The state of Minnesota will appeal a landmark ruling on the excessive pumping of groundwater around White Bear Lake, saying it is "not supported by scientific evidence" and would "immediately halt important development" within five miles of the lake.
In a written statement Tuesday underlining the ruling's potential to reach all across Minnesota, DNR Commissioner Tom Landwehr said:
"The DNR is strongly committed to protecting Minnesota's many precious water resources, including White Bear Lake and its surrounding aquifers. We take that responsibility very seriously. But responsible, effective water management must be supported by sound science."
Katie Crosby Lehmann, lead attorney in a team of lawyers that worked the case over several years' time, said in a statement late Tuesday:
"We stand by the detailed scientific evidence from the monthlong trial. As demonstrated by the [judge's 140-page] opinion, the DNR has known of the problems caused by its permitting actions since issuing its own 1998 study and has concluded that the water use in the north and east metro area is not sustainable."
The case stems from a long drought that turned much of White Bear Lake into a weedy mudhole, forcing lake owners to extend docks hundreds of feet in order to keep boating and causing the closure of a popular beach.
Heavy rains in recent years have pushed the lake several feet higher than the low point it reached in 2013. But the plaintiffs and Ramsey County District Judge Margaret Marrinan, now retired and moved to senior status, stressed that the case was not about short-term climate trends. Rather, it's the principle of state officials acting as proper trustees of public resources, including aquifers.
The DNR counters that, under the terms of the ruling, "if water levels remain below 923.5 feet above sea level in White Bear Lake, new irrigation and development restrictions would be imposed on area residents and businesses.