Victoria shuts down Yellow Giant gold mine in northwestern B.C. over pollution spills – by Gordon Hoekstra (Vancouver Sun – July 27, 2015)

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Gitxaala First Nation plans legal action against small operation, but environment ministry says risk to animals, humans minimal

The province has shut down the small Yellow Giant underground gold mine on Banks Island in northwest B.C. for spilling pollution on land and into creeks, lakes, and a wetland.

The B.C. environment ministry said the discharge reached the ocean through a creek, several beaver-dam-created wetlands and Banks Lake before entering the ocean at Surrey Bay, but it is not believed it will harm humans or animals.

The Yellow Giant incident is the latest of several mine waste spills — although much smaller in magnitude — since the catastrophic dam failure at Imperial Metals’ Mount Polley gold and copper mine in August 2014. There have been small spills at the Myra Falls and Copper Mountain mines in the past year.

First Nations and conservationists are concerned about the effect of this latest spill on animals and aquatic life, including salmon, at the island located about 100 kilometres south of Prince Rupert.

Pacific Wild executive director Ian McAllister, who lives in the area, visited the island on Sunday to get a first-hand look. Although he was blocked from the mine site by company personnel, a drone flight he carried out showed migrating salmon splashing in Banks Creek on their way to Banks Lake.

There were also salmon jumping in the ocean at the mouth of the river, six to nine metres wide, he said, noting the area is rich in biodiversity, home to herring, a unique population of sandhill cranes and genetically distinct wolves. “Whatever discharged into the system has gone into what appears to be a very productive salmon river,” McAllister said in a phone interview.

Gitxaala First Nation chief Clarence Innis said they will be launching legal action against Banks Island Gold and the province to ensure environmental damage caused by the spill is cleaned up.

The area is an important salmon area for the Gitxaala, as well as for other foods such as seaweed gathering, he said. “B.C. has to stop letting this industry essentially self-regulate themselves and start holding them accountable,” Innis said Sunday, adding they plan to carry out their own assessment of the spill.

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