Tainted stormwater is a common problem in urban areas, but here it is magnified by Los Alamos National Laboratory discharging polluted runoff into arroyos and canyons.
U.S. Energy Department treatment of the decades-old toxic plume, caused by Los Alamos National Laboratory Research, was halted in March over state regulator s claims the work was making the substance
BY STEPHANIE NAKHLEHfor the Los Alamos Reporter This story is the sixth in a series of guest articles about the housing situation in Los Alamos. The first is on LANL, whose hiring has further tightened the housing market; the second looks at housing from the real-estate-agent perspective; the third takes on the viewpoint of several young renters struggling to find adequate…
Lawmakers request feds and state officials find third party in chromium plume fight the-journal.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from the-journal.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
State regulators in March ordered the U.S. Energy Department to stop extracting tainted water, treating it and injecting it back into the plume over fears the contaminants were moving closer