Minnesota appeals court orders hearing on PolyMet permit
MINNEAPOLIS — A district court must determine if state environmental regulators improperly sought to suppress a federal agency’s serious concerns about the pollution risks arising from a proposed copper-nickel mine in northern Minnesota, the state Court of Appeals ruled Tuesday.
The St. Paul-based Ramsey County District Court must hold a hearing “as soon as practicable” on the Minnesota Pollution Control Agency’s dealings with the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency in the issuance of a major water permit for the PolyMet mine. It must report back with findings of fact, the appeals court said.
The allegations stem from a leaked email sent by a top official at the Minnesota agency to her counterparts at the EPA asking them not to file their written comments about the permit during the state agency’s public comment period on PolyMet’s application. Opponents of the PolyMet project say the state agency’s request kept the EPA officials’ criticisms of the permit off the public record.
The email was leaked last week by the union that represents EPA career staffers.