{"status": "ok", "message": "Success!", "html": "\u003Cp\u003EI'm a professional geologist and geophysicist with a mining, oil and gas, and environmental background. I'm also a volunteer member of the board of directors of the Southern Alberta Chapter of the Canadian Parks and Wilderness Society. In my personal and technical opinion, I believe that the Canadian Zinc Corporation's partially developed lead/zinc/silver mine on Prairie Creek needs to be decommissioned, as its future operation and the potential breach of its tailings pond, pose hazards to humans and to the environment. Several years ago, I visited Nahanni National Park, on a geology field trip, and marvelled at the Grizzly Bear and Dahl Sheep populations that I saw. While in Nahanni, I stayed in the trailer camp at the lead/zinc/silver mine, and viewed, first-hand, the tailings pond associated with this industrial development within a national park. The Nahanni River watershed, with its numerous side-tributaries is prone to catastrophic flash floods down canyons like Prairie Creek. Historically, these flash floods have caused environmental destruction (a natural phenomenon, in this case) and the loss of human life. In my personal and technical opinion, a breach of the Canadian Zinc Corporation's tailings pond on Prairie Creek would be catastrophic and would 1) present a risk to humans involved in recreation on Nahanni River, and 2) would inflict environmental damage on the Nahanni River and the Nahanni River Watershed, including areas downriver. \u003C/p\u003E\u0026nbsp;"}