Wrap-up & Action to Take on MN State
Legislation to
Control Corporate Frac Sand Interests
Control Corporate Frac Sand Interests
We Fell
Short on our Legislative Goals but Important Progress was
Made
During the recently adjourned
session of the Minnesota Legislature, frac sand provisions were passed and
signed into law, but they did not include a moratorium or a hard setback from
trout streams. The provisions were part of the Omnibus Environment and Agriculture Finance
bill signed by Governor Mark Dayton this week.The Senate floor vote
on a setback from trout streams for frac sand mines ultimately did not happen.
Before the vote could happen, Gov. Dayton met with industry representatives and
withdrew support for a hard setback of a mile. After that, legislative leaders,
industry representatives and state agency representatives developed provisions
short of that, which were eventually added into the omnibus bill. (Details on those provisions are
below.)
We called for legislation that put
rural communities before corporate profits. We started the legislative
session calling for a comprehensive approach to the threat the frac sand
industry poses to southeast Minnesota. We called for an in-depth study that
would be used to establish strong state-level regulations and appropriate fees
and taxes. We wanted a moratorium to be in place while the study was being
conducted and regulations adopted. This approach would also keep local control
strong, allowing local government to keep their right to set stronger controls
if they felt they were necessary
We had a big impact at the
Capitol. LSP members and others packed hearing rooms. At the first
three hearings, the rooms were filled to capacity with more supporters in
overflow rooms. Literally busloads of southeast Minnesotans and others were at
the Capitol to demand strong action. We garnered front page coverage in the
Star Tribune, the
Winona Daily News, the Winona
Post, Red Wing Republican Eagle, the Rochester
Post-Bulletin and many other papers time and time again. The Winona Daily News and
Star Tribune weighed in with
editorials in favor of what we were working for. Dozens of letters to the
editors from around the region were published.
The movement to control frac sand
mining was strengthened. Local activists from around southeast
Minnesota came together time and time again and made deeper connections on bus
rides to the Capitol. The Land Stewardship Project, Save the Bluffs, Houston
County Protectors, Winona Area Citizens Concerned About Silica Mining, Minnesota
Trout Unlimited, Friends of Wabasha, Audubon Minnesota and others worked as an
effective and unified coalition. The new documentary The Price of
Sand was shown to crowds who moved from education to
action.
Sen. Matt Schmit of Red Wing took
up this cause with us. Sen. Schmit authored legislation that put a
comprehensive approach forward, incorporating all the elements of what we
wanted. Sen. Schmit pushed to the end to get as much passed as possible. Without
his leadership, it is likely that no meaningful legislation would have passed.
All the other legislators from the heart of southeast Minnesota — Sen. Jeremy Miller (Winona), Rep. Greg
Davids (Preston), Rep. Gene Pelowski (Winona), Rep. Tim Kelly (Red Wing), and
Rep. Steve Drazkowski (Mazeppa) — all sided with frac sand interests in opposing
a moratorium, and none proposed any meaningful legislation on the
issue.
Provisions pass that can make a difference if implemented
aggressively by the Dayton administration. In the end, we did not win
the comprehensive approach that was necessary to fully protect southeast
Minnesota. Here is a summary of the most important pieces that did pass and how
they could be helpful if aggressively implemented:
- In southeast Minnesota, frac sand mines within a mile of a trout stream are prohibited unless granted a “trout stream setback permit” from the Department of Natural Resources (DNR). The DNR Commissioner testified at the legislature that a mile setback is necessary to protect trout streams. We need the DNR to be consistent and deny these permits.
- Local governments can now extend moratoriums on frac sand facilities until March 2015 regardless of how long moratoriums have already been in place. State law limited local moratoriums to two years at most and some local governments are approaching this limit..
- The Minnesota Pollution Control Agency (MPCA) must create rules to address silica dust from frac sand projects. We need the MPCA to use this authority to set an ambient air quality standard this is enforceable at the property line of the frac sand facility.
- The DNR must create rules for reclamation of frac sand mines. Among other things, this must include posting a bond so that frac sand companies that go out of business or go bankrupt don’t shift this reclamation cost onto the public.
- For two years, the threshold for environmental review for frac sand mines is lowered from 40 acres to 20 acres and the environmental review requires studies dealing with water quality and quantity, air quality and traffic impacts.
- During this two-year period, the Environmental Quality Board must update its environmental review rules to better address the frac sand industry. We need to ensure that, among other things, the new rules set strict standards on cumulative impacts and defining as one project multiple mines that will be operated or managed by the same owners.
All the provisions that passed in the bill
can be found HERE. If you have other ideas about how these
should be implemented or how they can help on the ground let us
know.
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