DULUTH – Throngs of Minnesotans turned out Thursday night to join the conversation about what could be the most contentious environmental issue the state has faced in decades — its first proposed copper-nickel mine.
An estimated 1,300 to 1,500 people braved blowing snow and low temperatures to attend a five-hour public hearing held by the Department of Natural Resources (DNR) and federal agencies to present details of a project that could define the future of the wildest and most beautiful corner of the state.
PolyMet Mining Corp. of Canada has proposed a $650 million open pit mine near Babbitt, on the eastern edge of Minnesota's storied Iron Range. It is just the first of many minerals companies lining up to tap one of the world's largest untouched deposits of copper, nickel and other such metals that lie beneath the forests and lakes of northeast Minnesota. Thursday's event was the first of three public hearings to debate the plan.
People started streaming into the Duluth Entertainment and Convention Center before 5 p.m., and the building soon had all the noise and flavor of a political convention — only this time two opposing factions occupied the same space. Signs, however, were not allowed to be posted. Most sported stickers that said either "I support jobs," or "Who Pays for Pollution?"
Brian Rebel was there to support PolyMet and represent his company, Ziegler Inc., of Minneapolis, which sells heavy equipment.
Speaking of PolyMet executives, he said, "These people know what they are doing. They are not going to do anything that would be negative in their own back yard."
But John Schmidt of Duluth said the environmental risks of a new mining endeavor are too great.
"We made a commitment that we would leave this place a better place. There are too many unanswered questions," he said.