The Minnesota Pollution Control Agency has a suite of new powers to crack down on the most severe polluters, after a change in state law inspired by recent cases where regulators said the law had tied their hands.
The previous standard for an emergency shutdown of a polluting site was “imminent and substantial danger to the health and welfare of the people of the state.” Agency leaders told lawmakers that was too high a threshold.
Starting on July 1, MPCA can act when it has proof a company has falsified records, a history of violating the terms of a settlement, “chronic or substantial” violations of a permit, or is operating without a permit. Regulators could take several actions if one of those conditions are met, including revoking a business’s permit or forcing it to stop operating.
“Whether it’s Water Gremlin or Smith Foundry, we always look to see if we need new tools to protect communities and hold polluters accountable. This change will help MPCA do both,” Claire Lancaster, a spokeswoman for Gov. Tim Walz, said in an email about the new law.
Water Gremlin, a company in White Bear Township that produced fishing tackle and electric battery terminals, was fined $4.5 million in 2019 and found to have been violating air pollution rules back to 2002. A report by Minnesota’s Legislative Auditor later found that the agency missed opportunities to act before 2019.
Northern Metals operated a metal shredder in north Minneapolis that was found to have faked its emissions records after a whistleblower came forward to MPCA. That company has since relocated its operations to Becker, and is suing state regulators over what it calls unequal enforcement of pollution laws in the metal shredding industry.
More recently, residents near Smith Foundry, in south Minneapolis, accused MPCA of failing to respond adequately to years of complaints of pollution and bad smells. The EPA found in its own investigation that the business was breaking pollution rules, and last week reached a settlement with the company to shut down its casting operations over the next 12 months.
After EPA’s investigation became public late last year, many residents and activists around the foundry repeatedly asked the state to shut it down or even order a temporary pause in operations. In one community meeting, an agency official responded that MPCA didn’t have the evidence to win a legal argument for a shutdown.