North Minneapolis residents are breathing easier for the first time in a decade after a metal shredder linked to years of air pollution ceased operation last week.
Scrap metal and car parts are still piled high at the Northern Metal Recycling facility in north Minneapolis, where the company is allowed to run a junkyard. But the company shut down its shredder Monday as part of a legal settlement in which it also admitted altering and improperly recording the performance of its pollution filters.
While neighbors cheered the end of their long struggle to close down the shredder, they questioned whether the company will face any more consequences for its long record of pollution violations. Residents and at least two lawmakers support a criminal investigation.
Channy Leaneagh, a north Minneapolis resident, said her daughter spent two weeks at home with asthma problems because of dirty air. She said it's been like this for the past five years, making it "treacherous" to walk through heavy pollutants to find green space where her two kids can play.
"It's been really frustrating for the community, because people that live around here know the scent of shredded metal," said Leaneagh, the lead singer of the popular band Poliça. "Anyone that lives with it on a daily basis knows it's a heavy, putrid smell."

After years of pollution violations and neighborhood pressure, Northern Metal was slated to close the shredder by Aug. 1. A Ramsey County judge gave the company a reprieve while it finished its new facility in Becker, Minn.
Altered pollution records
Then a whistleblower who worked for Northern Metal came forward in August and revealed the altered pollution records. With last week's settlement, the company agreed to additional monitors and reports for its pollution control equipment when it opens in Becker. The company must also pay $200,000 to the Minnesota Pollution Control Agency.
In a statement, Scott Helberg, chief operating officer of Northern Metal, said the Becker facility will employ 85 people and "set the benchmark for sustainability and environmental protection for the recycling industry in the state and the nation." The company declined to comment on Minneapolis residents' criticisms.