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As a young man, Valle left the peasant community of Uchumarca, 12 miles (19 kilometers) outside of Cerro de Pasco, to study mechanical engineering in Lima, returning to work for one of the area's principal miners, Minera Atacocha S.A. When he left mining, Valle expanded the family business distributing meat to markets and restaurants that feed the city's legions of hard hat and goggle-toting workers. Two weeks before Valle took office in January 2007, his predecessor shocked the town by green-lighting Volcan's expansion with no concessions from the company. Valle repealed the agreement in his first week in office and spent the next year and a half negotiating a compensation package for the expansion. The mine now must rebuild the plaza, church and infrastructure destroyed for $10 million, and spend another $10 million on roads and water and sewage systems for the city. Valle said rejecting the pit's expansion was out of the question. "Like it or not, we depend on this main industry to maintain any semblance of development," Valle said.
___ Just a dirt road stands between a chain-link fence on the northern edge of the pit and San Juan de Pampa's orderly rows of houses. When former owner Cerro de Pasco Corp. started building the community in the 1960s to replace homes destroyed by the mine, it was a half mile (0.8 kilometers) from the edge of the pit. Volcan started buying up those houses when metal prices shot up in 2007. Doors and window are removed from homes already sold, their frames stuffed with cinderblocks. Still, highland peasants continue to flock to toil in the mines of such soot-choked towns. Their chief alternatives: subsistence farming or hawking goods on the streets of Lima and living in its shantytowns. A Quechua family rents a three-room home at the end of a ravaged street in San Juan de Pampa. Marilyn Huaman, 24, says all nine live off the $400-a-month pay of her father, a contract miner. Her mother, Catalina Calzada, runs a small shop out of the house. They all sleep in the same bedroom. "We only stay out of necessity because my children need to study," said Calzada, 45, noting there is no high school in their native village of Alcacocha, an hour away. Like many parents in the Cerro de Pasco area, Calzada hasn't had her children tested for lead contamination, which can cause behavior disorders, stunt growth and impair learning, according to the CDC, which was invited by the Peruvian Health Ministry to do studies. "What are we going to do about it, if we have to be here?" Calzada asks. But the tests have given other miners second thoughts about an extended stay.
Hugo Minalaya, 32, a Quechua Indian, left his village two hours north two years ago after he ran out of money to fertilize his crops. Though the shantytown where he settled sits up on a hill, dust from explosions still floods his home, and his boys, ages 7 and 1, breathe it. "After I make some money maybe I'll go somewhere else," the contract miner says. "I can't contaminate my family, especially the children." ___ Quiulacocha sits on the shore of a shriveled lagoon filled with red-orange mine tailings dumped by Centromin. When the wind picks up, the community is showered with its heavy metal dust. "We can no longer grow lettuce or shiri potato in the yard," says sheepherder Raul Herrera. Tailings are an inevitable byproduct of mining and, under sound environmental practices, are typically diluted in ponds far from residential areas. Once full, the ponds are supposed to be filled with topsoil and re-vegetated. Centromin -- now defunct -- left scores of untreated tailings ponds across Peru's Andes. A few hundred yards behind Quiulacocha, Volcan is dumping its tailings in a second slurry pond it built in 1999 with mining ministry approval. Residents say at least 20 sheep have died drinking from that pond. They blocked the highway into town to protest. Volcan spokesman Luis Pariona says only one sheep died, and the family was compensated. The company is doing its best to manage the mess Centromin left, he added. That's little consolation for Primitivo Condeza, 47, who guides his flock of sheep and alpaca down a rocky hill behind the village, his 12-year-old son Wilder shuffling silently behind. He's got four kids and says doctors have confirmed that all suffer from chronic lead contamination. "The contamination has taken away his memory," Condeza says, gazing at Wilder. "Year after year I put him in school, but he's still in the first grade. He should be done by now."
[Associated
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