Floodwood-Fine Lakes Citizens Group v. Minnesota Environmental Quality Council

287 N.W.2d 390
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedNovember 9, 1979
Docket49181, 49203 and 49224
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 287 N.W.2d 390 (Floodwood-Fine Lakes Citizens Group v. Minnesota Environmental Quality Council) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Floodwood-Fine Lakes Citizens Group v. Minnesota Environmental Quality Council, 287 N.W.2d 390 (Mich. 1979).

Opinion

OTIS, Justice.

Pursuant to Minn.Stat. § 116C.57 (1976) Minnesota Power & Light Company (MPL) initiated these proceedings on March 11, 1975, by applying to the Minnesota Environmental Quality Council (EQC) 1 for two certificates of site compatibility permitting *392 the construction of two 500 megawatt electric power generating plants, one near Brookston in southwestern St. Louis County and one near Cohasset in south-central Itasca County. 2 EQC ultimately selected on its own initiative a. site designated as Floodwood/Fine Lakes (Fine Lakes). Three parties in intervention sought and obtained review in the District Court of St. Louis County, Floodwood-Fine Lakes Citizen Group (Citizens), Great Lakes Gas Transmission Company (Great Lakes), and MPL.

Opposing motions for summary judgment were made by Citizens and Great Lakes on one side and EQC on the other. On April 28, 1978 (with an amendment on July 6, 1978) the District Court held that in the' absence of criteria and standards and an inventory of potential large electric power generating plant sites, mandated by Minn. Stat. § 116C.55, subd. 3 (1976), EQC was without authority under Minn.Stat. § 116C.57, subd. 1 (1976), to designate the Fine Lakes site. Accordingly, the court declared such designation to be null and void and granted summary judgment in favor of Citizens, Great Lakes, and MPL.

On appeal to this court two parties, EQC and an intervenor, Society Concerned About a Ravaged Environment (SCARE), are joined by four parties amicus, Citizens Against Power Plant Pollution; Clear Air-Clear Water, Unlimited; Minnesota Environmental Control Citizens Association; and the Sierra Club, who seek to reverse the trial court and either to reinstate Fine Lakes as the designated site or permit EQC rather than MPL to select an alternative site. MPL seeks a mandate restoring Brookston as the designated site. Citizens and Great Lakes ask only that we affirm the trial court in holding the Fine Lakes site invalid.

We reverse the judgment of the trial court as amended by its order of July 6, 1978, and remand for further expedited proceedings limited to the issues over which we find the trial court retains jurisdiction.

Although the trial court decided the case on the narrow issue of whether or not an inventory of potential plant sites was a jurisdictional prerequisite to the EQC assuming jurisdiction in selecting a site, we feel it appropriate to comment on collateral issues which the trial court must resolve on the remand. These issues deal with the adequacy, of notice to interested parties, the conduct of public hearings, and the role of MPL, the EQC, and the trial court in specifying the site which will ultimately be selected.

The MPL is a Duluth-based utility supplying electrical power to consumers in northeastern Minnesota and Wisconsin. Pursuant to the authority vested in EQC by Minn.Stat. §§ 116C.53; .57, subd. 1 (1976), MPL petitioned EQC for a certificate of site compatibility to construct a 500 megawatt large electric power generating plant, naming Brookston as its preferred site, with an alternate site near Floodwood. Although MPL questioned the authority of EQC to select a site not proposed in its application, without a published inventory, MPL waived that objection in return for the right to enlarge the proposed plant from 500 megawatts to 800 megawatts.

On July 8, 1975, the EQC authorized the appointment of a citizens site evaluation committee pursuant to Minn.Stat. § 116C.59 (1978) and Minn.Reg. MEQC 73(b)(2)(bb) (1974). That committee was charged with the duty of evaluating eight sites proposed by MPL as well as studying additional sites which might be proposed by EQC. Contemporaneously Mr. John H. Herman was appointed as hearing officer to make findings and recommendations with respect to the merits of the various sites proposed. He conducted five public hearings between November 3 and December 16, 1975, in St. Paul, Grand Rapids, Floodwood, and Brook-ston.

The power plant siting staff on April 13, 1976, recommended as an alternative site for Brookston the Fine Lakes site here for *393 consideration. The site evaluation committee and the hearing officer ultimately supported that designation.

Nine public hearings were held between July 8 and August 13, 1976, to consider alternatives to the Brookston site. They took place in Brookston, Floodwood, and Duluth. Representatives of Citizens and of SCARE attended those hearings taking opposing positions. Representatives of Great Lakes appeared at the public hearing in Duluth on August 5 and presented testimony. A memorandum outlining its concerns was presented to the hearing officer on August 27, 1976, a month and a half after Great Lakes learned of the proposed Fine Lakes site on July 13. The hearing officer kept the record open for twenty days following the conclusion of testimony on August 13,1976, to allow interested persons an opportunity to submit written testimony. Thirteen days additional time was granted for the appellant’s brief and any rebuttal briefs.

In the findings filed by the hearing officer on September 24,1976, he described the 800 megawatt electric power generating plant as consisting of a large block type structure approximately 270 feet in height serviced by railroad spurs, switching yards, coal train unloading equipment, coal storage areas, transmission lines, air and water quality control systems, solid waste disposal ponds, and mechanical draft water cooling towers. The electricity would be generated by steam power with pulverized coal and would consume 960,000 pounds of coal per hour. Coal would be conveyed to the site by trains containing 95 to 105 cars carrying 100 tons in each car, six or seven times a week. At full load the unit would reject about 4.1 billion BTUs per hour of thermal energy in the form of heated water. It would require a stack of approximately 700 feet in height to comply with air quality standards. Substantial acreage would be needed for on-site disposal of wastes and for setback and aesthetic purposes to insulate the plant from the St. Louis River.

The three sites discussed by the hearing officer are all located on the St. Louis River. The Brookston site is about two and one-half miles northwest of the town of Brookston on the north side of the river, the Floodwood site is about five miles west of the Brookston site on the north side of the river, and the Fine Lakes site is about five miles southwest of the Floodwood site on the south side of the river, some three miles south of the town of Floodwood.

In specifying Fine Lakes as the preferred location, the hearing officer listed the following factors as influencing his decision:

(1) Impacts of population displacement, favoring Brookston
(2) Audible and visual impacts on recreation, favoring Floodwood/Fine Lakes
(3) Geological reliability of solid waste storage, favoring Floodwood/Fine Lakes
(4) On-site aquatic ecology, favoring Floodwood/Fine Lakes
(5) Impact on avoidance areas of high voltage transmission lines (HVTL) and transportation access routes, favoring Floodwood/Fine Lakes

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Related

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785 N.W.2d 771 (Court of Appeals of Minnesota, 2010)
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474 N.W.2d 392 (Court of Appeals of Minnesota, 1991)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
287 N.W.2d 390, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/floodwood-fine-lakes-citizens-group-v-minnesota-environmental-quality-minn-1979.