Environmental advocates, mining company PolyMet and the state's pollution regulator sparred in Minnesota's high court Wednesday over whether a wastewater permit for the state's first copper-nickel mine should be thrown out.
At stake was whether the state would have to restart the permit process with a new public comment period, which would be a major setback for a project that's already stalled. An appellate ruling in January determined the state had to redo one part of the water permit related to groundwater, to conform with federal law.
The Minnesota Supreme Court justices focused questions on whether the Minnesota Pollution Control Agency (MPCA) erred in asking the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) in 2018 to keep its comments on the permit out of the public record. Instead of writing a public response letter, EPA officials discussed the project with the MPCA by phone.
"The EPA eventually didn't issue any comments in like the biggest mining situation ever to occur in Minnesota," Associate Justice Margaret Chutich said. "When in all of the other mining cases, there are written comments and there are responses. I mean … isn't that like a danger signal here?"
Bryson Smith, an attorney for the MPCA, responded that lower courts had failed to find a connection between that decision and the permit that was ultimately issued.
An internal report from the EPA found that that agency shirked its oversight of the project, in part because it did not submit written comments. But before the court, arguments centered on the actions and motivations of state officials.
Environmental advocates argued that the public process had been corrupted. Paula Maccabee, an attorney for the group WaterLegacy, said the MPCA ultimately didn't consider concerns from the EPA about Great Lakes water quality and other issues that later came to light.
"The court should not adopt a rule of law that lets MPCA get away with this," Maccabee told the justices.