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  LWV Upper Mississippi River Region

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PolyMet copper-nickel mine permit appeals go to Minnesota Supreme Court

4/5/2020

 
In Minnesota, more than 75 environmental and public interest non-profits have banded together to form the Minnesota Environmental Partnership.  This organization strengthens member effectiveness and builds collective power to secure a healthy environment for all Minnesotans.  MEP achieves this mission by providing forums for collaboration and offering capacity building services that make our member groups, and our coalition, stronger. They create and organize various services, including communications and capacity building trainings, meetings for our members with policy makers, news and information gathering, networking opportunities, and more.  League of Women Voters Minnesota is a member of MEP; LWV UMRR participates in MEP activities through this link.  

This blog post and the post "Line 3 Comment Period Extended" are from a March 28 MEP "Environmental Insider" email by Matt Doll, and are reproduced here with his permission.  Line 3, an Enbridge pipeline that runs through northern Minnesota is in need of upgrade and repair.  This post
 focuses on the permitting of of a proposed copper-nickel mine adjoining the Boundary Waters Canoe Area along the Canadian border. ​  
PolyMet appeal headed to Supreme Court, company on the defensive on permits
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By Matt Doll, Minnesota Environmental Partnership
Two major developments on PolyMet’s proposed copper-nickel sulfide mine in northern Minnesota were announced this week.

On Monday, the Minnesota Court of Appeals overturned the Minnesota Pollution Control Agency’s (MPCA) air permits for the PolyMet mine. The Court found that in its permit, the MPCA hadn’t adequately considered the increase in air pollution that would ensue from PolyMet dramatically scaling up its mining operation. PolyMet’s recent lans anticipate increasing its mining operation beyond what it stated when it applied for permits. It appears to be a case of PolyMet attempting to use the “foot-in-the-door” trick by securing a permit for a smaller scale of mining before asking for an increase, to which state agencies would be presumably more agreeable. The Court of Appeals decision requires the MPCA to revisit the initial air permits on these grounds.
​

Then, on Wednesday, the Minnesota Supreme Court agreed to hear PolyMet’s appeal of a January Court of Appeals decision that overturned its permit to mine and its dam safety permits. That decision requires the Department of Natural Resources (DNR) to hold a public contested-case hearing on the mine’s environmental impacts before permitting for the mine can proceed.  (CLICK READ MORE TO PROCEED)


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