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    Richard G. Ballantine
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    Videos & Photos

    36002700Spotting fires break out in the steep canyons of the Stoner Mesa Fire on Saturday. (Courtesy photo)Crews reinforce lines as hot, dry weather threatens to feed Stoner Mesa Fire‘Rolling debris may cause uphill runs, torching, and spotting’Firefighters battling the Stoner Mesa Fire northeast of Dolores on Sunday reported steady progress on building containment lines, even as hot, dry weather promises to drive fire activity this week.The lightning-caused wildfire, which ignited July 28, has burned 8,369 acres and remains 0% contained as of Sunday morning, according to Rocky Mountain Complex Incident Management Team 1.The change in weather, following a cooldown with rain Friday and Saturday, is expected to intensify fire behavior, as grass and brush becomes increasingly flammable and likely to spread in the rough and sometimes steep terrain between Stoner and Taylor mesas.Structure protection teams continued to assess homes and energy infrastructure along the Colorado Highway 145 corridor, the team update said. More than 570 personnel have been assigned to the fire, and officials said efforts are focused on securing the perimeter and preventing the fire from advancing into inaccessible areas.In his morning briefing, Operations Section Chief Matt Weakland again asked drivers in the Colorado Highway 145 and Road 38 corridor to be cautious.“We have a lot of work going on in the Highway 145 and the County Road 38 areas. ... Please slow down and take some extra precaution just because we do have so many folks out in those areas working to prep and catalog all of those structures that we have out along those roads.” 0VideoYouTube480360Crews extend fire linesIn Division A, on the northwestern side of the fire, crews have established fire lines from the edge of Division X to West Twin Springs Trail, with only a small segment of indirect line remaining, the news release said.Firefighters are mopping up burned areas, strengthening fire lines and, where conditions allow, conducting small burns to reduce unburned fuels near the fire’s perimeter. Other crews were trying to contain two spot fires east of West Twin Springs Trail.Elsewhere, southern containment lines are largely complete in Division T, and crews were reopening historic roads to access and mop up hot spots near the canyon rim. In Division X, dozer lines and trail improvements are being extended toward Aspen Reservoir. Additional resources were reportedly on the way.Heavy equipment was also active in Division W, where mechanized tree fellers and masticators were clearing and shredding timber and vegetation to improve fire lines along the Road 201.In the far northeast corner, crews continue to scout the remote Division E for a plan of attack“We'll be gathering some more information to put together a good solid plan for Division Echo,” Weakland said. “One thing to note,” he said, “at the the far (eastern) end of the fire, we were able to get some additional old roadways opened up with a dozer so that we can put engines and crews out on this end of the fire to try to hold that right where it is on from any southward movement.” 081725 stoner mesa fire map.pdf<objectName>081725 stoner mesa fire map.pdf</objectName></data></link></links></object><element id="MTk0LDE0OCwxNjgsMTA2" type="subheadline1">The impact of weather</element><element id="paragraph-b409c8890858b354630688a9db1dd312" type="body">Forecasts call for temperatures in the upper 60s with light winds Sunday gusting up to 15 mph from the west. Fire behavior is expected to intensify as the hot, dry trend continues. Firefighters should confront smoldering, creeping and spotting fire with short uphill runs in the morning.</element><element id="paragraph-f164013c5e36c26541a248da1dd12507" type="body">“Rolling debris may cause uphill runs, torching, and spotting when wind and slopes align,” the team said in a news release.</element><element id="NzAsMjI4LDM2LDM1" type="subheadline1">Air quality in Southwest Colorado</element><element id="paragraph-47778867fd19c2739e44c52ca53ebee3" type="body">According to the U.S. Interagency <a href="https://outlooks.airfire.org/outlook/b1e651b4" id="link-d046789d5d617783eda47481766588be" target="_blank">Wildland Fire Air Quality Response</a> Program, smoke settled in the Stoner Creek, West Dolores and Dolores River drainages Saturday night, resulting in unhealthy air quality index conditions Sunday morning. Winds will raise the index to “good” by midday, but with nightfall, air quality will fall to “moderate” or "unhealthy“ in pockets along the Dolores River and continue into Monday morning.</element><element id="paragraph-7afafb59f1a460b9640d2d2f252ddfda" type="body">Air quality Monday morning is expected to be moderate in Cortez, and good in Durango.</element><element id="MTQxLDgxLDE4MywyMDY" type="subheadline1">Evacuation alerts remain in effect</element><element id="paragraph-418fe76e8ed3d133adc9dc2a49f9417d" type="body">Evacuation alerts and fire restrictions remain in effect across Dolores County and the San Juan National Forest.</element><element id="paragraph-f0d02dfe5cd7a6574f22aac875a05121" type="body"> More information is available at <a href="https://inciweb.wildfire.gov/incident-information/cosjf-stoner-mesa-fire" id="link-0db6a1b391377413eb29aee59df83301" target="_blank">https://inciweb.wildfire.gov/incident-information/cosjf-stoner-mesa-fire</a>.</element><object id="MTU2LDIwMiwxNzAsMTY1" title="More information" type="x-im/content-part" uuid="9008bd29-07a1-4467-a8c3-b9775a8d2ec1"><data><title><strong id="strong-984f56b9a9052c3cfa15a1b107d628e1">More information</strong>Information phone: 970-341-8668 (new number)Email: 2025.stonermesa@firenet.govInciWeb: https://inciweb.wildfire.gov/incident-information/cosjf-stoner-mesa-fireFacebook: https://facebook.com/StonerMesaFire/YouTube: https://youtube.com/@StonerMesaFireLinkTree: https://linktr.ee/StonerMesaFirePIO
    ‘Rolling debris may cause uphill runs, torching, and spotting’
    30003620Crews move firewood away from a home in the Stoner Mesa area. Structure protection teams are assessing homes and preparing for a possible defense. Courtesy photoCrews battle to contain Stoner Mesa Fire, work to protect high value areas‘Fully staffed division’ puts in fire line along mesa to protect County Road 38Firefighters are pushing to build containment lines in the Stoner Mesa Fire northeast of Dolores, taking advantage of a cool night with rainfall to improve fire lines and further implement the containment strategy.The fire, which has scorched more than 7,390 acres since it was ignited July 28, remained 0% contained Saturday morning, according to a news release from the Rocky Mountain Complex Incident Management Team 1. The team noted that because of poor flight conditions, no new infrared data was available to update the fire’s size. More than 530 personnel are working the fire, which is burning in rugged terrain and threatening homes, grazing lands, timber sales and key transportation routes including Colorado Highway 145 and County Road 38.“Firefighters continue to work toward full suppression of the fire, keeping firefighter safety and the public’s safety as a top priority,” the incident team said Saturday in a news release.According to operations section chief Matt Weakland, however, said in his morning update that the rainfall has brought new challenges for crews. 0VideoYouTube480360“Last night we received some moisture on the fire and more rain is expected today,” he said. “While that is a really good for moderating fire behavior, it does present some unique challenges to firefighters out on the ground. It can cause roads and dozer lines that we've been driving to become slick and impassible and it also can cause problems for firefighters … in those steep areas – makes it inaccessible due to slick conditions.”Infrared flights used to map the fire’s perimeter were grounded for two nights because of poor weather. Officials plan to use unmanned aerial systems and state Mission Aircraft to gather data this weekend.Impact on local communitiesResidents along Highway 145 and County Road 38 are being urged to drive cautiously due to heavy fire traffic. The fire team, led by Cmdr. Justin Conrad, has reported several close calls with drivers passing on double yellow lines and exceeding speed limits, the news release said.Officials also reminded the public that wildfires are a no-fly zone for unauthorized aircraft, including drones. “If you fly, we can’t,” the team warned. Flight crews were airborne Saturday morning. Structure protection teams are assessing homes and preparing for a possible defense. Structure Group 145 is identifying water tender fill sites and evaluating equipment needs. Structure Group 38 has completed assessments on the fire side of the footprint from Dunton to Colorado 145 and is working north to assess properties on the opposite side.The San Juan National Forest has announced emergency closures in areas affected by the fire. Stage 2 fire restrictions remain in place across the region.081625 stoner mesas map.pdf<objectName>081625 stoner mesas map.pdf</objectName></data></link></links></object><element id="MjIzLDIxMSwyMDMsMTYz" type="subheadline1">Firefighters make progress</element><element id="paragraph-4484e4e68eafcdfca9672bb5fa4e97cb" type="body">Crews were using direct and indirect means to suppress the fire.</element><element id="paragraph-6b8ff928e2031361f363676b95a86b9b" type="body">In Division A, firefighters made progress west from West Twin Springs Trail toward Road 335. Crews discovered two spot fires east of the trail; one and has begum mopping up one, while trying to contain the other.</element><element id="paragraph-5a53c365bd5711b0ac40e33a0b57e97d" type="body">Division E, located in steep and inaccessible terrain, is being scouted for containment opportunities using natural barriers and existing infrastructure. Infrared-equipped drones will help identify remaining heat sources. Staffing has begun, Weakland said.</element><element id="paragraph-dc6f80b584d120fd51daa5efc74891ba" type="body">“We've brought our division supervisor in they are getting familiar with this country to start putting a plan together for Division Echo,” he said.</element><element id="paragraph-890093972d88c9bde81cc51518441236" type="body">In Division T, crews are reinforcing lines between Roads 545 and 547. Burn operations were conducted Friday to remove unburned fuels. Mop-up continued Saturday.</element><element id="paragraph-24add7304a6266ced851956a43e34a12" type="body">Division X was scouting containment options on the western flank, working to tie trail systems into County Road 38. Mitigation work is underway along Stoner Mesa Trail.</element><element id="paragraph-e62548790b68e0b36dc63554cc40fdb0" type="body">“That's a fully staffed division today, and those folks are working on putting in fire line along that mesa top to protect County Road 38,” Weakland said.</element><element id="paragraph-2c2ba82d57fa20e2b28fe2b3b365cb8d" type="body">In Division W, heavy equipment was cutting a line along the southern edge, and improvements are underway on Road 201 south to Loading Pen Trail. Equipment movement is expected on Taylor Creek Road.</element><element id="paragraph-ec92fe33b1f2fa201a6be858ae2c5bd6" type="body">Weakland said the divisionj was fully staffed Saturday.</element><element id="paragraph-0c11801a4a61fbc43e02b079cb9f575f" type="body"> “They are working at putting in fire line on the mesa top to protect values that also includes some timber sales that are in this general area,” he said.</element><element id="NjMsODgsMTE0LDI0Ng" type="subheadline1">Weather gives crews a break</element><element id="paragraph-a319d552a2bdb92767391f899c5de21a" type="body">Clouds were expected to reduce daytime heating, with temperatures in the upper 60s. Thunderstorms are likely in the afternoon, bringing gusts up to 35 mph and light rainfall. Warmer, drier conditions were forecast for Sunday.</element><element id="paragraph-ee2e548ec314ca17b5081618c3b72021" type="body">Fire behavior was expected to be moderate, creeping and smoldering in the morning and isolated torching possible later in the day.</element></group> </idf></div> </div> <div class="row"> <div class="frontpage-photo-video-headline col-xs-12 col-md-9"> <a href="https://www.the-journal.com/articles/crews-battle-to-contain-stoner-mesa-fire-warn-of-risk-to-properties/">Crews battle to contain Stoner Mesa Fire, work to protect high value areas</a> </div> <div class="frontpage-photo-video-socials col-xs-12 col-md-3"> <a href="http://www.facebook.com/sharer/sharer.php?u=https://www.the-journal.com/articles/crews-battle-to-contain-stoner-mesa-fire-warn-of-risk-to-properties/&title=Crews%20battle%20to%20contain%20Stoner%20Mesa%20Fire%2C%20work%20to%20protect%20high%20value%20areas" class="facebook-share" target="_blank"> <div class="icon-circle-border"> <i class="fa fa-facebook-square" aria-hidden="true"></i> </div> </a> <a href="http://twitter.com/intent/tweet?status=Crews%20battle%20to%20contain%20Stoner%20Mesa%20Fire%2C%20work%20to%20protect%20high%20value%20areas+https://www.the-journal.com/articles/crews-battle-to-contain-stoner-mesa-fire-warn-of-risk-to-properties/" class="twitter-share" target="_blank"> <div class="icon-circle-border"> <i class="fa fa-twitter" aria-hidden="true"></i> </div> </a> <a class="email-share" target="_blank"> <div class="icon-circle-border"> <i class="fa fa-envelope" aria-hidden="true"></i> </div> </a> </div> </div> <div class="frontpage-photo-video-text"> ‘Fully staffed division’ puts in fire line along mesa to protect County Road 38 </div> <div class="frontpage-photo-video-related"> </div></div> <div class="photo-video-slider-element col-12"> <div class="responsive-embed" data-uuid="6726833c-afbc-4866-8fb3-a74e7747085a"> <div class="image-container"> <a href="https://www.the-journal.com/articles/blue-ridge-fire-90-contained-after-rapid-start-fast-firefighter-response/"> <!-- Using first_image crop --> <!-- width:1728, height: 1296--> <!-- 16:9 first_image crop --> <img decoding="async" class="frontpage-photo-gallery-image" src="https://imengine.public.prod.dur.navigacloud.com?uuid=01292b92-5985-577a-aa36-dda750a86cab&function=cropresize&type=preview&source=false&q=75&crop_w=0.99999&crop_h=0.75&width=1728&height=972&x=1.0E-5&y=0.24333"> </a> </div> <div class="d-none"><?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?><idf xmlns="http://www.infomaker.se/idf/1.0" dir="ltr" xml:lang="sv_SE"> <group type="body"><object id="MzAsMTk5LDQsMTIw" type="x-im/image" uuid="01292b92-5985-577a-aa36-dda750a86cab"><links><link rel="self" type="x-im/image" uri="im://image/Dsm1BzlkGcU-40MptsMuoByoGI8.jpg" uuid="01292b92-5985-577a-aa36-dda750a86cab"><data><width>1728</width><height>1296</height><imageInstructions/><text>The Blue Ridge Fire prompted the evacuation of homes on Hilltop Drive in the Forest Lakes subdivision on Friday. (Jerry McBride/Durango Herald)</text><alttext/></data><links><link rel="crop" title="1:1" type="x-im/crop" uri="im://crop/0.1025/0/0.75/1"/><link rel="crop" title="4:3" type="x-im/crop" uri="im://crop/0/0/1/1"/><link rel="crop" title="16:9" type="x-im/crop" uri="im://crop/0/0.24333333333333335/1/0.75"/></links></link></links></object><element id="headline-d1f5ac9f52fc17b4da89004c9c7493da" type="headline">Blue Ridge Fire 90% contained after rapid start, fast firefighter response</element><element id="preamble-a5efff9f3af396a0b0f095f2284b9023" type="preamble">Homes were put on evacuation, pre-evacuation notice in Forest Lakes subdivision Friday</element><element id="paragraph-85b2d74d9253b4567ed3850bfc85b1ab" type="body">Only hours after the Blue Ridge Fire started on Friday afternoon, evacuation and pre-evacuation notices for 900 homes in the Forest Lakes subdivision were lifted as fire crews brought the blaze to 90% containment, according to a news release from La Plata County. </element><element id="paragraph-5d3827432bf198d180b13c9de1669007" type="body">The Blue Ridge Fire sprang to life at 1:49 p.m. Friday in the forest just to the east of the subdivision. Upper Pine Fire Protection District Deputy Chief Greg French said fire crews had a rapid response and were well-equipped to handle the blaze. As of Saturday morning, containment remained at 90% and investigators were on the scene to look into what caused the fire, he said. </element><object id="youtubeembed-5c3bf0743a53e67b330bc91309fef151" type="x-im/youtube" uri="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KyP5Vivv8S4" url="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KyP5Vivv8S4"><data><start>0</start></data><links><link rel="alternate" title="Click link to view content" type="text/html" url="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KyP5Vivv8S4"><data><context>Video</context><provider>YouTube</provider></data></link><link rel="alternate" type="image/jpg" url="https://i.ytimg.com/vi/KyP5Vivv8S4/hqdefault.jpg"><data><width>480</width><height>360</height></data></link></links></object><element id="paragraph-3a88e97538561d25e82d1f8d416cdf13" type="body">“We worked with our mutual aid partners – Forest Service, state and also air resources,” he said Saturday. “Currently, I think, (the fire is) at about 11 acres, and we’re working it again this morning with our mutual aid partners, mopping up and continuing to extinguish hot spots and just trying to get after it before the weather gets bad.”</element><object id="MTMzLDE0NywyOSwxOTA" type="x-im/image" uuid="bdb506cc-2fc6-531f-a78f-1a4a08f4420f"><links><link rel="self" type="x-im/image" uri="im://image/UUm9gzMgau3zMVYRQGV_RkD06Z4.jpg" uuid="bdb506cc-2fc6-531f-a78f-1a4a08f4420f"><data><width>1728</width><height>1296</height><imageInstructions/><text>Smoke from the Blue Ridge Fire is visible from Bayfield on Friday. (Jerry McBride/Durango Herald)</text><alttext/></data><links><link rel="crop" title="1:1" type="x-im/crop" uri="im://crop/0.12375/0/0.75/1"/><link rel="crop" title="4:3" type="x-im/crop" uri="im://crop/0/0/1/1"/><link rel="crop" title="16:9" type="x-im/crop" uri="im://crop/0/0.24333333333333335/1/0.75"/></links></link></links></object><element id="paragraph-d48a73e65b2c66ce545d40b354909092" type="body">According to French and a news release from La Plata County, crews were able to encircle the fire with dozer, hand and hose lines, preventing it from spreading further. Now, they are working to fully extinguish it.</element><element id="paragraph-ba1c7af332f3c02298f47e1d0532f565" type="body">French said the blaze started on private property in Unit Three of Forest Lakes, and the terrain and composition of the forest made fighting it difficult. </element><element id="paragraph-9681551d44a62f218e15b08d678a7fe5" type="body">“It was very difficult topography,” he said. “Heavily treed, lots of oak – yeah, it was pretty difficult.” </element><object id="ximimage-7bea804d9b699dd6462681d141711728" type="x-im/image" uuid="bdb506cc-2fc6-531f-a78f-1a4a08f4420f"><links><link rel="self" type="x-im/image" uri="im://image/UUm9gzMgau3zMVYRQGV_RkD06Z4.jpg" uuid="bdb506cc-2fc6-531f-a78f-1a4a08f4420f"><data><width>1728</width><height>1296</height><imageInstructions/><text>Smoke from the Blue Ridge Fire is visible from Bayfield on Friday. (Jerry McBride/Durango Herald)</text><alttext/></data><links><link rel="crop" title="1:1" type="x-im/crop" uri="im://crop/0.12375/0/0.75/1"/><link rel="crop" title="4:3" type="x-im/crop" uri="im://crop/0/0/1/1"/><link rel="crop" title="16:9" type="x-im/crop" uri="im://crop/0/0.24333333333333335/1/0.75"/></links></link></links></object><element id="paragraph-9a8dd761599912d0b03ad6315e4db49a" type="body">French said multiple mutual aid partners, as well as helicopters and air tankers, responded to the blaze and assisted Los Pinos in fighting the fire. Additionally, he said, the community response helped responders get in and out quickly, and adhered to evacuation notices.</element><element id="paragraph-ca34f72cf574359262412309b94d9ad8" type="body">“We’re very, very thankful and appreciative to our mutual aid partners in the area,” he said. “We really appreciate people paying attention to the evacuation notices and paying attention to directions from law enforcement and firefighters in the area, because it’s a challenging spot with so many homes. The community did a good job up there, too.” </element><element id="paragraph-50c311128c026116de97e89412d45af8" type="body">Stage 2 fire restrictions are in place as fire danger remains high and monsoons fail to appear. </element><element id="paragraph-d9b4491ac42d87c9f066083427bbe673" type="body">For more information about bans or for wildfire information, visit <a href="https://experience.arcgis.com/experience/9f33361d194a4af0811051b756b50238/" id="link-444937963dccc806f60e39d11e75557a" target="_blank">www.readylaplata.org</a>. </element><element id="paragraph-6c68e1633acc8eb61a17a71474e29f1d" type="body"><em id="emphasis-f1a7074d1bc9e201147f3e3bb722fbbc">sedmondson@durangoherald.com</em></element></group> </idf></div> </div> <div class="row"> <div class="frontpage-photo-video-headline col-xs-12 col-md-9"> <a href="https://www.the-journal.com/articles/blue-ridge-fire-90-contained-after-rapid-start-fast-firefighter-response/">Blue Ridge Fire 90% contained after rapid start, fast firefighter response</a> </div> <div class="frontpage-photo-video-socials col-xs-12 col-md-3"> <a href="http://www.facebook.com/sharer/sharer.php?u=https://www.the-journal.com/articles/blue-ridge-fire-90-contained-after-rapid-start-fast-firefighter-response/&title=Blue%20Ridge%20Fire%2090%25%20contained%20after%20rapid%20start%2C%20fast%20firefighter%20response" class="facebook-share" target="_blank"> <div class="icon-circle-border"> <i class="fa fa-facebook-square" aria-hidden="true"></i> </div> </a> <a href="http://twitter.com/intent/tweet?status=Blue%20Ridge%20Fire%2090%25%20contained%20after%20rapid%20start%2C%20fast%20firefighter%20response+https://www.the-journal.com/articles/blue-ridge-fire-90-contained-after-rapid-start-fast-firefighter-response/" class="twitter-share" target="_blank"> <div class="icon-circle-border"> <i class="fa fa-twitter" aria-hidden="true"></i> </div> </a> <a class="email-share" target="_blank"> <div class="icon-circle-border"> <i class="fa fa-envelope" aria-hidden="true"></i> </div> </a> </div> </div> <div class="frontpage-photo-video-text"> Homes were put on evacuation, pre-evacuation notice in Forest Lakes subdivision Friday </div> <div class="frontpage-photo-video-related"> </div></div> <div class="photo-video-slider-element col-12"> <div class="responsive-embed" data-uuid="40accc88-8ed5-4e29-94c7-1faba3490613"> <div class="image-container"> <a href="https://www.the-journal.com/articles/photos-la-plata-county-fair-in-full-swing-thursday/"> <img decoding="async" class="frontpage-photo-gallery-image" src="https://imengine.public.prod.dur.navigacloud.com/?uuid=95242788-ea83-5ba6-9591-027dbc3ef95d&function=thumbnail&type=preview&source=false&width=1920&height=1080"> </a> </div> <div class="d-none"><?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?><idf xmlns="http://www.infomaker.se/idf/1.0" dir="ltr" xml:lang="sv_SE"> <group type="body"><element id="headline-d1f5ac9f52fc17b4da89004c9c7493da" type="headline">Photos: La Plata County Fair in full swing Thursday</element><element id="paragraph-85b2d74d9253b4567ed3850bfc85b1ab" type="body"/><object id="NTQsMjM0LDkyLDE5MA" type="x-im/image" uuid="95242788-ea83-5ba6-9591-027dbc3ef95d"><links><link rel="self" type="x-im/image" uri="im://image/qeb4m-yE1LTpwDTHJfaw2VpPRVM.jpg" uuid="95242788-ea83-5ba6-9591-027dbc3ef95d"><data><width>2010</width><height>1895</height><imageInstructions/><text>Turkeys in their pen on Thursday at the La Plata County Fair at the fairgrounds. (Jerry McBride/Durango Herald)</text><alttext/></data><links><link rel="author" title="Jerry McBride" type="x-im/author" uuid="00000000-0000-0000-0000-000000000000"/></links></link></links></object><object id="MTI5LDE5Myw3MywxMzU" type="x-im/image" uuid="7d8434f7-0f1a-579c-bc3d-d132736e60c6"><links><link rel="self" type="x-im/image" uri="im://image/GlxKJphasj8mgAsZOWS52ycWjP4.jpg" uuid="7d8434f7-0f1a-579c-bc3d-d132736e60c6"><data><width>3000</width><height>2041</height><imageInstructions/><text>Judy Case, right, from Pueblo, judges quilts on Thursday at the La Plata County Fair in the Exhibit Hall at the fairgrounds. (Jerry McBride/Durango Herald)</text><alttext/></data><links><link rel="author" title="Jerry McBride" type="x-im/author" uuid="00000000-0000-0000-0000-000000000000"/></links></link></links></object><object id="MTY1LDE3OCwxOTQsMjQ0" type="x-im/image" uuid="57edfbc3-fb79-53f4-9fcd-95ae48d9fd24"><links><link rel="self" type="x-im/image" uri="im://image/ChHaDDmv9kNdllx22rgbd7aWJWs.jpg" uuid="57edfbc3-fb79-53f4-9fcd-95ae48d9fd24"><data><width>1500</width><height>1319</height><imageInstructions/><text>Crochet bike wheels on Thursday at the La Plata County Fair in the Exhibit Hall at the fairgrounds. (Jerry McBride/Durango Herald)</text><alttext/></data><links><link rel="author" title="Jerry McBride" type="x-im/author" uuid="00000000-0000-0000-0000-000000000000"/></links></link></links></object><object id="NiwxODksMTk5LDgw" type="x-im/image" uuid="82c687e4-f599-5090-b78e-73d607ccaab5"><links><link rel="self" type="x-im/image" uri="im://image/afKQ4541eiODZzfnx_ZYUwPq6Go.jpg" uuid="82c687e4-f599-5090-b78e-73d607ccaab5"><data><width>3000</width><height>1938</height><imageInstructions/><text>Goats get groomed on Thursday at the La Plata County Fair. (Jerry McBride/Durango Herald)</text><alttext/></data><links><link rel="author" title="Jerry McBride" type="x-im/author" uuid="00000000-0000-0000-0000-000000000000"/></links></link></links></object><object id="NzUsNCwyNDAsNjU" type="x-im/image" uuid="3544349f-53f2-59b7-a218-eef09b75723c"><links><link rel="self" type="x-im/image" uri="im://image/gwCpd1YK0BsPzsximc9lz_ysc64.jpg" uuid="3544349f-53f2-59b7-a218-eef09b75723c"><data><width>3000</width><height>2056</height><imageInstructions/><text>Mackenzie Swanemyr, 16, blow-dries Pope an Angus steer that the she will show in the market steers class on Friday at the La Plata County Fair. (Jerry McBride/Durango Herald)</text><alttext/></data><links><link rel="author" title="Jerry McBride" type="x-im/author" uuid="00000000-0000-0000-0000-000000000000"/></links></link></links></object><object id="MjQ5LDI0NCwyMzksMjM1" type="x-im/image" uuid="b7af88ab-8042-5b6b-96d1-0d4d951e496b"><links><link rel="self" type="x-im/image" uri="im://image/Ukc8CZSA1AlMY52AHhfJXu8AwTc.jpg" uuid="b7af88ab-8042-5b6b-96d1-0d4d951e496b"><data><width>3000</width><height>1968</height><imageInstructions/><text>Cathy Seibel, superintendent of preserved food and beer and wine, arranges dried herbs after judging on Thursday at the La Plata County Fair in the Exhibit Hall at the fairgrounds. (Jerry McBride/Durango Herald)</text><alttext/></data><links><link rel="author" title="Jerry McBride" type="x-im/author" uuid="00000000-0000-0000-0000-000000000000"/></links></link></links></object><object id="ODIsMTgwLDYxLDE4NQ" type="x-im/image" uuid="57edfbc3-fb79-53f4-9fcd-95ae48d9fd24"><links><link rel="self" type="x-im/image" uri="im://image/ChHaDDmv9kNdllx22rgbd7aWJWs.jpg" uuid="57edfbc3-fb79-53f4-9fcd-95ae48d9fd24"><data><width>1500</width><height>1319</height><imageInstructions/><text>Crochet bike wheels on Thursday at the La Plata County Fair in the Exhibit Hall at the fairgrounds. (Jerry McBride/Durango Herald)</text><alttext/></data><links><link rel="author" title="Jerry McBride" type="x-im/author" uuid="00000000-0000-0000-0000-000000000000"/></links></link></links></object><object id="NDksMjQsMjIyLDY1" type="x-im/image" uuid="c8afa6d0-d0ba-5aaf-8777-3b0a2c3c6e90"><links><link rel="self" type="x-im/image" uri="im://image/mkKPnO9q5Irbp5gAStEKFPqga2o.jpg" uuid="c8afa6d0-d0ba-5aaf-8777-3b0a2c3c6e90"><data><width>3000</width><height>2000</height><imageInstructions/><text>Dandelion jelly is awarded the reserve champion ribbon on Thursday at the La Plata County Fair in the Exhibit Hall at the fairgrounds. (Jerry McBride/Durango Herald)</text><alttext/></data><links><link rel="author" title="Jerry McBride" type="x-im/author" uuid="00000000-0000-0000-0000-000000000000"/></links></link></links></object><object id="NzcsMTQ2LDIxNCwxNjk" type="x-im/image" uuid="dcfbcda6-aa35-5baa-a9cd-faf181d571cc"><links><link rel="self" type="x-im/image" uri="im://image/3EU_iefgP0utLXaCUQZVpp9QAEs.jpg" uuid="dcfbcda6-aa35-5baa-a9cd-faf181d571cc"><data><width>1500</width><height>1606</height><imageInstructions/><text>A beaded cat with ribbons on Thursday at the La Plata County Fair in the Exhibit Hall at the fairgrounds. (Jerry McBride/Durango Herald)</text><alttext/></data><links><link rel="author" title="Jerry McBride" type="x-im/author" uuid="00000000-0000-0000-0000-000000000000"/></links></link></links></object><object id="NywyNDMsMjEzLDYy" type="x-im/image" uuid="4c9545d5-5f47-53c3-82b6-3625c24c4896"><links><link rel="self" type="x-im/image" uri="im://image/eSD71zp4g6cr8KesyvSuj7gOJuI.jpg" uuid="4c9545d5-5f47-53c3-82b6-3625c24c4896"><data><width>3000</width><height>2000</height><imageInstructions/><text>Contestants with their chickens on Thursday wait to go in front of a judge at the La Plata County Fair at the fairgrounds. (Jerry McBride/Durango Herald)</text><alttext/></data><links><link rel="author" title="Jerry McBride" type="x-im/author" uuid="00000000-0000-0000-0000-000000000000"/></links></link></links></object><object id="NCw4MSw5MywxODQ" type="x-im/image" uuid="1bb13635-7d78-59b2-9268-60153b586acc"><links><link rel="self" type="x-im/image" uri="im://image/rrF_opWom60pGT-A283ANK54l_4.jpg" uuid="1bb13635-7d78-59b2-9268-60153b586acc"><data><width>3000</width><height>2159</height><imageInstructions/><text>Everly Van Houten, 11, shows her barnyard mix chicken to judge Lacy Greer, from St. Johns, Ariz., while competing in the showmanship class on Thursday at the La Plata County Fair at the fairgrounds. (Jerry McBride/Durango Herald)</text><alttext/></data><links><link rel="author" title="Jerry McBride" type="x-im/author" uuid="00000000-0000-0000-0000-000000000000"/></links></link></links></object><object id="MTIyLDE4NiwyMDgsMjI3" type="x-im/image" uuid="c6dcdd2d-c9f9-569d-adf7-8b4c2648efad"><links><link rel="self" type="x-im/image" uri="im://image/3cYBV-3TQroZ4hB0vwl3J-vis_8.jpg" uuid="c6dcdd2d-c9f9-569d-adf7-8b4c2648efad"><data><width>3000</width><height>2231</height><imageInstructions/><text>Jerrin Roukema is all smiles after her photo “The Buck Stops Here” won a second place ribbon in the humor photography class on Thursday at the La Plata County Fair in the Exhibit Hall at the fairgrounds. (Jerry McBride/Durango Herald)</text><alttext/></data><links><link rel="author" title="Jerry McBride" type="x-im/author" uuid="00000000-0000-0000-0000-000000000000"/></links></link></links></object><object id="MTIsNzIsMTk0LDIzOQ" type="x-im/image" uuid="4ef147b8-8420-5f60-ac39-efca6469af4e"><links><link rel="self" type="x-im/image" uri="im://image/VX43G1ghghSMFYEGUm5qzMnlkBA.jpg" uuid="4ef147b8-8420-5f60-ac39-efca6469af4e"><data><width>3000</width><height>2067</height><imageInstructions/><text>Contestants with their chickens on Thursday wait to go in front of a judge at the La Plata County Fair at the fairgrounds. (Jerry McBride/Durango Herald)</text><alttext/></data><links><link rel="author" title="Jerry McBride" type="x-im/author" uuid="00000000-0000-0000-0000-000000000000"/></links></link></links></object><object id="MTE2LDEzNSwyMjMsODA" type="x-im/image" uuid="40884fa8-9fcc-55e1-9b38-33e23836bda9"><links><link rel="self" type="x-im/image" uri="im://image/5uYHV41VkxTQsw1EIMMt9e_QIHc.jpg" uuid="40884fa8-9fcc-55e1-9b38-33e23836bda9"><data><width>3000</width><height>2087</height><imageInstructions/><text>Strawberry jalapeño jam received a grand champion ribbon on Thursday at the La Plata County Fair in the Exhibit Hall at the fairgrounds. (Jerry McBride/Durango Herald)</text><alttext/></data><links><link rel="author" title="Jerry McBride" type="x-im/author" uuid="00000000-0000-0000-0000-000000000000"/></links></link></links></object><object id="MjksODgsMTU1LDIzOQ" type="x-im/image" uuid="4a530fba-6c50-5cd1-9671-a8e1c0fb1c87"><links><link rel="self" type="x-im/image" uri="im://image/9W3xywF52OGqyMQlEEOh-etjoQk.jpg" uuid="4a530fba-6c50-5cd1-9671-a8e1c0fb1c87"><data><width>1500</width><height>2241</height><imageInstructions/><text>Glass work with ribbons on Thursday at the La Plata County Fair in the Exhibit Hall at the fairgrounds. (Jerry McBride/Durango Herald)</text><alttext/></data><links><link rel="author" title="Jerry McBride" type="x-im/author" uuid="00000000-0000-0000-0000-000000000000"/></links></link></links></object><object id="OTQsODMsMjgsMTI" type="x-im/image" uuid="7b70e9f6-9ca5-5d62-8e98-a9dc66ceddcb"><links><link rel="self" type="x-im/image" uri="im://image/3V5ROEthayPbaPFKv_1t4aK-FA0.jpg" uuid="7b70e9f6-9ca5-5d62-8e98-a9dc66ceddcb"><data><width>975</width><height>697</height><imageInstructions/><text>A clay monster on Thursday at the La Plata County Fair in the Exhibit Hall at the fairgrounds. (Jerry McBride/Durango Herald)</text><alttext/></data><links><link rel="author" title="Jerry McBride" type="x-im/author" uuid="00000000-0000-0000-0000-000000000000"/></links></link></links></object></group> </idf></div> </div> <div class="row"> <div class="frontpage-photo-video-headline col-xs-12 col-md-9"> <a href="https://www.the-journal.com/articles/photos-la-plata-county-fair-in-full-swing-thursday/">Photos: La Plata County Fair in full swing Thursday</a> </div> <div class="frontpage-photo-video-socials col-xs-12 col-md-3"> <a href="http://www.facebook.com/sharer/sharer.php?u=https://www.the-journal.com/articles/photos-la-plata-county-fair-in-full-swing-thursday/&title=Photos%3A%20La%20Plata%20County%20Fair%20in%20full%20swing%20Thursday" class="facebook-share" target="_blank"> <div class="icon-circle-border"> <i class="fa fa-facebook-square" aria-hidden="true"></i> </div> </a> <a href="http://twitter.com/intent/tweet?status=Photos%3A%20La%20Plata%20County%20Fair%20in%20full%20swing%20Thursday+https://www.the-journal.com/articles/photos-la-plata-county-fair-in-full-swing-thursday/" class="twitter-share" target="_blank"> <div class="icon-circle-border"> <i class="fa fa-twitter" aria-hidden="true"></i> </div> </a> <a class="email-share" target="_blank"> <div class="icon-circle-border"> <i class="fa fa-envelope" aria-hidden="true"></i> </div> </a> </div> </div> <div class="frontpage-photo-video-text"> </div> <div class="frontpage-photo-video-related"> </div></div> <div class="photo-video-slider-element col-12"> <div class="responsive-embed" data-uuid="1f325c5a-3e08-41ee-bb5f-78bda0587c33"> <div class="image-container"> <a href="https://www.the-journal.com/articles/10-years-after-gold-king-mine-spill-locals-reflect-on-need-for-patience/"> <!-- Using first_image crop --> <!-- width:3000, height: 2000--> <!-- 16:9 first_image crop --> <img decoding="async" class="frontpage-photo-gallery-image" src="https://imengine.public.prod.dur.navigacloud.com?uuid=98c87a1c-514e-5efc-ac01-1b8e251fbd63&function=cropresize&type=preview&source=false&q=75&crop_w=0.99999&crop_h=0.84428&width=2000&height=1125&x=1.0E-5&y=0.05629"> </a> </div> <div class="d-none"><?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?><idf xmlns="http://www.infomaker.se/idf/1.0" dir="ltr" xml:lang="sv_SE"> <group type="body"><element id="headline-d1f5ac9f52fc17b4da89004c9c7493da" type="headline">10 years after Gold King Mine Spill, locals reflect on need for patience </element><element id="MTQ2LDEzMiwxNjIsMTYx" type="preamble">EPA cleanup efforts continue at Bonita Peak Superfund site; some wonder if there's been progress</element><object id="MTU1LDE5NCwzOCwyNDQ" type="x-im/image" uuid="98c87a1c-514e-5efc-ac01-1b8e251fbd63"><links><link rel="self" type="x-im/image" uri="im://image/AUo_x7B4E4BjoTj-TPg7XM_S7Ls.jpg" uuid="98c87a1c-514e-5efc-ac01-1b8e251fbd63"><data><width>3000</width><height>2000</height><imageInstructions/><text>Ty Churchwell, mining coordinator for Trout Unlimited and secretary for the Community Advisory Fund, talks Wednesday about how the Gold King treatment plant was built in a couple of months and up and running after the Gold King Mine spill in 2015 about 8 miles north of Silverton. (Jerry McBride/Durango Herald)</text><alttext/></data><links><link rel="crop" title="1:1" type="x-im/crop" uri="im://crop/0.06125/0/0.66625/1"/><link rel="crop" title="4:3" type="x-im/crop" uri="im://crop/0.05625/0/0.88875/1"/><link rel="crop" title="16:9" type="x-im/crop" uri="im://crop/0/0.05628517823639775/1/0.8442776735459663"/><link rel="author" title="Jerry McBride" type="x-im/author" uuid="00000000-0000-0000-0000-000000000000"/></links></link></links></object><element id="paragraph-06916a1690a97412e79efa7ad912b870" type="body">SILVERTON – The streets of Silverton buzz with summer tourists in late July. Passengers disembark from the Durango & Silverton Narrow Gauge Railroad, duck into gift shops, sip beers at saloons and snap photos of the jagged peaks that surround the historic mining town.</element><element id="paragraph-ff57bcfcf3a1d68175dac6139206290d" type="body">Few are thinking about the Gold King Mine spill, even as its 10-year anniversary approaches.</element><element id="paragraph-6b4831eb14cdf29377c89cca35feb1b2" type="body">Even locals living near the Bonita Peak Mining District Superfund site – created in the wake of the 2015 disaster – rarely dwell on it.</element><element id="paragraph-fcac80ce84f94e854e7104ca800deb1b" type="body"><ins collapsed="true" creationdate="2025-08-01T08:39:50" id="inlinenote-2c2449e242444aaab20504481f2ed0c0" modificationdate="2025-08-01T08:39:50" username="jbowman@durangoherald.com">This quiet normalcy is, in some ways, a sign of success.</ins></element><element id="MjQ5LDE1MywxMzMsMzA" type="subheadline1">Invisible no longer </element><element id="paragraph-3e78ed459f86392ca91bff13ffd04987" type="body">On Aug. 5, 2015, Environmental Protection Agency contractors breached a collapsed mine entrance at the Gold King Mine. </element><element id="paragraph-bf17e7d56bb5043ba013c9445aed05e8" type="body">About 3 million gallons of acidic mine drainage laced with heavy metals poured into Cement Creek, sending a plume of orange water down the Animas and San Juan rivers before settling in Lake Powell over a week later. </element><object id="MTQ4LDIwMSwxMzUsNTc" type="x-im/image" uuid="5e06aebc-ed37-5bb8-8f28-41f62a93ae3d"><links><link rel="self" type="x-im/image" uri="im://image/cWmYkYjnzrVf06pK_qDLkuJTt5w.jpg" uuid="5e06aebc-ed37-5bb8-8f28-41f62a93ae3d"><data><width>3000</width><height>2000</height><imageInstructions/><text>Water from the Gold King spill runs near Bakers Bridge on Aug. 6, 2015. (Jerry McBride/Durango Herald file)</text><alttext/></data><links><link rel="author" title="Jerry McBride" type="x-im/author" uuid="00000000-0000-0000-0000-000000000000"/></links></link></links></object><element id="paragraph-9f250b2235797af3725376eabf46fa60" type="body">Images of the Animas River colored a toxic, synthetic-looking shade of orange-rust made international headlines and drew the globe’s attention to Silverton and the legacy of environmental contamination left by the mining boom in the West. </element><element id="paragraph-bae635867429d133fff3af29ef5bd68f" type="body">“It was a literal tsunami of not only national, but international press,” said DeAnne Gallegos, spokesperson for San Juan County, Colorado.</element><element id="paragraph-09db509bc43562f586131225fb21dbd7" type="body">In days following, it was confirmed that the actual environmental damage was minor. No fish died and the water quality retained no long-term effects. </element><element id="paragraph-4d9e52d63b06e6b111aa39d8509dea84" type="body">“It was more of a visual emergency than it was a real environmental disaster,” said Ty Churchwell, mining coordinator for Trout Unlimited and secretary for the Community Advisory Fund. </element><object id="MTIyLDkyLDQ4LDQ3" type="x-im/image" uuid="b27de59c-709b-5d6a-aff4-edb66fa8e654"><links><link rel="self" type="x-im/image" uri="im://image/ZZUsu-uiATVEaxFsom4jD7oue7o.jpg" uuid="b27de59c-709b-5d6a-aff4-edb66fa8e654"><data><width>3000</width><height>1942</height><imageInstructions/><text>Water from the Gold King Mine flows into settling ponds on Wednesday before entering the Gold King treatment plant, which is about 8 miles north of Silverton. (Jerry McBride/Durango Herald)</text><alttext/></data><links><link rel="author" title="Jerry McBride" type="x-im/author" uuid="00000000-0000-0000-0000-000000000000"/></links></link></links></object><element id="paragraph-1ec82c4bf469a67cbb60ac9a1f77f839" type="body">The spill, he and others said, brought long-overdue attention to an invisible crisis: the legacy pollution from hundreds of abandoned and inactive mines discharging heavy metals into the watershed year-round.</element><element id="paragraph-b6bf44f9cb9d3f80b45f34e85123dd12" type="body">“It wasn’t a fish killer, but yes, people were impacted,” Churchwell said. “Businesses shut down. Tourism slowed. Tribes were hurt.”</element><element id="NzYsMTQ5LDE0MywxMDc" type="subheadline1">A catalyst for cleanup </element><element id="paragraph-628894a202d792058b52723bda45f27b" type="body">The immediate response was marked by uncertainty and concern – not only for the environment, but for the community’s reputation and economy, said Anthony Edwards, Silverton’s representative on the Community Advisory Group.</element><element id="paragraph-2c62ff15d1c8ab5ab9e046240e160336" type="body">In the months following, Silverton’s leaders wrestled with whether to accept a Superfund designation, a term considered to be politically fraught in the tourism-dependent town.</element><element id="paragraph-ab467bd1884658c5cf831396c8fec4e5" type="body"><ins collapsed="false" creationdate="2025-08-01T11:53:03" id="inlinenote-4229936f7c295abe1eb204674291426b" modificationdate="2025-08-01T11:53:03" username="jbowman@durangoherald.com">[superfund explanation] </ins></element><element id="paragraph-2d9562c9d2b817bc6a31280ea073117b" type="body">The spill pushed the region’s move toward the unanimous acceptance of the Bonita Peak Mining District Superfund site designation a year later. </element><element id="paragraph-a80d1030e2f6dd1ce5d4e87c69d15409" type="body">Many residents worried that a Superfund designation would bring disruption, recalling the experience of other mining towns where extensive cleanup efforts had upended daily life and threatened tourism.</element><element id="paragraph-40f15fd6d8ada4a60a1b1aebc85f9c38" type="body">Still, the community took proactive steps to educate itself and advocate for its interests, which proved a turning point.</element><element id="paragraph-5157cb9275d86dbee7e2d2bee614267e" type="body">Local leaders studied the experiences of other Superfund towns, distributed books about environmental cleanups, and sent a detailed letter to state and federal officials outlining their concerns and recommendations, Edwards said. </element><element id="paragraph-dadb7c80eba845bac8a621f8bbd66d26" type="body">That collaborative approach helped shape how the Superfund designation was implemented in Silverton: The cleanup efforts were kept outside town limits to minimize the potential negative effects. </element><element id="paragraph-a3125c53c1d02219d83dbc0a11c911fc" type="body">It’s been one of biggest successes in the years after the spill, said former Mayor Molly Barela. Silverton is not directly associated with the Superfund site or the presence of toxic pollutants. </element><object id="MjI1LDQ1LDYyLDIxOQ" type="x-im/image" uuid="ded0aaab-4804-5b03-85b4-b67c03e902a9"><links><link rel="self" type="x-im/image" uri="im://image/3ABmZD-Hy-Z2IgK0T4LYYIDGRjs.jpg" uuid="ded0aaab-4804-5b03-85b4-b67c03e902a9"><data><width>3000</width><height>2250</height><imageInstructions/><text>Molly Barela, former Silverton mayor and business owner, talks Wednesday about the Gold King Mine spill 10 years later. (Jerry McBride/Durango Herald)</text><alttext/></data><links><link rel="author" title="Jerry McBride" type="x-im/author" uuid="00000000-0000-0000-0000-000000000000"/></links></link></links></object><element id="paragraph-74abe15987ee6371a895a8a9d803d88f" type="body">Several business owners said the memory of the spill is no longer on visitors’ minds. All agreed it’s rare for a customer to bring it up.</element><element id="paragraph-db1600290bd677391d9309d79993b0e5" type="body"><ins collapsed="false" creationdate="2025-08-01T12:55:36" id="inlinenote-24ac5a77e0fe5b0a2e06d04f34ba3595" modificationdate="2025-08-01T12:55:36" username="katie@durangoherald.com">According to DeAnne </ins>Gallegos said<ins collapsed="false" creationdate="2025-08-01T12:55:45" id="inlinenote-7a554861183e343dbe950f7aa5d63598" modificationdate="2025-08-01T12:55:45" username="katie@durangoherald.com"> spokesperson for San Juan County,</ins> those successes are credited to the community’s advocacy.</element><element id="paragraph-a83f9b5d29ffb62c819d709adf80fdd3" type="body">“It was kind of a dance of just trying to figure this out,” she said. “And I’ve always said, once you sign up for a Superfund with a community, you are in a decades-long arranged marriage with a federal agency.”</element><element id="paragraph-0ef3ea4aa00bdffa8475905a85185a90" type="body">And despite early fears, the tourism industry did not experience the expected decline after the Superfund designation.</element><element id="paragraph-ffdd0464ab47bf753d6ec9d9ecc2e20b" type="body">“In some ways, it’s helped us,” said Scott Fetchenhier, San Juan County commissioner and Silverton business owner. “We have EPA people staying in town. They’re eating in the restaurants, buying liquor at the liquor store and stuff like that.”</element><element id="paragraph-79ed21c02013e024c23fb7b209029f7b" type="body">Since the designation, the EPA has completed surface water and soil sampling, built a water treatment plant below the Gold King Mine and prioritized about a dozen sites for early cleanup actions. </element><object id="NzIsMTY0LDIxNCwyMzk" type="x-im/image" uuid="03f3e68a-a549-5f12-94e6-a22d872394e7"><links><link rel="self" type="x-im/image" uri="im://image/fJuqICOhiIj82GbsdZA3H6xAJNQ.jpg" uuid="03f3e68a-a549-5f12-94e6-a22d872394e7"><data><width>3000</width><height>2048</height><imageInstructions/><text>San Juan County Commissioner and business owner Scott Fetchenhier talks Wednesday about the Gold King Mine spill. (Jerry McBride/Durango Herald)</text><alttext/></data><links><link rel="author" title="Jerry McBride" type="x-im/author" uuid="00000000-0000-0000-0000-000000000000"/></links></link></links></object><element id="paragraph-732743a7c9277dfdd12ec65909ecb911" type="body">Major stabilization work has been completed at the Red and Bonita Mine, and more than 80 waste piles have been assessed.</element><element id="paragraph-29081409547bdffe6b3554e3c23f7cc9" type="body">In recent years, the agency entered the remedial investigation phase – a comprehensive study to guide long-term cleanup decisions. Mitigation work has been completed or is nearly done at 21 of the 48 identified mine sites, according to the EPA’s five-year review.</element><element id="paragraph-63b9621a5fd6efa6502be240a8cd4248" type="body">“They either redirected water around mine tailings or somehow made those sites less toxic to the environment,” said Chara Ragland, chairwoman of the <a href="https://www.bonitapeakcag.org/cag-members/" id="link-dc971bb4bedd4b5bb9b31e2fa0902376" target="_blank">Community Advisory Group</a>.</element><element id="paragraph-215216aa961541d0bfe9151564e07776" type="body">The EPA also constructed a waste repository, which is now nearing completion after delays caused by a lapsed contractor agreement.</element><object id="MTk1LDEwMSw1MywxMjY" type="x-im/image" uuid="07d0fc99-e616-53d2-8542-d60b0880c27b"><links><link rel="self" type="x-im/image" uri="im://image/nqitjyk1CnRmGU11ftwYyejButw.jpg" uuid="07d0fc99-e616-53d2-8542-d60b0880c27b"><data><width>3000</width><height>1938</height><imageInstructions/><text>The waste repository that the Environmental Protection Agency constructed northeast of Silverton to handle the sludge left over from treating the water flowing out of the Gold King Mine is seen Wednesday. (Jerry McBride/Durango Herald)</text><alttext/></data><links><link rel="author" title="Jerry McBride" type="x-im/author" uuid="00000000-0000-0000-0000-000000000000"/></links></link></links></object><object id="MjQzLDIwLDIwLDIwNw" type="x-im/image" uuid="f40e9882-06cc-5682-b337-13b950195115"><links><link rel="self" type="x-im/image" uri="im://image/xz5-Zrm8beK5UApB_BZPuNkzyO8.jpg" uuid="f40e9882-06cc-5682-b337-13b950195115"><data><width>3000</width><height>1879</height><imageInstructions/><text>Sludge, a byproduct of the Gold King Mine treatment plant, dries out on Wednesday at the plant about 8 miles north of Silverton. (Jerry McBride/Durango Herald)</text><alttext/></data><links><link rel="author" title="Jerry McBride" type="x-im/author" uuid="00000000-0000-0000-0000-000000000000"/></links></link></links></object><element id="paragraph-0b922be45d7eeca1d7818f69ca399419" type="body">The Gold King Mine remains the only site where contaminated water is actively treated. The water treatment plant, at the base of Bonita Peak near the American Tunnel, was built just months after the spill. It extracts metals such as lead and arsenic from the water and turns them into a solid sludge.</element><element id="paragraph-cc77122e6b92c8630e1f9a21b455b3e0" type="body">The treated versions of these metals are completely safe, Churchwell said. So safe that they could be disposed of at the Bondad Landfill if it weren’t so costly to transport.</element><element id="MTQyLDM5LDE3MiwyMDA" type="subheadline1">A long road and lingering criticisms</element><element id="paragraph-418fdfc0e1bec9466b2cc6629de36ce4" type="body">Despite nearly $140 million spent, some locals question the pace and impact of the cleanup.</element><element id="paragraph-348f569d709781890f20d7001da4803e" type="body">“In 10 years, what have they done? They’ve moved a lot of dirt,” Barela said.</element><element id="paragraph-a75a0964431419ddf93c170b81a2ccc0" type="body">She and others pointed to the success of the now-defunct Animas River Stakeholders Group, a coalition of regional citizens and agencies that had made steady progress cleaning the watershed before the Superfund site was established.</element><object id="youtubeembed-b3e6b2f84131e816637a9af152f28658" type="x-im/youtube" uri="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dHsxexCtVPA" url="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dHsxexCtVPA"><data><start>0</start></data><links><link rel="alternate" title="Click link to view content" type="text/html" url="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dHsxexCtVPA"><data><context>Video</context><provider>YouTube</provider></data></link><link rel="alternate" type="image/jpg" url="https://i.ytimg.com/vi/dHsxexCtVPA/hqdefault.jpg"><data><width>480</width><height>360</height></data></link></links></object><element id="paragraph-1291b8ded05a3c0c3e206b0927f189ee" type="body">“That was everyone in the Four Corners – including the Southern Ute Tribe, Silverton and Durango – coming together,” Gallegos said.</element><element id="paragraph-7fcc50c1e97f13092c97dbacc678e1c0" type="body">The Stakeholders Group dissolved after the Superfund designation and was restructured into the Community Advisory Group, the community’s main point of contact with the EPA.</element><element id="paragraph-0b2017133a1571e4c3e55ad603845a04" type="body">For some, the scope of the Superfund site feels too broad.</element><element id="paragraph-810ed98e44b8a1fb08b84c0c7bb74592" type="body">Of the 48 sites included in the Bonita Peak Mining District, just four – the Gold King, Red and Bonita, American Tunnel, and Mogul Mines – account for the majority of metal pollution, and only the Gold King is currently treated.</element><element id="paragraph-23a1c42e490090fbeb15f2771630b870" type="body"><ins collapsed="false" creationdate="2025-08-01T12:59:43" id="inlinenote-e0a3c463fe2cf4dc3b91ba7b7c5ab1ad" modificationdate="2025-08-01T12:59:43" username="katie@durangoherald.com">San Juan County Commissioner and business owner Scott</ins> Fetchenhier said his original belief – that the Superfund should have focused solely on the most polluting mines – has only been reinforced.</element><element id="MTMzLDUwLDIwNSwyMg" type="subheadline1">The limits of the system</element><element id="MzAsNzAsMjA1LDE3MQ" type="body">Churchwell and others say progress has been slow largely because of the limitations of the Superfund framework itself.</element><element id="paragraph-54eb288bb7be7a1c6621cca628a562d9" type="body">“It’s the only legal mechanism by which we can clean up abandoned mines like this,” he said. “Whether we like it or not, that’s the tool. Without it, we’d just be nibbling at the edges.”</element><element id="paragraph-e33292249bcfa4cdbafcf6b5080cc886" type="body">Last year, the Good Samaritan Remediation of Abandoned Hardrock Mines Act of 2024 – aimed at addressing pollution from smaller mines not covered under the Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation, and Liability Act – was signed into law.</element><element id="paragraph-e94c6483d30331b2a7b31441c9308d5c" type="body">Originally introduced in 1999, the legislation allows eligible parties, or “Good Samaritans,” to obtain remediation permits for abandoned mines where no responsible party remains to be held accountable for the cleanup.</element><element id="paragraph-3654b29a9dd83a0e7ddc1b57e17288ad" type="body">Previously, any entity that attempted to clean up historic mines with ongoing acid or heavy metal drainage assumed full legal liability for the pollution. The Act provides liability protections to such entities to encourage remediation efforts at these neglected sites.</element><element id="paragraph-19b341e6c366ecb0f6ef1f07e1be1630" type="body">Churchwell credited the final passage of the Act to the attention the 2015 Gold King Mine spill brought to the issue of hard rock mine contamination and the limited legal tools available to address it.</element><object id="youtubeembed-d157f8b76046dc17844a721de239afc0" type="x-im/youtube" uri="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sQNqCS8frEE" url="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sQNqCS8frEE"><data><start>0</start></data><links><link rel="alternate" title="Click link to view content" type="text/html" url="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sQNqCS8frEE"><data><context>Video</context><provider>YouTube</provider></data></link><link rel="alternate" type="image/jpg" url="https://i.ytimg.com/vi/sQNqCS8frEE/hqdefault.jpg"><data><width>480</width><height>360</height></data></link></links></object><element id="paragraph-ba9c04f71ecf3d88cc1bc9b2e4bdc7b4" type="body">While the law offers an important alternative mechanism for mine cleanup, Churchwell said it only complements the work being done under the Bonita Peak Superfund designation. </element><element id="paragraph-a9647b830e02ed6bbb61b35475010b88" type="body">Mine sites already included in a Superfund are not eligible for Good Samaritan permits.</element><element id="paragraph-297b9cb0863d0c5699790b5e7e7ee0c5" type="body">But that is still not nearly enough, Edwards said. </element><element id="paragraph-db2a753992f0f495d949a950083e9b47" type="body">“The Superfund program, as currently designed, isn’t always a good fit for Western mining districts with complex land ownership and environmental issues,” he said. “We need a better way to clean our watersheds without imposing unnecessary burdens on local communities.”</element><element id="paragraph-19cca716de89ff4c4234c0b58760b314" type="body">There’s bipartisan support for addressing the legacy of mining in the West, he said. But small towns like Silverton often lack the population, and subsequent political power to drive timely change.</element><element id="paragraph-936d121f1fba3f9c4bfd59508954ab68" type="body">Meanwhile, concerns about the stability of the program are mounting. Several CAG members cited federal workforce reductions and political uncertainty as major threats to continued progress.</element><element id="paragraph-e130ce43fcce337466207258f8fa59ae" type="body">“They were supposed to have the repository finished at the beginning of this summer,” Ragland said. “That didn’t happen because they couldn’t get a contract signed.”</element><object id="MTAxLDIwLDQ1LDE3NA" type="x-im/image" uuid="b27de59c-709b-5d6a-aff4-edb66fa8e654"><links><link rel="self" type="x-im/image" uri="im://image/ZZUsu-uiATVEaxFsom4jD7oue7o.jpg" uuid="b27de59c-709b-5d6a-aff4-edb66fa8e654"><data><width>3000</width><height>1942</height><imageInstructions/><text>Water from the Gold King Mine flows into settling ponds on Wednesday before entering the Gold King treatment plant that is about 8 miles north of Silverton. (Jerry McBride/Durango Herald)</text><alttext/></data><links><link rel="author" title="Jerry McBride" type="x-im/author" uuid="00000000-0000-0000-0000-000000000000"/></links></link></links></object><element id="MjA0LDE5MSwxMDcsMTMy" type="subheadline1">Looking ahead: A decade of patience</element><element id="paragraph-3a3932a55e14bc380b7fdfc4c9ee2fa2" type="body">Still, there are signs of improvement. Fish have returned to stretches of Mineral Creek where none lived before.</element><element id="paragraph-21fd8123f0f73e6fe5d10999918b71d4" type="body">“This is a long-term project for a lot of us,” Ragland said. “The idea that the EPA should have swooped in and fixed everything in 10 years is unrealistic.”</element><element id="paragraph-90d0ed26b2027cb3a8af7e4bde797ec1" type="body">Fetchenhier put it more bluntly: “The federal government ain’t gonna get anything done quickly.”</element><element id="paragraph-a297152d2241db4da3dc52429e724ee3" type="body">Even so, many in Silverton remain committed to the process, however imperfect.</element><element id="paragraph-2902067e23ad76e36ba06cae453ffdd1" type="body">“If you could sum up the last 10 years in one word,” Fetchenhier said, “it’d be ‘patience.’”</element><element id="paragraph-716f2c856495b1a60bea270281b10b8e" type="body"><em id="emphasis-da5a8247fd52fa20fe794d993bed3ed8">jbowman@durangoherald.com</em></element><object 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url="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DBekGi1wCqQ"><data><context>Video</context><provider>YouTube</provider></data></link><link rel="alternate" type="image/jpg" url="https://i.ytimg.com/vi/DBekGi1wCqQ/hqdefault.jpg"><data><width>480</width><height>360</height></data></link></links></object><object id="youtubeembed-e0942949b52025ac57090ebc0a8c8411" type="x-im/youtube" uri="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zkRzG73vF_k" url="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zkRzG73vF_k"><data><start>0</start></data><links><link rel="alternate" title="Click link to view content" type="text/html" url="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zkRzG73vF_k"><data><context>Video</context><provider>YouTube</provider></data></link><link rel="alternate" type="image/jpg" url="https://i.ytimg.com/vi/zkRzG73vF_k/hqdefault.jpg"><data><width>480</width><height>360</height></data></link></links></object><object id="youtubeembed-b284f2872d5465ab90d02a9768f982be" type="x-im/youtube" uri="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aS0CXVOHjlQ" 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url="https://i.ytimg.com/vi/34qTjkPrGqI/hqdefault.jpg"><data><width>480</width><height>360</height></data></link></links></object></group> </idf></div> </div> <div class="row"> <div class="frontpage-photo-video-headline col-xs-12 col-md-9"> <a href="https://www.the-journal.com/articles/10-years-after-gold-king-mine-spill-locals-reflect-on-need-for-patience/">10 years after Gold King Mine Spill, locals reflect on need for patience </a> </div> <div class="frontpage-photo-video-socials col-xs-12 col-md-3"> <a href="http://www.facebook.com/sharer/sharer.php?u=https://www.the-journal.com/articles/10-years-after-gold-king-mine-spill-locals-reflect-on-need-for-patience/&title=10%20years%20after%20Gold%20King%20Mine%20Spill%2C%20locals%20reflect%20on%20need%20for%20patience%20" class="facebook-share" target="_blank"> <div class="icon-circle-border"> <i class="fa fa-facebook-square" aria-hidden="true"></i> </div> </a> <a href="http://twitter.com/intent/tweet?status=10%20years%20after%20Gold%20King%20Mine%20Spill%2C%20locals%20reflect%20on%20need%20for%20patience%20+https://www.the-journal.com/articles/10-years-after-gold-king-mine-spill-locals-reflect-on-need-for-patience/" class="twitter-share" target="_blank"> <div class="icon-circle-border"> <i class="fa fa-twitter" aria-hidden="true"></i> </div> </a> <a class="email-share" target="_blank"> <div class="icon-circle-border"> <i class="fa fa-envelope" aria-hidden="true"></i> </div> </a> </div> </div> <div class="frontpage-photo-video-text"> EPA cleanup efforts continue at Bonita Peak Superfund site; some wonder if there's been progress </div> <div class="frontpage-photo-video-related"> </div></div> <div class="photo-video-slider-element col-12"> <div class="responsive-embed" data-uuid="04fe3f47-f11d-4c9d-8bbb-3486c3ae6fd3"> <div class="image-container"> <a href="https://www.the-journal.com/articles/dulins-dodgers-claim-first-connie-mack-world-series-title-beat-renegades-by-score-of-5-2/"> <img decoding="async" class="frontpage-photo-gallery-image" src="https://imengine.public.prod.dur.navigacloud.com/?uuid=e06ced91-2f52-5ad1-895f-f39ca78060ca&function=thumbnail&type=preview&source=false&width=1920&height=1080"> </a> </div> <div class="d-none"><?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?><idf xmlns="http://www.infomaker.se/idf/1.0" dir="ltr" xml:lang="sv_SE"> <group type="body"><element id="headline-d1f5ac9f52fc17b4da89004c9c7493da" type="headline">Dulins Dodgers claim first Connie Mack World Series title, beat Renegades 5-2</element><element id="preamble-a5efff9f3af396a0b0f095f2284b9023" type="preamble">Landon Collins hurls complete game and picks up tournament MVP award</element><object id="MTkwLDEwNiwyMjcsMjM" type="x-im/image" uuid="e06ced91-2f52-5ad1-895f-f39ca78060ca"><links><link rel="self" type="x-im/image" uri="im://image/vo8XqM9EXfiprJSncJaqg0j-6aA.jpg" uuid="e06ced91-2f52-5ad1-895f-f39ca78060ca"><data><width>3600</width><height>2400</height><imageInstructions/><text>Dulins Dodgers' Landon Collins throws a pitch to Southern California Renegades Evan Thomas in the bottom of the first inning during the Connie Mack World Series championship game on Saturday at Ricketts Park. (Curtis Ray Benally/Special to the Tri-City Record)</text><alttext/></data><links><link rel="author" title="Curtis Ray Benally" type="x-im/author" uuid="7e708c36-8199-4d70-a662-5b191305a9c7"><data><email>info@turkeyboyphotography.com</email></data></link></links></link></links><properties><property name="alignment" value="center"/><property name="size" value="jumbo"/></properties></object><element id="paragraph-85b2d74d9253b4567ed3850bfc85b1ab" type="body">FARMINGTON – The fourth time was the charm for Dulins Dodgers, who captured their first Connie Mack World Series championship Saturday night in front of a sold-out crowd at Ricketts Park with a dominating 5-2 win over the defending champion Southern California Renegades.</element><element id="paragraph-0fe3b9b90a024ff6acdf304bef44be0e" type="body">Led by a stellar pitching performance by Landon Collins, as well as timely hitting from Tommy Baker and John Clark, the Dodgers grabbed command of the scoreboard in the second inning and never trailed in the final game of the tournament, giving the team from Gunter, Texas, their first championship in one of the nation’s most prestigious amateur baseball tournaments.</element><object id="youtubeembed-faecd77f9c3b1a586bcaee44d530c5a8" type="x-im/youtube" uri="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Tjc93CpFzm0" url="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Tjc93CpFzm0"><data><start>0</start></data><links><link rel="alternate" title="Click link to view content" type="text/html" url="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Tjc93CpFzm0"><data><context>Video</context><provider>YouTube</provider></data></link><link rel="alternate" type="image/jpg" url="https://i.ytimg.com/vi/Tjc93CpFzm0/hqdefault.jpg"><data><width>480</width><height>360</height></data></link></links></object><element id="paragraph-0ba280e1c9d08a8ef0be2cc2067e9785" type="body">“It’s such a hard event to win, and it’s hard to win in general, but everyone talked about how young we were, but they played like veterans,” said Dodgers head coach Chris Godwin. “They’re resilient, selfless, and they’re unbelievable teammates. When you look at championship teams, everybody is for each other, everybody wants the next guy up and that’s why we won this game.”</element><element id="paragraph-9d0925299e0841532ed087b3abf7202a" type="body">Collins pitched a complete game, striking out six Renegades hitters while allowing just two runs on six hits and a pair of walks over seven innings. The Texas Tech University commit threw just 97 pitches and had the Renegades offense on its heels much of the night.</element><element id="paragraph-1ac1436efd88d01ce349e9d24beb679f" type="body">“You can’t ask for a better kid. I don’t know if there’s many out there who work harder than him,” Godwin said. “I’m so proud of him, and he’s going to be a big time arm in the future.”</element><element id="paragraph-87edfdefed97e56eb2a4b30c50c2d661" type="body">The Dodgers struck first, taking advantage of a fielding error in the top of the second inning. Renegades starting pitcher Stephen Michalsky threw offline trying to get Kolt Larsen out at third on a bunt attempt from John Clark. The errant throw allowed Larsen to score and gave the Dodgers a 1-0 advantage.</element><element id="paragraph-ebfa44c97fabb0839428ea9c1f93d783" type="body">Michalsky threw 2 2/3 innings before he was replaced by Tyler Onofre. Michalsky left with the bases loaded but Onofre got Dodgers second baseman John Clark to ground out to end the top half of the third inning.</element><object id="OTEsOTMsMTg0LDI0OQ" type="x-im/image" uuid="7dc7eb40-8a7d-5747-a1b1-59c070dcf616"><links><link rel="self" type="x-im/image" uri="im://image/xKm-zS2uQIGUccZRk0MzsnbPMas.jpg" uuid="7dc7eb40-8a7d-5747-a1b1-59c070dcf616"><data><width>3600</width><height>2400</height><imageInstructions/><text>Dulins Dodgers' John Clark hits the ball to right field for a single and RBI in the top of the seventh inning against Southern California Renegades during the Connie Mack World Series championship game Saturday at Ricketts Park. (Curtis Ray Benally/Special to the Tri-City Record)</text><alttext/></data><links><link rel="author" title="Curtis Ray Benally" type="x-im/author" uuid="7e708c36-8199-4d70-a662-5b191305a9c7"><data><email>info@turkeyboyphotography.com</email></data></link></links></link></links></object><element id="paragraph-79f54134c270ae3fdf16c2530479e92c" type="body">The Dodgers got some defensive help in the bottom of the third inning when Collins took a grounder off the bat of Evan Thomas, leading a double play to first baseman Logan Corley, who threw across the infield to nab Isaiah Munoz, who led off the frame with a single. </element><element id="paragraph-98d4ebeef259c09f16e1f27c9b53e1dd" type="body">Onofre was replaced on the mound by JW Bayless. Onofre gave up a walk and a single to start the top of the fourth inning. Bayless then struck out two of the next three batters to end the Dodgers threat.</element><element id="paragraph-9b5fd434f1820e6375dea12dda81d286" type="body">The Renegades offense had an golden opportunity to take the lead in the bottom of the fourth, while Collins showed the first signs of trouble on the mound. The Renegades loaded the bases with a double by Tomas Cernius, followed by a sharply hit single by Travis Curry and a walk to Sean Green. Collins responded by striking out Tyler Peshke before Munoz bounced out to the shortstop. The Renegades stranded five baserunners in the contest.</element><object id="MTEwLDE2MiwxNjMsMTA" title="Dulins Dodgers Road to CMWS Championship" type="x-im/content-part" uuid="c508ba76-ae86-41e1-ae11-37ffc82ba59e"><data><title>Dulins Dodgers Road to CMWS ChampionshipDodgers 6, Zinger Prospects 0Dodgers 5, White Sox Scout Team 4Dodgers 9, So Cal Renegades 6Midland Southwest Bulls 9, Dodgers 6Dodgers 10, Midland Southwest 1Dodgers 5, Renegades 2Bayless returned to the mound in the top of the fifth inning and surrendered only one hit. The Piedra Vista High product has been one of the most efficient pitchers in the tournament, with a three-inning shutout performance out of the bullpen earlier this week in a Renegades win over the Midland Redskins.The Dodgers broke the game open in the top of the sixth, scoring three times. Clark and Ashten Ballew both scored, followed by Austen Allen. Those three runs gave the Dodgers a commanding 4-0 edge.The Renegades closed the gap in the bottom of the sixth inning. Ben Finnegan led off the frame getting hit by a pitch, then scored on a double down the right field line by Curry. Green then doubled in Curry to cut the Dodgers lead in half, but then proceeded to leave a runner on base to end the threat.The Dodgers added a run in the top of the seventh when Baker led off the frame with a single and later scored from second on a base hit from Clark to add some leverage for Collins, who shut the Renegades down with a flawless final inning to complete the win.“Everything was working for me tonight, I got myself into a lot of 2-strike counts and had myself in the drivers seat,” Collins said. “I had a lot of faith in my defense and they executed so well in getting us out of jams.”36002400Dulins Dodgers team pose for a portrait at the conclusion of the 2025 Connie Mack World Series championship game on Saturday at Ricketts Park. The Dodgers defeated the Southern California Renegades 5-2. (Curtis Ray Benally/Special to the Tri-City Record)info@turkeyboyphotography.comThe Dodgers made their CMWS debut in 2022 and have been a return visitor each of the last three years. In 2022 and 2023, they earned automatic bids to the tournament having won the Don Mattingly World Series the prior year. This year, the Dodgers won the Ozarks qualifying tournament in Joplin, Missouri to earn their spot in the event. The Dodgers finish the CMWS with a record of 4 wins and one loss, dropping their only game in bracket competition to the Midland Southwest Bulls.The Renegades, who were hoping to become back-to-back CMWS champions, never appeared to overcome Collins’ performance on the mound.“The kid threw strikes and we just couldn’t capitalize on them at all,” said Renegades head coach Si Pettrow. “Even when we made that run in the fourth, we still couldn’t keep that momentum going.”This was the second meeting between these two teams during the Connie Mack World Series. On Thursday, the Dodgers outscored the Renegades by a score of 9-6. “The more you see a team, the more you get to scout their tendencies and so we focused on that a little bit coming into this game tonight. The Renegades finish the tournament with a record of 4-2, with both of their losses coming at the hands of the newly crowned champions.
    Landon Collins hurls complete game and picks up tournament MVP award
    65864391Weigh-in day for the goats Tuesday at the Montezuma County Fair. (Aaron Lewis/Special to The Journal)At the county fair: Weigh-in day with the goatsA sampling of images from the Montezuma County Fair65574672Weigh-in day for the goats Tuesday at the Montezuma County Fair. (Aaron Lewis/Special to The Journal)67104473Weigh-in day for the goats Tuesday at the Montezuma County Fair. (Aaron Lewis/Special to The Journal)70084672Weigh-in day for the goats Tuesday at the Montezuma County Fair. (Aaron Lewis/Special to The Journal)70084672Weigh-in day for the goats Tuesday at the Montezuma County Fair. (Aaron Lewis/Special to The Journal)
    A sampling of images from the Montezuma County Fair
    Vermette wins Red Bull Hardline WalesDurango downhill mountain bike star made history becoming youngest winner14402160Durango's Asa Vermette became the youngest winner of Red Bull Hardline with his victory at Red Bull Hardline Wales on Sunday. (Courtesy Nathan Hughes)Asa Vermette didn’t think it was enough. The 18-year-old downhill mountain bike sensation was the final rider to hit the Red Bull Hardline course in Dyfi, Wales, on Sunday. He knew England’s Charlie Hatton had put down a great run before him.He knew the top of his run wasn’t the fastest and he made a small mistake. That mistake didn’t matter. As soon as Vermette crossed the finish line, the timing screen turned green and he became the youngest Red Bull Hardline winner in the event’s history, beating Hatton’s run by 1.681 seconds. It was a bounce back effort for Vermette after he finished second at Red Bull Hardline Tasmania in February. “I felt really good after Tasmania; I just wanted to get the win, pretty bad, for sure,” Vermette said. “So to do it there was insane. Also, I wasn't really even thinking about being the youngest person until it happened. So, I'm stoked on that; it’s cool.”The Durangoan completed his final run in two minutes and 24.477 seconds; Vermette’s final run was over four seconds faster than his qualifying run. Hatton finished in second in 2:26.158 and Ronan Dinne was third in 2:29.396. Like in many of his World Cup runs, Vermette built up his run by starting slower in the first split and then built his speed and a gap to his competitors. He was fourth after the first split and then had the fastest splits in Split 2, 3 and 4. 0VideoYouTube480360Rain was in the air in Dyfi the night before the qualifying and race day. Vermette didn’t grow up racing in the rain and mud in Durango but he’s gotten used to it doing the World Cups.“My riding style for all the technical rock gardens was actually pretty good because at Purgatory we’ve got a bunch of those; it's just doesn't usually rain,” Vermette said. “So the track was something I was pretty familiar with the steep chutes, corners and big jumps … having a slippery top section was something … to adjust to was some slippery rocks. But other than that, the track was pretty suited to me.”A big difference between World Cup tracks and Red Bull Hardline are the jumps. The jumps at Hardline, with drops up to 90 feet, according to Vermette, are a lot bigger than anything he’d see at a World Cup. The difference suits Vermette as he enjoys hitting jumps.Vermette had one final jump to nail before crossing the finish line at the bottom. He felt like his run wasn’t enough because of a couple mistakes. Reflecting on the moment, Vermette realizes that on the bike, every mistake feels like it’s bigger than it is.After hitting the final jump, crossing the finish line and realizing he won, Vermette was mobbed by camera people and his competitors congratulating him in front of a huge crowd.1440960Durango's Asa Vermette is embraced after his winning run at Red Bull Hardline Wales on Sunday. (Courtesy Nathan Hughes)It was an insane feeling for Vermette, one he struggled to put into words as all the fans were stoked to watch a run on such an entertaining track. The 2025 World Cup season has been tough for Vermette so far. He crashed in the first two rounds, is without a win and is fourth in the men’s junior downhill World Cup standings. His Red Bull Hardline win could turn the tide on his year. “It'll help for sure, just for the confidence,” Vermette said. “It's a totally different field and different track, but just the confidence of knowing you did it the weekend before or whatever will be nice to have. Hopefully we can just keep building and going on for me.”1440960Durango's Asa Vermette celebrates his Red Bull Hardline Wales victory on Sunday. (Courtesy Nathan Hughes)Vermette has a quick turnaround to defend his men’s elite downhill USA Cycling Gravity Mountain Bike National Championship in Big Bear Lake, California, from Thursday-Sunday. bkelly@durangoherald.com
    Durango downhill mountain bike star made history becoming youngest winner
    Report IDs marshals involved in Farmington shootingMarshals claim suspect was armed with AK-47, but police can’t confirm it25321418The U.S. Marshal Service-involved shooting on May 7, 2025, in the 4000 block of Copper Avenue killed Breanna Wilkerson, 25, and Brandon Roe, 37, both of Farmington.The Tri-City Record has obtained an unredacted copy of the San Juan County Sheriff’s Office incident report detailing the May 7 shooting of two people by the U.S. Marshals Service in Farmington.The report identified the marshals involved in the shooting as Jared Santesson, Navid Babadi and Mike Coconis. It is believed their gunfire killed Breanna Wilkerson, 25, of Farmington, her puppy and Brandon Roe, 37, of Farmington.The marshals’ names had been redacted from all other documents received from the Sheriff’s Office including three written statements the Tri-City Record obtained through a July 10 Inspection of Public Records Acts Request.The statements detail the events leading up to the shooting deaths, which happened about 6:30 p.m. in the 4000 block of Copper Avenue, when Wilkerson reportedly was trying to leave the area with Roe in the vehicle.The statements showed that the marshals began surveillance on Roe on May 1, 2025, in response to three warrants issued on Feb. 20, 2025, for his arrest.370614Brandon Roe, 37, was shot and killed May 7 when U.S. Marshals were serving a warrant for his arrest.All three U.S. deputy marshals stated in the documents that they believed Roe to be armed and possibly in possession of an AK-47.“This belief stemmed from his history, from when the Farmington Officer recently observed an AK style firearm in his vehicle’s front seat,” one of the marshals stated.San Juan County Sheriff’s Lt. Gilbert stated in the shooting narrative that “Roe had fled from FPD a week or so before, and an AK-47 was found in the vehicle.”An email detailing the statement was sent on July 24 to Farmington Police spokeswoman Shanice Gonzales, who originally said she could not confirm this.“We looked into it, and we can’t confirm that. We also reviewed other cases involving Roe and found no cases of an AK being observed by FPD,” Gonzales said shortly before 11 a.m. July 29.Then at 3:37 p.m. July 29 Gonzales sent a revised statement in an email, saying there was an incident at 1:46 a.m. April 16, 2025, in the 400 block of Copper Street.Officers were conducting “proactive patrols,” in the area, “when a male subject fled from a yard where he appeared to be working on a vehicle,” Gonzales wrote.The officers spoke to Wilkerson as well as other “individuals at the property to identify the fleeing subject but were unable to confirm his identity. Conflicting information was provided by individuals on scene,” Gonzales wrote.“While investigating, officers observed what appeared to be an M4-style firearm inside a vehicle located on the private property,” Gonzales said. “As there was no legal basis to seize the firearm at that time, it remained in place.”There also were reports of an empty holster being observed in Roe’s vehicle earlier in the day. However, none of the statements or the narrative mention an actual firearm being found at the scene.Tiimeline of the shootingThe following timeline is based on statements from the U.S. Marshals Service statements.Feb. 20, 2025Three felony arrest warrants issued for Brandon ROE, including failure to comply for aggravated fleeing, burglary, failure to comply for burglary. May 1Deputy U.S. marshals begin an investigation and surveillance operation in Farmington.May 7 at 3:30 p.m.A black Mercury Mariner tied to Brandon Roe is located again by marshals near roads 5290 and 3184. Roe is spotted later in the day driving the same black Mercury Mariner, making multiple stops and circling the area.He enters Dino’s Gas Station, then leaves again. The vehicle appears to have mechanical issues but continues to move. He is seen driving to County Road 390 as surveillance continues. Later, the vehicle is abandoned at No. 4 County Road 5478, unoccupied, but confirmed as Roe’s via license plate.Later that dayA female resembling Breanna Wilkerson is seen walking from a nearby field, and a gold Chevrolet Blazer stops and picks her up.Surveillance is reestablished on the Blazer.May 7 at 6:30 p.m.The gold Chevrolet Blazer is seen at 4004 Copper Ave. in Farmington, where officers establish surveillance.Roe is positively identified outside the home, shirtless, wearing a black cap. He goes inside and out multiple times. Multiple vehicles are nearby – a gold Chevrolet Blazer, a white Dodge truck, and a red/white Ford truck.The gold Blazer is boxed in by law enforcement, yet the driver attempts to leave. A deputy U.S. marshal jumps from vehicle and in front of Blazer orders that hands be shown.The deputy U.S. marshal fires into windshield, and the vehicle turns. Two other marshals fire their weapons, and the Blazer collides with a brick wall and comes to a stop.Roe and Wilkerson are struck by gunfire and declared dead.The marshals also report that they believed “Roe to be the sole occupant” of Wilkerson’s Gold Chevrolet Blazer when they opened fire.However, they knew the Blazer was registered in Wilkerson’s name and said that they saw her leave the home in the 4000 block of Copper Avenue shortly before the shooting. “I observed Roe in the driver’s seat of the Gold Chevrolet Blazer with both hands on the left side of the steering wheel,” one marshal wrote.Another marshal wrote that he “only saw one individual in the vehicle,” and the person “looked like Roe and fit the description of clothing (that I could see) he was wearing prior to the approach to the residence.” He added that he saw a dog at a window in the backseat. 1178858Bree Wilkerson, 25, of Farmington, was shot and killed May 7 by U.S. marshals near the intersection of Hubbard Road and Copper Avenue.None of the marshals admitted to seeing Wilkerson, because she was “seated under Roe in the driver’s seat.”One of the marshals wrote “I never saw or knew anyone else was in the vehicle,” until after the shooting, when “I was very surprised and concerned to see someone under Roe.”However, in the incident report, Gilbert states, “I could see the occupants of the vehicle hunched over as the vehicle rolled forward.”Gilbert also states, “The male was awkwardly positioned in the vehicle.”Gilbert also stated that when law enforcement checked on Roe and Wilkerson after the shooting, Roe had a “faint pulse,” and Wilkerson was “clearly deceased.”One of the marshals stated that he “did not feel a pulse” on either Roe or Wilkerson, yet he “immediately requested medical personnel to be summoned for medical aid.”0VideoYouTube480360The marshal, believed to be Babadi from the video and the redacted statement, claimed that before the shooting, Roe was “revving” the engine and “the vehicle continued to accelerate rapidly toward me.”In the video, the marshal believed to be Babadi could be seen jumping from his vehicle and running toward the front of the Blazer, while yelling, “Show me your f----ing hands.”However, in his statement to investigators, he said he was “unable to move out of the way in time,” and “I believed I was about to run over and fearing for my life, I fired my weapon multiple times through the front windshield to stop the deadly threat.”This marshal stated that he could “not estimate the speed of the vehicle.”Another marshal stated, “the vehicle was moving fast enough by my perception to kill or seriously injure,” other law enforcement officers, and he knew this because of his “personal experience of being run over by a fleeing fugitive in a vehicle in the past.”However, Lt. Gilbert wrote in the incident narrative that the “vehicle was moving somewhat slowly and erratically towards them.”This incident was not the first time Babadi stood in front of vehicle and fired into the windshield. He was involved in a multi-agency police-involved shooting on Dec. 14, 2020, which resulted in the death of William Hernandez, 46, of Kirtland.According to the news release dated Jan. 21, 2021, from the New Mexico State Police, Hernandez barricaded himself inside a Ford Expedition outside the Life Care Center in Farmington.The report stated that Babadi “positions himself facing the front of the Expedition.”Hernandez was armed with a knife and a handgun, which he pointed at the head of a passenger. He lowered the gun and then, raised it “a second time towards” the passenger’s head, the news release stated.Babadi, four San Juan County Sheriff’s deputies and a New Mexico State Police Officer fired into the vehicle, killing Hernandez, the news release stated.Babadi also was named in at least two lawsuits claiming illegal search and seizure of vehicles, and in the 2019 case, U.S. Magistrate Laura Fashing entered a ruling to suppress all evidence from the search and seizure as it was not done legally.A determination has not been made in the shooting deaths of Roe and Wilkerson. San Juan County District Attorney Jack Fortner said his office is reviewing the information and should make a decision this week.This article was updated July 29 to include new comment from Farmington Police spokeswoman Shanice Gonzales about the investigation of Brandon Roe.
    Marshals claim suspect was armed with AK-47, but police can’t confirm it
    36002246The 4-H community sets up pens in the swine barn.Erika Alvero/Special to The JournalThe stars behind the Montezuma County FairFamilies set up pens, exhibits for the Montezuma County FairLocal 4-H members and their parents gathered at the Montezuma County Fairgrounds Saturday afternoon before dispersing to set up exhibit tables for the upcoming Montezuma County Fair. Monday will feature 4-H general project entries, 4-H live cake decorating, fine arts contest, fashion revue contest, cat contest and more, while Tuesday will include weigh-ins for goats, beef, sheep, swine, rabbits and poultry.A highlight will be the 4-H and FFA livestock shows, running throughout the week, starting on Wednesday, where 4-H members will showcase their livestock prior to the event’s sale. 20001220Local 4-H members and their parents gather at the Montezuma County Fairgrounds Saturday afternoon before dispersing to set up exhibit tables for the upcoming Montezuma County Fair. Erika Alvero/Special to The Journal36002264The 4-H community sets up pens in the swine barn.Erika Alvero/Special to The Journal20001384Rylee Otteson, 11, smiles for the camera as she and Violet Porter, 12, set up rabbit cages. Rylee will take part in the rabbits event while Violet is competing in rabbits and cats.Erika Alvero/Special to The Journal20001130Noelle Walden, 14, and Eberly Englehart, 9, help construct tables for feathered guests in the poultry and rabbits barn. Noelle will participate in the chicken and herdsmanship events, while Eberly is taking part in the quail, ducks, chicken, and cake decorating events. Erika Alvero/Special to The Journal20001341From left, Presley Englehart, 10, and Corbin Traweek, 10, assist with constructing enclosures in the goats and sheep barn at the fairgrounds. Presley will be competing in the goats, cake decorating, and leather craft events, while Corbin is taking part in sheep, rocketry, and sports fishing.Erika Alvero/Special to The Journal20001472Students debate next steps as they construct a wooden tower in an exhibition room.Erika Alvero/Special to The Journal16811600From left, Roy (8), Tayler, and Charlotte (5) Hill helped with Saturday's event preparations. Roy will be participating in the goat show and cake decorating this year.Erika Alvero/Special to The Journal20001473Roy Hill, 8, helps his mother Tayler arrange a table cover for the fair.Erika Alvero/Special to The Journal20001258Youngsters and adults alike came together to ready the fairgrounds for the upcoming festivities.Erika Alvero/Special to The Journal20001327Students carefully carry exhibition cases into a presentation space.Erika Alvero/Special to The Journal
    Families set up pens, exhibits for the Montezuma County Fair