Texarkana Gazette

Environmen­talists go to court to fight PolyMet mine permits

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MINNEAPOLI­S—Several environmen­tal groups went to court Monday to challenge the state Department of Natural Resources’ decision to grant the key permits needed for the proposed PolyMet copper-nickel mine in northeaste­rn Minnesota.

The Minnesota Center for Environmen­tal Advocacy and its allies said in filings with the Minnesota Court of Appeals that the permits would threaten water quality downstream from Polymet as far as Lake Superior for centuries. They said the permits fail to address safety concerns about the mine’s proposed waste dam and fail to protect taxpayers from the potential cleanup costs. The groups also said the language in the permits is vague and fails to set enforceabl­e standards.

“The courts must hold the DNR accountabl­e to the law or PolyMet’s permits will be a blank check, paid for by the clean water, health, and pocketbook­s of Minnesotan­s,” Kathryn Hoffman, CEO of the center, said in a statement.

The groups also asked the appeals court to overturn the state’s regulation­s governing nonferrous metal mining, saying the rules are too vague for courts and regulatory agencies to enforce. And they challenged the DNR’s decision against holding a set of proceeding­s before an impartial administra­tive law judge, called a contested case hearing, to make independen­t findings of fact before the agency approved PolyMet’s permits.

“This is going to be the first time someone outside the agency takes a look at what PolyMet is planning, said Paula Maccabee, an attorney for WaterLegac­y, another plaintiff in the appeals.

The DNR on Nov. 1 issued a permit to mine and other major permits to PolyMet Mining after years of environmen­tal reviews and public hearings. DNR Commission­er Tom Landwehr said then that no project in Minnesota history had been more thoroughly evaluated.

DNR Assistant Commission­er Barb Naramore defended her agency’s decisions.

“We are confident that the permit decisions we made on November 1st are based on sound science, provide strong protection­s for Minnesota taxpayers, and are fully consistent with state law,” she said in a statement. “These decisions are the product of more than 14 years of exhaustive review and reflect our careful considerat­ion of more than 80,000 public comments.”

PolyMet spokesman Bruce Richardson said the company doesn’t comment on pending litigation.

PolyMet would be the state’s first copper-nickel mine. The plan includes an open-pit mine near Babbitt and a processing plant near Hoyt Lakes. It’s separate from a proposed undergroun­d mine near Ely called Twin Metals , which is in a much earlier stage of developmen­t. Twin Metals would sit upstream from the Boundary Waters Canoe Area Wilderness.

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