Minnesota regulators have asked the Trump administration to provide the research from an aborted federal study about the impacts of copper mining on the Superior National Forest and its Boundary Waters Canoe Area Wilderness, within 30 days.
The federal study and its materials have been kept secret in defiance of multiple demands for their release, including from U.S. Rep. Betty McCollum, D-Minn., chairwoman of a key funding subcommittee.
The U.S. Department of Agriculture abruptly canceled the Forest Service study in September 2018, after nearly two years of work, saying the analysis "did not reveal new scientific information" and was a "roadblock" to minerals exploration in the Rainy River Watershed.
What has been made public — 60 pages of redaction, with blacked-out pages that say "deliberative process privilege" in red — was released to the Wilderness Society only after it sued.
Department of Natural Resources (DNR) Commissioner Sarah Strommen requested the unreleased research in a March 10 letter to Bob Lueckel, regional head of the U.S. Forest Service in Milwaukee.
Strommen asked for "all previously prepared environmental review data and studies related to the previously proposed federal mineral withdrawal project within the Superior National Forest." That includes information on mineral resources, economic impacts and impacts to the water and wilderness and cultural areas.
The DNR "has a responsibility" to access the research, Strommen wrote, since it's charged with doing an in-depth environmental review of the copper-nickel mine plan that Twin Metals Minnesota has submitted to regulators.
The DNR stated back in 2017 that the U.S. Forest Service study would have "important implications for the people of Minnesota," Strommen wrote. "This remains equally true today."