A photo of wild rice, wild blueberries and a jar of maple syrup flashed onto a large screen in a conference hall.
Pointing up at it, Thomas Howes, natural resources program manager for the Fond du Lac Band of Lake Superior Chippewa, said these were some of his tribe's traditional sustenance at risk from mining runoff. And it's personal.
"This is literally the composition of my daughter's first solid meal," Howes said.
It was a poignant moment in an otherwise technical U.S. Army Corps of Engineers hearing ending Thursday about whether mercury and other pollutants from PolyMet Mining's proposed $1 billion copper-nickel project in northeast Minnesota would affect the downstream Fond du Lac Band.
It's rare for a tribe to challenge a wetlands destruction permit as a downstream state, but in this case the tribe has a significant ally: the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA).
The PolyMet mine project, which would be Minnesota's first hard-rock mine, has already stalled with major permits under review or in litigation. The dredge-and-fill permit that is at issue is suspended.
The EPA recommended during the hearing that the Army Corps of Engineers not reinstate the wetlands permit. The EPA, acting as a science adviser to the Corps, said there are "no conditions" that could be put on the wetlands permit to ensure mine discharge would comply with the tribe's water-quality requirements, as the law requires.
The mine would be a "significant potential source of mercury" to the St. Louis River watershed, said Tera Fong, director of the Water Division at EPA Region 5 in Chicago.