater and threaten Colorado Plateau communities, especially the Ute Mountain Ute tribe. Unless action is taken to implement rigorous pollution controls, White Mesa Mill could permanently contaminate the perched aquifer underlying the mill site, and threaten contamination of the deeper Navajo Aquifer. A serious cause of concern is the fact that monitoring wells penetrate both the perched aquifer and the Navajo Aquifer, and could act as contaminant pathways from the upper aquifer to the Navajo Aquifer. I urge you to address this issue by requiring the company to permanently dewater and close the legacy impoundments at the White Mesa Mill site - namely Cells 1, 2, and 3. Please exercise your full discretion as regulators by requiring the most rigorous pollution controls for the site. I do not want to see another Superfund site in the heart of the Colorado Plateau, as the region's scarce groundwater resources cannot afford to be compromised. You have the ability to protect this region and its communities from the toxic and radioactive contamination; please do everything in your power to protect our people and our water. Thank you for your consideration, Name: /Marcus Address: ^^51? m o _ Attn: Scott Anderson Division Director, Utah Division of Waste Management and Radiation Control P.O. Box 144880 Salt Lake City, Utah 84114-4880 Div of Waste Management and Radiation Control Dear Mr. Anderson, I am writing to express my concern about the threat that the White Mesa Uranium Mill poses to nearby communities and the environment, particularly to the groundwater that underlies the White Mesa Mill site. I am familiar with the pattern of groundwater contamination due to uranium milling activities across Northern Arizona and the Colorado Plateau, as exemplified by the Tuba City Mill, the Atlas tailings pile, and the Monticello Mill site. As an Arizona resident, I am also concerned that uranium ore milled at White Mesa is mined near the Grand Canyon and hauled 300 miles across Arizona and the Navajo Nation, putting our groundwater and our communities at risk. I am deeply concerned that the ongoing uranium mining and milling in our region will permanently contaminate surrounding groundwater and threaten Colorado Plateau communities, especially the Ute Mountain Ute tribe. Unless action is taken to implement rigorous pollution controls, White Mesa Mill could permanently contaminate the perched aquifer underlying the mill site, and threaten contamination of the deeper Navajo Aquifer. A serious cause of concern is the fact that monitoring wells penetrate both the perched aquifer and the Navajo Aquifer, and could act as contaminant pathways from the upper aquifer to the Navajo Aquifer. I urge you to address this issue by requiring the company to permanently dewater and close the legacy impoundments at the White Mesa Mill site - namely Cells 1,2, and 3. Please exercise your full discretion as regulators by requiring the most rigorous pollution controls for the site. I do not want to see another Superfund site in the heart of the Colorado Plateau, as the region's scarce groundwater resources cannot afford to be compromised. You have the ability to protect this region and its communities from the toxic and radioactive contamination; please do everything in your power to protect our people and our water. Thank you for your consideration, N Name: ^,v l \ wi) ^ Address: p0 33 J 5-+■ M v4 Z Email: <u( H9-*) Attn: Scott Anderson Division Director, Utah Division of Waste Management and Radiation Control P.O. Box 144880 Salt Lake City, Utah 84114-4880 Div of Waste Management and Radiation Control 3 I 201? Dear Mr. Anderson, I am writing to express my concern about the threat that the White Mesa Uranium Mill poses to nearby communities and the environment, particularly to the groundwater that underlies the White Mesa Mill site. I am familiar with the pattern of groundwater contamination due to uranium milling activities across Northern Arizona and the Colorado Plateau, as exemplified by the Tuba City Mill, the Atlas tailings pile, and the Monticello Mill site. As an Arizona resident, I am also concerned that uranium ore milled at White Mesa is mined near the Grand Canyon and hauled 300 miles across Arizona and the Navajo Nation, putting our groundwater and our communities at risk. I am deeply concerned that the ongoing uranium mining and milling in our region will permanently contaminate surrounding groundwater and threaten Colorado Plateau communities, especially the Ute Mountain Ute tribe. Unless action is taken to implement rigorous pollution controls, White Mesa Mill could permanently contaminate the perched aquifer underlying the mill site, and threaten contamination of the deeper Navajo Aquifer. A serious cause of concern is the fact that monitoring wells penetrate both the perched aquifer and the Navajo Aquifer, and could act as contaminant pathways from the upper aquifer to the Navajo Aquifer. I urge you to address this issue by requiring the company to permanently dewater and close the legacy impoundments at the White Mesa Mill site - namely Cells 1, 2, and 3. Please exercise your full discretion as regulators by requiring the most rigorous pollution controls for the site. I do not want to see another Superfund site in the heart of the Colorado Plateau, as the region's scarce groundwater resources cannot afford to be compromised. You have the ability to protect this region and its communities from the toxic and radioactive contamination; please do everything in your power to protect our people and our water. Thank you for your consideration, Name: I^W-HlSCHA (j{A{ccttO Address: H ( 0^1 S- HodoiAct ^cl AZ Fmail* Attn: Scott Anderson Division Director, Utah Division of Waste Management and Radiation Control P.O. Box 144880 Salt Lake City, Utah Div of Waste Management and Radiation Control 3 I 84114-4880 Dear Mr. Anderson, I am writing to express my concern about the threat that the White Mesa Uranium Mill poses to nearby communities and the environment, particularly to the groundwater that underlies the White Mesa Mill site. I am familiar with the pattern of groundwater contamination due to uranium milling activities across Northern Arizona and the Colorado Plateau, as exemplified by the Tuba City Mill, the Atlas tailings pile, and the Monticello Mill site. As an Arizona resident, I am also concerned that uranium ore milled at White Mesa is mined near the Grand Canyon and hauled 300 miles across Arizona and the Navajo Nation, putting our groundwater and our communities at risk. I am deeply concerned that the ongoing uranium mining and milling in our region will permanently contaminate surrounding groundwater and threaten Colorado Plateau communities, especially the Ute Mountain Ute tribe. Unless action is taken to implement rigorous pollution controls, White Mesa Mill could permanently contaminate the perched aquifer underlying the mill site, and threaten contamination of the deeper Navajo Aquifer. A serious cause of concern is the fact that monitoring wells penetrate both the perched aquifer and the Navajo Aquifer, and could act as contaminant pathways from the upper aquifer to the Navajo Aquifer. I urge you to address this issue by requiring the company to permanently dewater and close the legacy impoundments at the White Mesa Mill site - namely Cells 1, 2, and 3. Please exercise your full discretion as regulators by requiring the most rigorous pollution controls for the site. I do not want to see another Superfund site in the heart of the Colorado Plateau, as the region's scarce groundwater resources cannot afford to be compromised. You have the ability to protect this region and its communities from the toxic and radioactive contamination; please do everything in your power to protect our people and our water. Thank you for your consideration, Name: Address: M \J XI' Email: YlOftK+U Attn: Scott Ande'rson Division Director, Utah Division of Waste Management and Radiation Control P.O. Box 144880 Salt Lake City, Utah 84114-4880 Div of Waste Management and Radiation Control 3 0 Dear Mr. Anderson, I am writing to express my concern about the threat that the White Mesa Uranium Mill poses to nearby communities and the environment, particularly to the groundwater that underlies the White Mesa Mill site. I am familiar with the pattern of groundwater contamination due to uranium milling activities across Northern Arizona and the Colorado Plateau, as exemplified by the Tuba City Mill, the Atlas tailings pile, and the Monticello Mill site. As an Arizona resident, I am also concerned that uranium ore milled at White Mesa is mined near the Grand Canyon and hauled 300 miles across Arizona and the Navajo Nation, putting our groundwater and our communities at risk. I am deeply concerned that the ongoing uranium mining and milling in our region will permanently contaminate surrounding groundwater and threaten Colorado Plateau communities, especially the Ute Mountain Ute tribe. Unless action is taken to implement rigorous pollution controls, White Mesa Mill could permanently contaminate the perched aquifer underlying the mill site, and threaten contamination of the deeper Navajo Aquifer. A serious cause of concern is the fact that monitoring wells penetrate both the perched aquifer and the Navajo Aquifer, and could act as contaminant pathways from the upper aquifer to the Navajo Aquifer. I urge you to address this issue by requiring the company to permanently dewater and close the legacy impoundments at the White Mesa Mill site - namely Cells 1,2, and 3. Please exercise your full discretion as regulators by requiring the most rigorous pollution controls for the site. I do not want to see another Superfund site in the heart of the Colorado Plateau, as the region's scarce groundwater resources cannot afford to be compromised. You have the ability to protect this region and its communities from the toxic and radioactive contamination; please do everything in your power to protect our people and our water. Thank you for your consideration, Name: VAo-V-oa^ Address: N sV . ft EmaiL l cU6<ock. cjo mEmail: Div of Waste Management and Radiation Control Attn: Scott Anderson Division Director, Utah Division of Waste Management and Radiation Control P.0. Box 144880 Salt Lake City, Utah 84114-4880 Dear Mr. Anderson, I am writing to express my concern about the threat that the White Mesa Uranium Mill poses to nearby communities and the environment, particularly to the groundwater that underlies the White Mesa Mill site. I am familiar with the pattern of groundwater contamination due to uranium milling activities across Northern Arizona and the Colorado Plateau, as exemplified by the Tuba City Mill, the Atlas tailings pile, and the Monticello Mill site. As an Arizona resident, I am also concerned that uranium ore milled at White Mesa is mined near the Grand Canyon and hauled 300 miles across Arizona and the Navajo Nation, putting our groundwater and our communities at risk. I am deeply concerned that the ongoing uranium mining and milling in our region will permanently contaminate surrounding groundwater and threaten Colorado Plateau communities, especially the Ute Mountain Ute tribe. Unless action is taken to implement rigorous pollution controls, White Mesa Mill could permanently contaminate the perched aquifer underlying the mill site, and threaten contamination of the deeper Navajo Aquifer. A serious cause of concern is the fact that monitoring wells penetrate both the perched aquifer and the Navajo Aquifer, and could act as contaminant pathways from the upper aquifer to the Navajo Aquifer. I urge you to address this issue by requiring the company to permanently dewater and close the legacy impoundments at the White Mesa Mill site - namely Cells 1, 2, and 3. Please exercise your full discretion as regulators by requiring the most rigorous pollution controls for the site. I do not want to see another Superfund site in the heart of the Colorado Plateau, as the region's scarce groundwater resources cannot afford to be compromised. You have the ability to protect this region and its communities from the toxic and radioactive contamination; please do everything in your power to protect our people and our water. Thank you for your consideration, Name: Address: ^ ^ tlldt W Email: jaiMko^d^cl v°?i .osy^\ Attn: Scott Anderson Division Director, Utah Division of Waste Management and Radiation Control P.O. Box 144880 Salt Lake City, Utah Div of Waste Management and Radiation Control 3 I 84114-4880 Dear Mr. Anderson, I am writing to express my concern about the threat that the White Mesa Uranium Mill poses to nearby communities and the environment, particularly to the groundwater that underlies the White Mesa Mill site. I am familiar with the pattern of groundwater contamination due to uranium milling activities across Northern Arizona and the Colorado Plateau, as exemplified by the Tuba City Mill, the Atlas tailings pile, and the Monticello Mill site. As an Arizona resident, I am also concerned that uranium ore milled at White Mesa is mined near the Grand Canyon and hauled 300 miles across Arizona and the.Navajo Nation, putting our groundwater and our communities at risk. I am deeply concerned that the ongoing uranium mining and milling in our region will permanently contaminate surrounding groundwater and threaten Colorado Plateau communities, especially the Ute Mountain Ute tribe. Unless action is taken to implement rigorous pollution controls, White Mesa Mill could permanently contaminate the perched aquifer underlying the mill site, and threaten contamination of the deeper Navajo Aquifer. A serious cause of concern is the fact that monitoring wells penetrate both the perched aquifer and the Navajo Aquifer, and could act as contaminant pathways from the upper aquifer to the Navajo Aquifer. I urge you to address this issue by requiring the company to permanently dewater and close the legacy impoundments at the White Mesa Mill site - namely Cells 1, 2, and 3. Please exercise your full discretion as regulators by requiring the most rigorous pollution controls for the site. I do not want to see another Superfund site in the heart of the Colorado Plateau, as the region's scarce groundwater resources cannot afford to be compromised. You have the ability to protect this region and its communities from the toxic and radioactive contamination; please do everything in your power to protect our people and our water. Thank you for your consideration, Name: f<AVI &OS7&C'Name: Address: Email: v//e.^ Attn: Scott Anderson Division Director, Utah Division of Waste Management and Radiation Control P.O. Box 144880 Div of Waste Management and Radiation Control 3 0 201? Salt Lake City, Utah 84114-4880 Dear Mr. Anderson, I am writing to express my concern about the threat that the White Mesa Uranium Mill poses to nearby communities and the environment, particularly to the groundwater that underlies the White Mesa Mill site. I am familiar with the pattern of groundwater contamination due to uranium milling activities across Northern Arizona and the Colorado Plateau, as exemplified by the Tuba City Mill, the Atlas tailings pile, and the Monticello Mill site. As an Arizona resident, I am also concerned that uranium ore milled at White Mesa is mined near the Grand Canyon and hauled 300 miles across Arizona and the Navajo Nation, putting our groundwater and our communities at risk. I am deeply concerned that the ongoing uranium mining and milling in our region will permanently contaminate surrounding groundwater and threaten Colorado Plateau communities, especially the Ute Mountain Ute tribe. Unless action is taken to implement rigorous pollution controls, White Mesa Mill could permanently contaminate the perched aquifer underlying the mill site, and threaten contamination of the deeper Navajo Aquifer. A serious cause of concern is the fact that monitoring wells penetrate both the perched aquifer and the Navajo Aquifer, and could act as contaminant pathways from the upper aquifer to the Navajo Aquifer. I urge you to address this issue by requiring the company to permanently dewater and close the legacy impoundments at the White Mesa Mill site - namely Cells 1, 2, and 3. Please exercise your full discretion as regulators by requiring the most rigorous pollution controls for the site. I do not want to see another Superfund site in the heart of the Colorado Plateau, as the region's scarce groundwater resources cannot afford to be compromised. You have the ability to protect this region and its communities from the toxic and radioactive contamination; please do everything in your power to protect our people and our water. Thank you for your consideration, Address: UjZS/ Ufay Email: rwZCO*rt Attn: Scott Anderson Division Director, Utah Division of Waste Management and Radiation Control P.O. Box 144880 Salt Lake City, Utah Div of Waste Management and Radiation Control 3 0 84114-4880 Dear Mr. Anderson, I am writing to express my concern about the threat that the White Mesa Uranium Mill poses to nearby communities and the environment, particularly to the groundwater that underlies the White Mesa Mill site. I am familiar with the pattern of groundwater contamination due to uranium milling activities across Northern Arizona and the Colorado Plateau, as exemplified by the Tuba City Mill, the Atlas tailings pile, and the Monticello Mill site. As an Arizona resident, I am also concerned that uranium ore milled at White Mesa is mined near the Grand Canyon and hauled 300 miles across Arizona and the Navajo Nation, putting our groundwater and our communities at risk. I am deeply concerned that the ongoing uranium mining and milling in our region will permanently contaminate surrounding groundwater and threaten Colorado Plateau communities, especially the Ute Mountain Ute tribe. Unless action is taken to implement rigorous pollution controls, White Mesa Mill could permanently contaminate the perched aquifer underlying the mill site, and threaten contamination of the deeper Navajo Aquifer. A serious cause of concern is the fact that monitoring wells penetrate both the perched aquifer and the Navajo Aquifer, and could act as contaminant pathways from the upper aquifer to the Navajo Aquifer. I urge you to address this issue by requiring the company to permanently dewater and close the legacy impoundments at the White Mesa Mill site - namely Cells 1, 2, and 3. Please exercise your full discretion as regulators by requiring the most rigorous pollution controls for the site. I do not want to see another Superfund site in the heart of the Colorado Plateau, as the region's scarce groundwater resources cannot afford to be compromised. You have the ability to protect this region and its communities from the toxic and radioactive contamination; please do everything in your power to protect our people and our water. Thank you for your consideration, Name: Lv/du<X Address: 7 Attn: Scott Anderson Division Director, Utah Division of Waste Management and Radiation Control P.O. Box 144880 Div of Waste Management and Radiation Control 3 I Salt Lake City, Utah 84114-4880 Dear Mr. Anderson, I am writing to express my concern about the threat that the White Mesa Uranium Mill poses to nearby communities and the environment, particularly to the groundwater that underlies the White Mesa Mill site. I am familiar with the pattern of groundwater contamination due to uranium milling activities across Northern Arizona and the Colorado Plateau, as exemplified by the Tuba City Mill, the Atlas tailings pile, and the Monticello Mill site. As an Arizona resident, I am also concerned that uranium ore milled at White Mesa is mined near the Grand Canyon and hauled 300 miles across Arizona and the Navajo Nation, putting our groundwater and our communities at risk. I am deeply concerned that the ongoing uranium mining and milling in our region will permanently contaminate surrounding groundwater and threaten Colorado Plateau communities, especially the Ute Mountain Ute tribe. Unless action is taken to implement rigorous pollution controls, White Mesa Mill could permanently contaminate the perched aquifer underlying the mill site, and threaten contamination of the deeper Navajo Aquifer. A serious cause of concern is the fact that monitoring wells penetrate both the perched aquifer and the Navajo Aquifer, and could act as contaminant pathways from the upper aquifer to the Navajo Aquifer. I urge you to address this issue by requiring the company to permanently dewater and close the legacy impoundments at the White Mesa Mill site - namely Cells 1, 2, and 3. Please exercise your full discretion as regulators by requiring the most rigorous pollution controls for the site. I do not want to see another Superfund site in the heart of the Colorado Plateau, as the region's scarce groundwater resources cannot afford to be compromised. You have the ability to protect this region and its communities from the toxic and radioactive contamination; please do everything in your power to protect our people and our water. Thank you for your consideration, Name: r i „tl cx Address:La/- Jolch^co £q/0 ■ellaEmail: Div of Waste Management and Radiation Control Attn: Scott Anderson Division Director, Utah Division of Waste Management and Radiation Control P.O. Box 144880 Salt Lake City, Utah 84114-4880 Dear Mr. Anderson, I am writing to express my concern about the threat that the White Mesa Uranium Mill poses to nearby communities and the environment, particularly to the groundwater that underlies the White Mesa Mill site. I am familiar with the pattern of groundwater contamination due to uranium milling activities across Northern Arizona and the Colorado Plateau, as exemplified by the Tuba City Mill, the Atlas tailings pile, and the Monticello Mill site. As an Arizona resident, I am also concerned that uranium ore milled at White Mesa is mined near the Grand Canyon and hauled 300 miles across Arizona and the Navajo Nation, putting our groundwater and our communities at risk. I am deeply concerned that the ongoing uranium mining and milling in our region will permanently contaminate surrounding groundwater and threaten Colorado Plateau communities, especially the Ute Mountain Ute tribe. Unless action is taken to implement rigorous pollution controls, White Mesa Mill could permanently contaminate the perched aquifer underlying the mill site, and threaten contamination of the deeper Navajo Aquifer. A serious cause of concern is the fact that monitoring wells penetrate both the perched aquifer and the Navajo Aquifer, and could act as contaminant pathways from the upper aquifer to the Navajo Aquifer. I urge you to address this issue by requiring the company to permanently dewater and close the legacy impoundments at the White Mesa Mill site - namely Cells 1, 2, and 3. Please exercise your full discretion as regulators by requiring the most rigorous pollution controls for the site. I do not want to see another Superfund site in the heart of the Colorado Plateau, as the region's scarce groundwater resources cannot afford to be compromised. You have the ability to protect this region and its communities from the toxic and radioactive contamination; please do everything in your power to protect our people and our water. Thank you for your consideration, Name: Mo0 r*- Address: 2-7 3 7 r i 1 S V—! Div of Waste Management and Radiation Control Attn: Scott Anderson Division Director, Utah Division of Waste Management and Radiation Control P.O. Box 144880 Salt Lake City, Utah 3 i 201? 84114-4880 Dear Mr. Anderson, I am writing to express my concern about the threat that the White Mesa Uranium Mill poses to nearby communities and the environment, particularly to the groundwater that underlies the White Mesa Mill site. I am familiar with the pattern of groundwater contamination due to uranium milling activities across Northern Arizona and the Colorado Plateau, as exemplified by the Tuba City Mill, the Atlas tailings pile, and the Monticello Mill site. As an Arizona resident, I am also concerned that uranium ore milled at White Mesa is mined near the Grand Canyon and hauled 300 miles across Arizona and the Navajo Nation, putting our groundwater and our communities at risk. I am deeply concerned that the ongoing uranium mining and milling in our region will permanently contaminate surrounding groundwater and threaten Colorado Plateau communities, especially the Ute Mountain Ute tribe. Unless action is taken to implement rigorous pollution controls, White Mesa Mill could permanently contaminate the perched aquifer underlying the mill site, and threaten contamination of the deeper Navajo Aquifer. A serious cause of concern is the fact that monitoring wells penetrate both the perched aquifer and the Navajo Aquifer, and could act as contaminant pathways from the upper aquifer to the Navajo Aquifer. I urge you to address this issue by requiring the company to permanently dewater and close the legacy impoundments at the White Mesa Mill site - namely Cells 1, 2, and 3. Please exercise your full discretion as regulators by requiring the most rigorous pollution controls for the site. I do not want to see another Superfund site in the heart of the Colorado Plateau, as the region's scarce groundwater resources cannot afford to be compromised. You have the ability to protect this region and its communities from the toxic and radioactive contamination; please do everything in your power to protect our people and our water. Thank you for your consideration, Name: \ Address: Name: Div of Waste Management and Radiation Control Attn: Scott Anderson Division Director, Utah Division of Waste Management and Radiation Control P.O. Box 144880 Salt Lake City, Utah 84114-4880 Dear Mr. Anderson, I am writing to express my concern about the threat that the White Mesa Uranium Mill poses to nearby communities and the environment, particularly to the groundwater that underlies the White Mesa Mill site. I am familiar with the pattern of groundwater contamination due to uranium milling activities across Northern Arizona and the Colorado Plateau, as exemplified by the Tuba City Mill, the Atlas tailings pile, and the Monticello Mill site. As an Arizona resident, I am also concerned that uranium ore milled at White Mesa is mined near the Grand Canyon and hauled 300 miles across Arizona and the Navajo Nation, putting our groundwater and our communities at risk. I am deeply concerned that the ongoing uranium mining and milling in our region will permanently contaminate surrounding groundwater and threaten Colorado Plateau communities, especially the Ute Mountain Ute tribe. Unless action is taken to implement rigorous pollution controls, White Mesa Mill could permanently contaminate the perched aquifer underlying the mill site, and threaten contamination of the deeper Navajo Aquifer. A serious cause of concern is the fact that monitoring wells penetrate both the perched aquifer and the Navajo Aquifer, and could act as contaminant pathways from the upper aquifer to the Navajo Aquifer. I urge you to address this issue by requiring the company to permanently dewater and close the legacy impoundments at the White Mesa Mill site - namely Cells 1, 2, and 3. Please exercise your full discretion as regulators by requiring the most rigorous pollution controls for the site. I do not want to see another Superfund site in the heart of the Colorado Plateau, as the region's scarce groundwater resources cannot afford to be compromised. You have the ability to protect this region and its communities from the toxic and radioactive contamination; please do everything in your power to protect our people and our water. k you for your consideration, Skid ttuiky) ess:/J, Div of Waste Management and Radiation Control Attn: Scott Anderson Division Director, Utah Division of Waste Management and Radiation Control P.O. Box 144880 Salt Lake City, Utah 84114-4880 Dear Mr. Anderson, I am writing to express my concern about the threat that the White Mesa Uranium Mill poses to nearby communities and the environment, particularly to the groundwater that underlies the White Mesa Mill site. I am familiar with the pattern of groundwater contamination due to uranium milling activities across Northern Arizona and the Colorado Plateau, as exemplified by the Tuba City Mill, the Atlas tailings pile, and the Monticello Mill site. As an Arizona resident, I am also concerned that uranium ore milled at White Mesa is mined near the Grand Canyon and hauled 300 miles across Arizona and the Navajo Nation, putting our groundwater and our communities at risk. I am deeply concerned that the ongoing uranium mining and milling in our region will permanently contaminate surrounding groundwater and threaten Colorado Plateau communities, especially the Ute Mountain Ute tribe. Unless action is taken to implement rigorous pollution controls, White Mesa Mill could permanently contaminate the perched aquifer underlying the mill site, and threaten contamination of the deeper Navajo Aquifer. A serious cause of concern is the fact that monitoring wells penetrate both the perched aquifer and the Navajo Aquifer, and could act as contaminant pathways from the upper aquifer to the Navajo Aquifer. I urge you to address this issue by requiring the company to permanently dewater and close the legacy impoundments at the White Mesa Mill site - namely Cells 1, 2, and 3. Please exercise your full discretion as regulators by requiring the most rigorous pollution controls for the site. I do not want to see another Superfund site in the heart of the Colorado Plateau, as the region's scarce groundwater resources cannot afford to be compromised. You have the ability to protect this region and its communities from the toxic and radioactive contamination; please do everything in your power to protect our people and our water. Thank you for your consideration, Name:-a Address: ^ 2°l &U.YK Orcle. T=(«^5 4-^ Email: ‘ Attn: Scott Anderson Division Director, Utah Division of Waste Management and Radiation Control P.O. Box 144880 Salt Lake City, Utah Div of Waste Management and Radiation Control 3 84114-4880 Dear Mr. Anderson, I am writing to express my concern about the threat that the White Mesa Uranium Mill poses to nearby communities and the environment, particularly to the groundwater that underlies the White Mesa Mill site. I am familiar with the pattern of groundwater contamination due to uranium milling activities across Northern Arizona and the Colorado Plateau, as exemplified by the Tuba City Mill, the Atlas tailings pile, and the Monticello Mill site. As an Arizona resident, I am also concerned that uranium ore milled at White Mesa is mined near the Grand Canyon and hauled 300 miles across Arizona and the Navajo Nation, putting our groundwater and our communities at risk. I am deeply concerned that the ongoing uranium mining and milling in our region will permanently contaminate surrounding groundwater and threaten Colorado Plateau communities, especially the Ute Mountain Ute tribe. Unless action is taken to implement rigorous pollution controls, White Mesa Mill could permanently contaminate the perched aquifer underlying the mill site, and threaten contamination of the deeper Navajo Aquifer. A serious cause of concern is the fact that monitoring wells penetrate both the perched aquifer and the Navajo Aquifer, and could act as contaminant pathways from the upper aquifer to the Navajo Aquifer. I urge you to address this issue by requiring the company to permanently dewater and close the legacy impoundments at the White Mesa Mill site - namely Cells 1, 2, and 3. Please exercise your full discretion as regulators by requiring the most rigorous pollution controls for the site. I do not want to see another Superfund site in the heart of the Colorado Plateau, as the region's scarce groundwater resources cannot afford to be compromised. You have the ability to protect this region and its communities from the toxic and radioactive contamination; please do everything in your power to protect our people and our water. Thank you for your consideration. Name: Address: Email: Attn: Scott Anderson Division Director, Utah Division of Waste Management and Radiation Control P.O. Box 144880 Salt Lake City, Utah 84114-4880 Div of Waste Management and Radiation Control JUW -i 20)7 Dear Mr. Anderson, I am writing to express my concern about the threat that the White Mesa Uranium Mill poses to nearby communities and the environment, particularly to the groundwater that underlies the White Mesa Mill site. I am familiar with the pattern of groundwater contamination due to uranium milling activities across Northern Arizona and the Colorado Plateau, as exemplified by the Tuba City Mill, the Atlas tailings pile, and the Monticello Mill site. As an Arizona resident, I am also concerned that uranium ore milled at White Mesa is mined near the Grand Canyon and hauled BOO miles across Arizona and'the Navajo Nation, putting our groundwater and our communities at risk. I am deeply concerned that the ongoing uranium mining and milling in our region will permanently contaminate surrounding groundwater and threaten Colorado Plateau communities, especially the Ute Mountain Ute tribe. Unless action is taken to implement rigorous pollution controls, White Mesa Mill could permanently contaminate the perched aquifer underlying the mill site, and threaten contamination of the deeper Navajo Aquifer. A serious cause of concern is the fact that monitoring wells penetrate both the perched aquifer and the Navajo Aquifer, and could act as contaminant pathways from the upper aquifer to the Navajo Aquifer. I urge you to address this issue by requiring the company to permanently dewater and close the legacy impoundments at the White Mesa Mill site - namely Cells 1, 2, and 3. Please exercise your full discretion as regulators by requiring the most rigorous pollution controls for the site. I do not want to see another Superfund site in the heart of the Colorado Plateau, as the region's scarce groundwater resources cannot afford to be compromised. You have the ability to protect this region and its communities from the toxic and radioactive contamination; please do everything in your power to protect our people and our water. Thank you for your consideration, Address: fOS (U-