by William Langewiesche The Atlantic Monthly
Butte,
Montana, lives on its toxic waste. It is a filthy brick city of
33,000, built on a steep hill among the remains of dead copper
mines. Montanans elsewhere call it "Butte, America"
in a disparaging way, as if it were somehow a separate and alien
place. One can see why by hiking up the hill, past Butte's decrepit
central district, past mines and union halls and a bar called
Pisser's, through proletarian neighborhoods of bungalows nestled
among waste heaps laced with lead and arsenic, to the Granite
Mountain overlook, a memorial to 168 miners killed in 1917 in
an underground fire.
Out across
the horizon of snow-capped mountains lies the celebrated Montana
of natural beauty, where a record number of visitors vacationed
in recent years, even as the residents' incomes floated in the
forty-sixth position among the fifty states. Montanans proudly
call their home "The Last Great Place," though the slogan
can sound wistful and forlorn. Caught in a two-tiered economy
with little industry left to sustain them, they are remaking the
fashionable western half of the state into an exaggeration of
itself, so that even the individualists therethe guides,
the survivalists, the cowboy poetsnow learn at the movies
how to dress and talk. Or so I've been told in Butte.
From the archives:
The Environment
A collection of Atlantic articles on environmental issues.
Butte's residents
speak frankly about themselves as well. They say that their city
is fractious and that its survival remains in doubt. Eighty years
ago it had a population three times as large as today's, predominantly
of Irish Catholics, but also of Serbs, Scandinavians, Italians,
Chinese, and French. The immigrants, who formed labor unions that
were willing to fight, infused Butte with an old-fashioned left-wing
sensibility that remains a part of its character to this day.
The workers' enemy was also their patronthe voracious Anaconda
Mining Company, which was founded in 1891 and soon absorbed Butte's
independent mines. Over the years, Anaconda sent perhaps 2,500
local men to their deaths underground in pursuit of copper ore,
but it employed a far greater number of people and gave Butte
its life. Because the company was so important to the community,
when Anaconda said it needed to begin open-pit mining, in 1955,
it was allowed to consume long-standing neighborhoods with barely
an objection.
Quarrying
was the way of the future, and it was safer than tunneling. But
it required less labor, which weakened the unions and meant that
layoffs, once cyclical, became permanent. It was also physically
destructive: over the years the open pit, known as the Berkeley,
grew into a crater 1.5 miles across and 1,800 feet deepa
giant hole in the heart of town. In 1977 Anaconda Mining was near
death, and the oil company ARCO bought it up. ARCO was flush with
cash at the time and wanted to diversify and experiment with hard-rock
mining. Within a few years the experiment began to fail. In the
early 1980s ARCO closed the remaining shafts and turned off the
pumps that had kept the mines from flooding. It then shut down
the Berkeley Pit.

Butte, Montana, with an edge of the
Berkeley Pit visible on the left. The city stands on the world's
most heavily mined ground
The sight
from Granite Mountain today is of an industrial battlefield with
smoke still hanging in the air. The city spills into the flats
of the valley below with a sprawl of new houses and a shopping
strip that extends to the airport. But the soul of Butte remains
on the hill, in the tattered and cosmopolitan centera red-brick
commercial district, scarred by vacant lots and shuttered storefronts,
but resilient and defiantly urban. This is the core that refuses
to die. The streets are steep and unadorned, and eerily empty
at night even in the summer. In the winter they are swept by the
full force of mountain winds and snows. On the east side the central
district falls precipitously into the Berkeley Pit; on the west
side it melds with an old neighborhood of brick houses, most in
need of repair, where the engineers and mine bosses once lived.
Higher on the hill stand the miners' modest wooden houses, snaking
upward in bands among the wood-and-steel hulks of the abandoned
mine yards. A dozen main shafts are straddled by black steel elevator
derricks, called gallows frames, which dominate the city's skyline.
From them the miners were lowered as much as a mile into a labyrinth
of now unreachable destinationsthe most heavily mined ground
in the world. It is said that the hill contains 7,000 miles of
wood-framed horizontal tunnels and untold numbers of vertical
shafts. Most of the shafts are closed over and forgotten, but
every year a few of them suddenly open upsometimes in people's
back yards or basements. No one knows why dogs fall in and children
do not.
Butte has
bigger problems anyway. This hill, once called the richest on
earth, is known now as one of the dirtiest in America. Its soils
and waters are filled with lead and other toxic metals, and the
creek called the Silver Bow, which flows at its base, was until
recently so contaminated by runoff that it was poisoned at least
140 miles downstream, creating a plume of death that reached into
the picturesque Clark Fork River and on toward the Columbia.
In 1983 the
Environmental Protection Agency declared that Butte was a high-priority
Superfund siteand by the way, that ARCO would have to pay
for most of the cleanup. ARCO was taken by surprise. The Superfund
laws had been passed in 1980, decades after most of the mess had
been made and three years after ARCO bought Anaconda's liabilities.
The retroactive application of the laws, though apparently constitutional,
seemed unfair. Nonetheless, when threatened with triple damages
by the EPA, ARCO did not go to court, as other companies have,
but began grudgingly to cooperate. Eighteen years later it remains
entangled in what has grown into one of the largest Superfund
sites in the United States. The costs of the cleanup have been
huge. The site is especially complex because it remains inhabited.
The health consequences of the pollution have been only partially
studied, but they are widely assumed to be seriouslead poisoning
in particular is a concern.
Meanwhile,
in Butte's vast underground the shafts and tunnels, full of residual
heavy metals and arsenic, have floodedand the tainted waters
have risen within the hill to a level precariously close to that
of the rivers and stream-beds on the surface.
Now for the
paradox: The mine waters would already be spilling into the Silver
Bow, further poisoning it and the rivers downstream, were it not
for the existence in the middle of town of the Berkeley Pit, which
by serving as a giant sump has delayed the day of reckoning. Five
million gallons a day drain into the pit and mix with oxygen to
form one of the most contaminated bodies of water in the worlda
brown lake of metal-laden sulfuric acid, currently 900 feet deep
and steadily rising. The lake is expected to reach the critical
level (about 1,100 feet) in another twenty years, at which timeif
left aloneit will bleed into the aquifer and poison springs
and wells, with catastrophic consequences.
That is unlikely
to happen, of course, because Butte is in America, which has the
wealth to clean itself up. If Congress lets ARCO off by loosening
the Superfund laws (as industry believes it should), then the
necessary treatment plant will be built by the EPA instead. One
way or the other, the problem will be contained.
Nonetheless,
the image of an acid lake is compellingly apocalyptic, and it
has come to symbolize Butte's unhappy fate. Much has been made
of a flock of migrating geese that landed and died in the poisons
of the Berkeley Pit. Butte has been displayed in the press as
a moral lesson in environmental self-destruction. Repeatedly it
has been called a ghost town, in anticipation of its necessary
end.
But Butte
defies such easy dismissals. Indeed, its toxic wastes, however
abhorrent, may prove in some way to be the city's salvation. There
are those who believe that pollution may just possibly provide
an important new economic base that will allow Butte if not to
prosper, then to live on with dignity, and perhaps to avoid the
clownishness and implicit servility that seems increasingly to
color the vacationland of western Montana. If so, a man named
Donald Peoples will deserve much of the credit.
Peoples is
a third-generation native son, born and raised in Butte. At first
he was merely another high school football star, of which Butte
has had plenty. He was a hard worker, and smart enough to go off
to college. Afterward, in 1962, he dutifully returned to Butte.
Several years later he got a job as a football coach at Butte
Central, the Catholic high school where both he and his father
had played. When we first met, in the summer of 1999, he still
wanted to talk about it, even after thirty years. He told me in
all sincerity that he would have been content to spend his life
coaching at Butte Central. Indeed, at sixty-one, he still looks
the parta tall, wide-shouldered man with gaunt cheeks, brooding
eyes, and an asceticism honed by daily sessions of hard running.
But as it happened, Peoples coached for only three years until,
in 1972, an old friend of his persuaded him to go to work as a
planner and manager for the city administration. He rose quickly
within the local government. He became mayor in 1979, when he
was thirty-nine, and he remained in office through multiple elections
for more than a decade during the final collapse of mining in
Butte and the worst years of despair. Many residents now believe
that by his public displays of courage he single-handedly kept
Butte from falling apart, and thatthough he is no longer
in governmenthe is still saving Butte today. History is
never that simple, of course. But there are reasons more important
than football that some people in Butte call Don Peoples "the
coach."
Butte has
never had an easy time. It had been slowly losing population since
World War I when, suddenly, in the mid-1960s, it slipped into
what appeared to be a final decline. A combination of mine-yard
closures and the inexorable growth of the Berkeley Pit caused
real-estate prices to collapse. People began to flee the hill,
abandoning their houses and small businesses by the hundreds.
Butte had a powerful patron in another native son, U.S. Senator
Mike Mansfield, who in 1968 tried to intervene with a typical
Great Society program called Model Cities, which tripled Butte's
budget, paid for repaving the streets, created new social programs
for the unemployed and the poor, and tried to cut out urban blight
as if it were a cancerby tearing down more than 300 old
buildings and houses. The Model Cities program lasted six years,
and it softened Butte's pain. But the cancer kept spreading anyway.
Forces too
large to control were to blame. Copper prices had plummeted, and
in 1971 Chile expropriated Anaconda's important South American
operations. The beleaguered company announced that Butte, with
vast amounts of ore still lying in the ground, was Anaconda's
last hope; it warned, however, that the Berkeley Pit might have
to be expanded westward, across the whole of the city's central
district. So bleak was the civic mood that rather than resist
such a move, Butte began reflexively to give way: over the next
few years, at the height of the Model Cities attempts at urban
renewal, a series of fires, most of them thought to be caused
by arson, destroyed more than twenty major buildings in the central
district, leaving ruined blocks that remain vacant today. The
fiercest of the fires exploded in JCPenney in February of 1972,
blowing mannequins like corpses onto the streets and destroying
thirteen businesses in a single night. Watching the fires became
a Butte pastime. In 1974, when the historic Pennsylvania block
burned to the ground, more than 8,500 residents gathered to watch
the conflagration and in some cases to cheer it on.
That attitude
was formalized the same year, by a group of leading citizens who
called themselves Butte Forward and drew up plans for a radical
solution to the town's decaythe staged demolition of the
remaining central district, and the construction of an entirely
new town center, to be built in the flats around bright offices
and a shopping mall. For its proponents the plan served two purposes:
it would allow Anaconda the room to survive while offering the
city itself a completely fresh start. The plan seemed progressive
at the time, though in retrospect its supporters, including Don
Peoples, agree that it would have been a mistake. Butte was saved
from it by a group of shopkeepers from the hill, who ran ads shouting
"Wake Up, Butte! Don't Be Pushed Around!" Their leader
was Beverly Hayes, a blunt-spoken woman who owned a burger joint
called The Doghouse. She mocked the plan as a sellout to Anaconda
and protested loudly against it during a series of tumultuous
public hearings. In July of 1976, just as federal officials in
Washington, D.C., indicated that they would fund Butte's relocation,
the city council voted it down. The emotion in Butte afterward
was one of unexpected relief: suddenly everyone agreed on the
need to save the central district. But then Anaconda died, and
ARCO arrived on its ill-fated mission, and people continued to
abandon the hill. Butte was still slipping away.
In the last
days of 1978, after a bitter firefighters' strike, Butte's mayor
left town for a job in Helena, and the city council appointed
Don Peoples, then serving as Butte's director of community development
and public works, to finish the term. Peoples was an ordinary
leader at first. He instituted a program of street and sidewalk
repairs, and shored up the façades of some crumbling buildings,
but mostly he just rode the city's decline.
Butte hit
bottom in 1982, when ARCO shut down the Berkeley Pit and flooded
the mines. Thousands of people packed up and moved on, and unemployment
among those who remained rose above 20 percent. Adding to the
sense of doom, the EPA began sampling the water and soil on the
way to declaring the city a Superfund sitea designation
from which no reputation could be expected to recover.
Don Peoples
now met the challenge. Having watched the grand plans fail, he
believed that what the city needed was a strategy of incremental
advancesanything to get it moving again. In 1983 he held
a series of town meetings at which he invited hundreds of people
to express their ideas for Butte's futureand having involved
them, he organized a broad-based community response. Most of the
initiatives were small business projects that individually didn't
amount to much. Collectively, however, they began to turn the
town around.
Peoples worked
without respite, acknowledging his mistakes and pressing ahead
with such dedication that he was able if not exactly to shame
community leaders into action, then at least to elicit important
new commitments from them. The Montana Power Company, which had
toyed with the idea of moving its headquarters out of the central
district, now promised to expand its presence instead; the hospital
promised to stick around too, and to build a new cancer center,
which would require an increase in staff. ARCO began to pump money
into the Superfund cleanup. Then, in 1985, a Missoula construction
magnate named Dennis Washington started a new open-pit mine. It
was a mechanized, nonunion operation, and it employed relatively
few people, but it proved that mining could still be profitable,
and it symbolized the city's resilience.
Equally important
to the mood that year, a group of miners erected Our Lady of the
Rockiesa ninety-foot statue of the Virgin Mary, supported
inside by a steel scaffold like a gallows frame, standing high
on the Continental Divide with her hands held wide in acceptance
of the ravaged city below. The statue was a genuine expression
of faith, and if only in that sense it appears to have helped.
The central district continued to decline, but the city was taking
heart. In 1987 U.S. News & World Report listed Don Peoples
as one of the top mayors in the nation. By 1988 Butte's unemployment
rate had dropped to that of the state as a whole, about seven
percent.
But Butte
had never happily shared in Montana's fate, and Peoples wanted
a fuller life for it than the life that tourism could provide.
He had a way of looking squarely at things. The city was undercut
by its ugliness and hard winters, and by its geographic isolation.
The tax breaks and subsidies it had offered in order to attract
manufacturing had been exploited by companies to extract equal
concessions from more-desirable towns. Some of the companies that
did arrive turned out to be empty shells and stock-market scams;
others were simply ill managed or impractical. Peoples insisted
that Butte had to endure these bruisings and to continue searching
outside the valley for investors. But he also looked inside the
valley, and began to wonder if the city's mining wastes, however
terrible they seemed, might somehow be turned into assets. He
came to realize that at the least the local pollution was no longer
an embarrassment to be covered up.
The strength
of that insight was its acceptance of an authentic Buttea
place with a few false fronts on its buildings but little chance
of forgetting its past or engaging in Montana-style reconstructions
of its identity. Butte had always been and always would be a gritty
town, and Don Peoples wanted to recognize it as such. His revelation
was profound. It was a step not just toward the development of
a new resource but also, implicitly, toward a new form of preservation.
Practically speaking, its origins lay in a Department of Energy
testing facility built in the mid-1970s in a federally financed
industrial park near the airport. An existing nonprofit community-development
organization now called the Montana Economic Research and Development
Institute took over that facility. In 1981 this organizationMERDIin
turn created a for-profit engineering company, Mountain States
Energy, specifically to run the DOE's programs. Don Peoples sat
on both boards. MSE's initial mission was to experiment with a
power-generation technology called magneto hydrodynamics, but
the company soon diversified into civil engineering and landed
new contracts with various government agencieseventually
including the EPAfor a bewildering range of construction
projects and the pilot-scale testing of advanced materials and
processes. It operated in conjunction with the state's universitiesparticularly
Montana Tech, Butte's once great school of mines.

Five million gallons of arsenic- and
lead-laden water drain into the Berkeley Pit every day. The water
is now 900 feet deep
MSE was an
unusual company, and it remains so today. It had a hard-nosed
business sense, but it was owned by a community organization and
its ultimate purpose was to promote the public good. It put its
headquarters in the middle of the central district, among halfway
houses and ruined stores, and it ploughed its profits into the
city, funding scholarships, grants, and infrastructure projects
that the local government could not afford. Equally important,
it provided jobs for Butte residents who had technical or university
training. There was a troublesome side to MSE as well: it was
in some ways a provincial and insecure company, searching in vain
for legitimacy and a permanent mission while presenting a public
face that was a bit too bright to be entirely believable. Nonetheless,
it was determined to exploit every opportunity to build a new
economic base for the city.
From the
start of the Superfund cleanup MSE wanted to get in on the action.
The immediate problem was that ARCO didn't require its advice.
ARCO's cleanup of the mines consisted mostly of old-fashioned
earthmoving, an activity for which Buttewhere people are
known to indulge in recreational bulldozingwas particularly
well prepared. "Suck, muck, and truck," the locals called
it. The technique was relatively cheap, and it served to concentrate
and bury the toxins, at least for a lifetime. The EPA and ARCO
agreed on a similar plan for the eventual cleanup of the Berkeley
Pit: they would pump out the water, mix in limestone to neutralize
the acid, and truck the resulting gelatin to a toxic dumpor
repositoryto be monitored indefinitely. This promised to
be a large but otherwise ordinary job.
From the archives:
"The Sub Sea-Bed Solution" (October 1996 )
Far from being embraced, a promising solution to the radioactive-waste
problem faces stiff opposition from the federal government, the
nuclear industry, and environmental interests. By Steven Nadis
MSE saw its
chance in the national discomfort with repositories as a permanent
solution for toxic waste. Under Don Peoples's guidance the company
slipped in from the side, exploiting Butte's growing notoriety
and MSE's own reputation for technical competence, and managed
to assume control over research grants for a wide range of advanced
cleanup technologies. Peoples encouraged the company to move beyond
repositories, whether by incinerating the pollution, remining
the wastes, or applying chemical or biological cures. The size
and pace of the Berkeley Pit drama helped to ensure long-term
funding and provided time to work the solutions out.
Suddenly MSE
had large ambitions. Its purpose was not to change ARCO's plans
for the cleanup of the pit, or even necessarily to clean up the
hill, but rather to use Butte as a test bed for permanent solutionsto
spin off ventures, capitalize on new knowledge, and find work
for itself around the world. For this the company needed a strong
president. After a nationwide search the board realized that no
one would equal its own Don Peoples. Peoples felt he had done
what he could in government. In 1989 he left office and took the
job at MSE. His political admirers were dismayed, and worried
that he had in some sense sold out, until they realized that from
his new position he was still attempting to rescue his beloved
home town.
He knew it
would be a rescue without endand, indeed, after more than
a decade at MSE he recognizes that his city remains at risk. Though
he sometimes talks of retirement, it is difficult to believe he
would choose this moment to quit. These are hard but pioneering
times, and his work at MSE is starting to bear fruit. A cluster
of new companies interested in pollution remediationsome
directly spawned by MSE, others intending to compete with ithave
sprung up in Butte. This is more or less what Peoples had always
had in mindthe possibility that an entirely new industry
might come to life on these polluted grounds.
Meanwhile,
the acceptance of Butte for what it is has spread. Assertive young
officials in the city government have dusted off a 1962 "National
Historic Landmark" designation and are using it in radical
ways to shape the Superfund cleanup: rather than allowing the
EPA simply to cap the mine waste and return the land to a clean
condition, they have declared that even the waste piles have historical
significance, and therefore, according to the law, must be respected
by federal agencies. Their idea is to leave the least toxic of
the piles in their raw state, as historical monuments. For the
dangerously contaminated sites that must be cleaned up and eliminated,
trades can be madeswapping those sites for the preservation
of the old mine buildings, for drainage and street improvements,
and for an extensive new network of footpaths and parks. It is
possible that the greatest result for Butte of the Model Cities
program was the expertise the program created in just this sort
of bureaucratic leveraging and manipulation.
But the preservation
of industrial waste is more than a ploy, or a folly for reporters
to write about. Don Peoples is an instinctively conservative man;
he seems uncomfortable with the city's new stridency, and uncertain
about where it will lead. Nonetheless, he also seems to recognize
that this public embrace of pollution is a complement to his own
way of thinking, and that the honesty of such an approach is helping
to attract a new generation of immigrants to the townpeople
who are too young or urban for him quite to appreciate, but who
are smart and effective and are looking for something beyond the
standard Montana. Some of those people work for MSE or its subcontractors,
or for Montana Tech; others work independently, as architects,
engineers, software designers, and technicians of various kinds.
So much the
better if Butte does not try to be pretty. Its population, after
more than eight decades of decline, has finally stabilized, and
there are signs of new life for the central district, as residents
of all generations slowly begin to return to the hill. MSE still
suffers from its provincial insecurities and an over-reliance
on government funding, but its priority remains the health of
the city. Recently, for instance, it spun off its profitable civil-engineering
division, selling it to the employees with the provision that
the new and promising company remain based in Butte. Meanwhile,
the somewhat reduced MSE brings in $25 million a year, employs
200 people, and stands at the core of the most hopeful industry
in town. Critics say that the industry is hardly more than a welfare
scheme, and that welfare of any kind is bad. But MSE and similar
companies in Butte are finding customers; Don Peoples predicts
that the new technologies will someday stand on their own. Butte
is still a hard-luck town. But it may be able to mine the only
resource that will never be used upa whole renewable world
of industrial waste.
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