Damage at Yukon's Eagle mine site could be 'worst-case scenario,' says local mayor
CBC
The mayor of Mayo, Yukon, says a heap leach failure and slide reported Monday at the Eagle gold mine will have a "huge impact" on his community, and the territory as a whole.
Mayor Trevor Ellis said he's shocked by the incident which has indefinitely halted operations at the mine.
"'Catastrophic' would probably be, from what I'm hearing, would probably be a good way to describe it," he said of the incident.
Few details about what happened and the extent of the damage at Victoria Gold's mine site have been made public. In a brief statement on Monday, the company said the heap leach pad at the mine site - about 80 kilometres north of Mayo - experienced a failure, and that there had been "some damage to infrastructure and a portion of the failure has left containment."
According to the Yukon Workers' Safety and Compensation Board on Monday, the heap leach failure "led to a material slide" at the mine site.
The heap leach facility at the Eagle mine uses a cyanide solution to percolate through ore, stacked in 10-metre layers, to dissolve gold. The company's website says approximately a million tonnes of ore is processed each month by that method.
Ellis said he was pleased to hear that no one was hurt in the incident on Monday.
"Now we just hope and pray that everything is OK environmentally, that, you know, a lot of this kind of toxic effluent didn't make it into a water course. And if it did, that they've been able to contain it and mitigate the damage to the environment," he said.
Ellis said there's a lot of speculation around town about what this might mean for the future of the mine, which employs up to 500 people when at full operations. Ellis hopes the incident won't mean a prolonged shutdown, or "the end of the mine."
He said that he was involved in lots of planning meetings as a town councillor years ago, when the mine was initially being developed.
"It always seemed to be the worst-case scenario, was what happened today," he said on Monday.
"To me, I think it's a sad day for the territory as a whole."
Yukon NDP Leader Kate White, who's also her party's mines critic, said Monday that she was also grateful that no one was hurt at the Eagle mine but said "there are a lot of questions" about what exactly happened.
She called the incident "appalling and deeply concerning."