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Thursday, November 30, 2023

Administrative law judge finds and concludes against Polymet on mining waste risk. The DNR head receives the ALJ's recommendation.

 The Agency head can accept or overrule the ALJ. The hearing resulted in a 40 page opinion. If accepting its recommendation, the DNR head would not have to say much beyond it being well reasoned and correct. To overrule it some fault in the analysis or fact finding would need to be pointed out. 

The above is true, since either side will put a final DNR ruling into litigation. So, this is a positive step to environmental advocates, a defeat for Stauber and his mining minions.

The opinion: https://mn.gov/oah/assets/2004-37824-northmet-dnr-permit-mine-report_tcm19-601732.pdf

In a nutshell, the opening two pages summarize things:


 
click the images to enlarge and read

It is the DNR's Reactive Mine Waste Rule which is adjudicated, so in the final conclusion the ALJ recommends to the DNR Commissioner, no one else:

IV.
Conclusion Based on the foregoing, the Commissioner should find that PolyMet’s proposed bentonite amendment is not a workable practical reclamation technique and does not satisfy the requirements of Minnesota’s Reactive Waste Rule. As a result, the Commissioner should DENY a permit for the NorthMet Project.
J. E. L.

While politicians may advocate or straddle the issue, the DNR Commissioner is on the hot seat do decide what is best for the State, for all of the people of Minnesota, and the hope is a sagacious and clear decision with that in mind will result.

And then the lawyers litigate further starting with a Court of Appeals review of whatever final agency decision is made. Bless the lawyers, bless them all.

Will this ultimately result in a wood stake driven decisively through the heart of the Undead Beast once the Minnesota Supreme Court rules? We hope. We wait to see.


________________UPDATE________________

Polymet is a politically charged issue.  Reporting notes:

“It’s time for the Governor as well as Minnesota’s state agencies to take a hard look at whether it is time to pull the plug on the PolyMet mine project.” Paula Maccabee, an attorney for the environmental group WaterLegacy, said in a statement.

NewRange spokesman Bruce Richardson said Wednesday that the company was “reviewing the ruling and evaluating our options.” The company says it can produce copper, nickel and platinum-group metals needed for the clean energy economy without harming the environment while creating jobs for northeastern Minnesota.

Other environmental groups also welcomed the ruling. They say the risks of acid mine drainage from [disturbing] the sulfide-bearing ore under northeastern Minnesota pose unacceptable risks to the environment and human health.

The issue in this case was whether the bentonite clay liner that NewRange plans to use to seal its waste basin would adequately contain the reactive mine waste, known as tailings, and keep oxygen and water out. The judge concluded that it was not a “practical and workable” way to render the tailings nonreactive or to keep water out of them over time.

“The crux of the issue is simple: Will the method to contain the waste work? The evidence is clear, and the judge’s ruling is clear: No,” said Chris Knopf, executive director of Friends of the Boundary Waters Wilderness.

Several other major obstacles to the project also remain unresolved. [...]

Ultimately agency heads report to the governor. Walz is going to have to end his straddle. That is the political reality underlying the legal futzing. And then the courts will proceed. Hopefully Walz makes a decision of conscience. A long-term correct decision. 

McCollum is willing to shepherd a bill through Congress to protect unique natural resources and protect tribal treaty rights, however a bill proposal gets worded. The problem is that McCollum's party is not the House majority party at present, and even if it held a numerical majority, diversity of opinion could sink a McCollum proposal. That route succeeding would be a longshot, but it would be the wood stake if enacted.


Sorensen at BluestemPrairie posts two noteworthy items.

LTE of the day: loons visit everywhere in Minnesota though not on finalist flags

 

PolyNot! news digest: OAH judge recommends denial of NewRange Copper Nickel mine permit

 

__________UPDATE___________

Sorensen's post on the LTE re state flag designs leads, then ends, with this:

Loonflag
 

...........................................[snip]..........................................

Image: A loon and a star combine in submission F408 for Minnesota’s revised state flag. (Courtesy of the Minnesota Historical Society/ via St. Paul Pioneer Press, Here are some interesting and offbeat submissions for MN’s new flag and seal, by Molly Guthrey).This isn't the flag Jason recommends.

 Of course Crabgrass has an opinion.

That loon flag design is great. It is not trite, nor gutless.

As to the finalists "designs" chosen by the panel/commission/committee, whoever it was, I analogize the process to peristalsis, final product and all.


Kissenger dies.

 

search = kissenger

search = kissinger war-criminal

search = kissinger pinochet

Rolling Stone.

HuffPo.


Wednesday, November 29, 2023

Crabgrass had predicted that Trump, once officially annointed/nominated as 2024 GOP Pres. candidate, would pick SD's Guv for VP on the ticket, as a kindred soul. A recent bluestemprairie post fleshes out a dimension of why such a choice might resonate.

Sorensen posts, https://www.bluestemprairie.com/bluestemprairie/2023/11/66-year-old-guy-touted-in-september-press-release-from-sd-governors-office-might-not-be-best-freedom.html

Early item content:

Nov 27, 2023

66-year-old guy touted in September press release from SD governor’s office might not be best Freedom Works Here recruitment example

 

Bluestem last left off coverage of Freedom Works, the high-profile South Dakota worker recruitment pr campaign, with Work, We're On It: Freedom Works Here ads scrutinized, Ohio vendor swiped local idea.

Sioux Falls Live was first with that scoop.

Monday morning, South Dakota News Watch is out with more. That extended lede below inspired Bluestem's headline. More Governor Noem positive pants on fire?

'Freedom' not enough to fill South Dakota jobs: Local business leaders say there are hurdles with campaign
By Stu Whitney

SIOUX FALLS, S.D. – Bob Douglas, touted as a success story of Gov. Kristi Noem’s "Freedom Works Here” workforce recruitment campaign in South Dakota, confirmed a few things during a recent interview with News Watch.

The 66-year-old recreational vehicle salesman does enjoy freedom, it turns out. And he loves South Dakota. He plans to move to the Sioux Falls area once he sells his house in southern California, maybe as early as next spring. Douglas was referenced in a Sept. 21 press release from the governor’s office as having “recently moved to South Dakota.”

As for being heralded by the governor’s staff as an example of Noem’s $6.5 million ad campaign drawing new residents to the Mount Rushmore State, well, that’s not exactly true either.

“I wasn’t really aware of the campaign,” said Douglas, whose experience in the RV industry led to him being hired by Parkston-based Trailmanor as a West Coast representative in 2022. He was then named the company’s national sales and marketing director in April 2023, several months before the Governor’s Office of Economic Development (GOED) launched the Freedom Works Here effort.

Douglas told News Watch that politics played a role in his decision to take the Trailmanor job. He called Noem a “rock star” and added that his community of Tehachapi, about 100 miles from Los Angeles, holds rallies supporting former President Donald Trump that he and his wife, Jennifer, attend.

“Once you get out into the valley and mountains and away from the big cities, you’ll find a whole lot of people that think the way that my wife and I think,” said Douglas.

"Feel" might be a better word for the man than "think."

Yes, some might say there's a bit of grifter in all of us, but some have more, and Gov. Kristi Noem has enough to spare, or to gain Trump attention, even if a hair short of fully Trumpian grift levels herself. 

She tries.

Two searches about South Dakota set a theme.

search = money laundering South Dakota 

search = south dakota registered agent services anonymity

And, this images return page adds flavor:



Yes, you might say South Dakota is a  permissive State, one with a high threshold level of inattention, and insufficient public concern, over potential scam business practices which might add to State revenue or attract money into play.

Last representative search = bluestemprairie +gov-Noem lying grandstanding culture-war

The return list shows Sorensen has posted, others have posted, and Noem is a kindred con to Boss Trump.

What a State. What a Gov. What VP potential. 

___________UPDATE____________

Overlooked, the need to emphasize that Sorensen's cited and quoted item included THIS LINK

So linked, an item complete with a link to Guardian speculation of Noem as a Trump second spot consideration, with Trump insider Corey Lewandowski prominently mentioned as a Noem fellow traveler. Remember, if Noem makes the ticket as VP, you may have read about it first at Crabgrass, but Sorensen had posted of the possibility much earlier. July, 2022. Hat tip accordingly.