AP Exclusive: Water delivery suspended in Nevada mine battle

Nicolas Cuevas, right, and others load up plastic water bottles to distribute to members of the Yerington Paiute tribe after their weekly water delivery was left at the tribal border in Yerington, Nev., Friday, April 27, 2018. Atlantic Richfield, the owner of a abandoned open pit mine nearby, has suspended the normal bottled water deliveries it’s been providing neighbors since tests in 2004 confirmed a plume of groundwater contaminated area wells. The move comes two months after federal regulators backed off plans to add the mine to the list of the most toxic U.S. Superfund sites. (AP Photo/Scott Sady)

Yerington Paiute Tribal Chairman Laurie Thom poses in the tribal office in Yerington, Nev., Friday, April 27, 2018. Atlantic Richfield, the owner of a abandoned open pit mine nearby, has suspended the normal bottled water deliveries it’s been providing neighbors since tests in 2004 confirmed a plume of groundwater contaminated area wells. The move comes two months after federal regulators backed off plans to add the mine to the list of the most toxic U.S. Superfund sites. The tribe is suing Atlantic Richfield, saying its decision underscores fears that scuttling the proposed listing will slow cleanup efforts. (AP Photo/Scott Sady)

Tommy Gutierrez, a Paiute tribe member, puts water bottles on the porch as Mrs. Carrera watches on the Yerington Paiute reservation in Yerington, Nev., Friday, April 27, 2018. Atlantic Richfield, the owner of a abandoned open pit mine nearby, has suspended the normal bottled water deliveries it’s been providing neighbors since tests in 2004 confirmed a plume of groundwater contaminated area wells. The move comes two months after federal regulators backed off plans to add the mine to the list of the most toxic U.S. Superfund sites. (AP Photo/Scott Sady)

Water tanks for the town of Yerington, Nev., with the abandoned Anaconda mine pit, source of an underground plume of poisonous water in the background, are seen Friday, April 27, 2018. The mine’s owner, Atlantic Richfield, has suspended the normal bottled water deliveries it’s been providing neighbors since tests in 2004 confirmed a plume of groundwater contaminated area wells. The move comes two months after federal regulators backed off plans to add the mine to the list of the most toxic U.S. Superfund sites. A Native American tribe suing Atlantic Richfield says its decision underscores fears that scuttling the proposed listing will slow cleanup efforts. (AP Photo/Scott Sady)

Tommy Gutierrez, a Paiute tribe member, helps load up some of the thousands of plastic water bottles that are distributed weekly to the Yerington Paiute tribe in Yerington, Nev., Friday, April 27, 2018. Atlantic Richfield, the owner of a abandoned open pit mine nearby, has suspended the normal bottled water deliveries it’s been providing neighbors since tests in 2004 confirmed a plume of groundwater contaminated area wells. The move comes two months after federal regulators backed off plans to add the mine to the list of the most toxic U.S. Superfund sites. (AP Photo/Scott Sady)

The abandoned Anaconda open pit mine, source of an underground plume of poisonous water, is seen in an aerial photo in Yerington, Nev., Friday, April 27, 2018. The mine’s owner, Atlantic Richfield, has suspended the normal bottled water deliveries it’s been providing neighbors since tests in 2004 confirmed a plume of groundwater contaminated area wells. The move comes two months after federal regulators backed off plans to add the mine to the list of the most toxic U.S. Superfund sites. A Native American tribe suing Atlantic Richfield says its decision underscores fears that scuttling the proposed listing will slow cleanup efforts. (AP Photo/Scott Sady)

RENO, Nev. — It was an uncharacteristically urgent demand at a U.S. Superfund site where the cleanup of an abandoned World War II-era mine has dragged on for two decades and progress is measured, at best, in years.

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