Six months of partisan crossfire and troubling revelations about Lt. Gov. Carol Molnau's leadership of Minnesota's Department of Transportation have led to a clear conclusion: Minnesota needs a new transportation commissioner -- a nonelected, nonpartisan, respected professional in that field.
Charging the GOP governor's running mate and former legislative ally with leading an agency in which politics ought to play little or no role was considered an experiment when it began in 2003. The experiment has failed. It ought to end for Minnesota's sake -- and, arguably, for Molnau's too. A new role might give her a chance for political rehabilitation.
The partisan suspicion that has hung over MnDOT since Molnau's appointment has grown deeper since the Aug. 1 Interstate 35W bridge disaster. The situation is casting an unfortunate shadow on MnDOT's previously bright reputation for politically untarnished professionalism -- something Molnau herself lamented in an interview last week.
"I really do hate it when it becomes so political that it negatively impacts a lot of good folks" in her agency, she said. She did not acknowledge, but should, that as long as someone in line to be the state's next governor sits in the commissioner's office, a barrage from political opponents will just keep coming.
Some DFL complaints about Molnau's MnDOT service smack of overreach. For example, attempts to tie her decisions directly to the collapse of the Interstate 35W bridge remain mostly rooted in speculation.
But Molnau has given her foes real ammunition, too:
• On her watch, the agency experienced its first budget shortfalls in modern times. The Crosstown Hwy. 62 project was delayed for a year because funds were so short that contractors were asked to front the startup money -- and refused.
• Her decision to seek new bids on a portion of the Wakota Bridge project in the wake of a design error led to a 14-month delay and higher costs, with the original contractor still doing the job.