Speedway gas stations got permission to leave their fuel pumps unattended. The University of Minnesota can skip the weekly inspections that ensure containers of hazardous waste aren't leaking. A large hog operation in Sleepy Eye, Minn., was OK'd to stock more pigs in its barns than its permits allow.
These permit holders are among scores granted relief as state pollution regulators ease up on environmental safeguards during the COVID-19 pandemic. But the Minnesota Pollution Control Agency (MPCA) also said no to requests from mining companies and petrochemical refineries.
So far, the MPCA has granted nearly 430 emergency requests to ease or delay compliance, and rejected seven, according to data the MPCA is posting on its website for the purpose of transparency.
The MPCA nixed a request from PolyMet Mining Corp. to defer monitoring surface water and groundwater at the leaking tailings basin on the Iron Range where it wants to build the state's first copper-nickel mine, as well as a separate request to defer monitoring of nearby wetlands.
Also denied were requests from Mesabi Metallics Co., Randy's Sanitation Inc., St. Paul Park Refining Co., Savannah Meadows Wastewater Treatment Plant and Western Refining Terminals LLC.
The data suggests the case-by-case program has not become a pollution free-for-all. The waivers represent a small fraction of the 84,000 facilities the agency permits.
MPCA Assistant Commissioner Katrina Kessler said that to get approval, compliance problems had to be related to the pandemic and a waiver couldn't result in impacts to human health or the environment. All the temporary allowances have end dates.
"Generally, the majority of the requests have been administrative in nature: a delay in reporting, a delay in submitting monitoring results or a delay in submitting annual reports," Kessler said in an interview. They don't involve raising limits on pollutant discharges, for example.