Opinion editor’s note: Editorials represent the opinions of the Star Tribune Editorial Board, which operates independently from the newsroom.
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Eleven years ago this month, a cheerful and determined Minnesota Pollution Control Agency employee stopped by the Star Tribune Editorial Board’s office seeking support for a formidable undertaking: cleaning up a century’s worth of industrial pollution in northern Minnesota’s St. Louis River estuary and bay, enough to remove it from a national list of polluted areas around the Great Lakes by 2025.
The employee’s name: Nelson French. He’d worked for nonprofit conservation organizations before joining the state agency and taking aim at the St. Louis River cleanup.
The river’s meet-up with Lake Superior had been designated in the 1980s as an “Area of Concern,” one of 43 “highly degraded shoreline areas” along the Great Lakes in Canada and the United States. French knew that far too little progress had been made in the decades since.
Nevertheless, he was undaunted. Several key ingredients could make the difference, he told a skeptical editorial writer. Among them: a business plan to make it happen. Another: “creative financing” to tap federal, state and private dollars to fund the work.
The editorial inspired by French’s visit ran on Aug. 17, 2013. It praised the ambitious plan and expressed hope for success. At the same time, it underscored the massive challenges ahead.
French was envisioning one of the state’s largest-ever environmental remediations. And among experts, the St. Louis River Area of Concern (AOC) was often considered to be one of the most complex to tackle because of its size and because it spanned two states: Minnesota and Wisconsin.