VIRGINIA, Minn. – The shortest distance between two points is about to vanish into a pit mine.
Half a century ago, Minnesota built a highway through the Iron Range, across land it didn't own, directly over an iron deposit. Now, the mining company needs access to that ore and the state needs to reroute a four-lane highway, fast.
Hwy. 53 links Duluth to International Falls. It binds the Quad Cities of the Iron Range — Virginia, Eveleth, Gilbert, and Mountain Iron — together. It carries weary travelers up to Bill Aho's door.
"You sever that, you cut me off," said Aho, who owns a Super 8 Motel in Eveleth and an AmericInn Lodge in Virginia, just off the highway on opposite sides of the future mine site. Like others in the region, he's been waiting and worrying over the highway relocation for years. Without Hwy. 53, he said, "We would be shut off. It would be devastating."
The state has until 2017 to build an alternate route for the estimated 24,000 travelers who cross this short stretch of road every day. But four years into the process, it's still trying to figure out how.
Options range from building the tallest bridge in Minnesota over some of the hardest rock on the planet to letting the highway dead-end at the mine. None of the proposed alternatives is easy and none would be cheap.
The state took the cheap, easy route in 1960, when it cut a deal with the local mining companies to lease the stretch of land leading into Virginia instead of buying it outright. For five decades, the state got free use of the land while the property owners focused on iron deposits that were bigger and richer than the low-grade taconite under all that asphalt.
But now, with older mines played out, the taconite under the roadway is worth hundreds of millions of dollars and mining it could extend the life of an operation that employs 514 people.