Lake Calhoun is back on the map.
The state Court of Appeals ruled Monday that former Department of Natural Resources Commissioner Tom Landwehr lacked authority last year to change the name of the lake to Bde Maka Ska (White Earth Lake), so the lake's name legally remains Calhoun.
Erick Kaardal, a lawyer representing "Save Lake Calhoun," a group that opposed renaming the lake, called the decision "a win for holding the system accountable." He added: "We don't have to pronounce Bde Maka Ska."
But then again, maybe we will. Minneapolis Park and Recreation Board President Brad Bourn said in a statement Monday that the lake was called Bde Maka Ska for generations before white settlers, he said, "stole it" from the Dakota.
Minneapolis Park Board members said they have no intention of honoring the decision, and some legislators are already pushing for a vote to allow the Dakota name to stay. That vote could come in the House as early as Tuesday.
The court's ruling is pinned on a 1925 law which it said "unambiguously, denies authority for the DNR to change the name of a lake which has existed for 40 years."
Lake Calhoun was referred to as such in writings dating to the early 1820s. The court ruled that only the Legislature can change the name after four decades.
Gov. Tim Walz deferred comment on the ruling to the DNR, which issued a statement saying it has 30 days to decide whether to ask the state Supreme Court to review the decision. In the meantime, it said, the lake's name in federal documents remains Bde Maka Ska, pronounced beh-DAY mah-KAH skah.