The city of Lake Elmo has decided to withdraw from the state's case against 3M Co. over PFCs in the east metro area, dealing a second setback in recent weeks to the nearly 3-year-old lawsuit.
Instead, the city has entered an agreement to discuss issues surrounding perfluorochemicals directly with the company instead of through the courts, said Dean Zuleger, Lake Elmo's city administrator.
"We have a new City Council and a new mayor who believe in being more collaborative rather than confrontational," Zuleger said, adding that hundreds of city residents are employed at 3M's corporate headquarters campus in nearby Maplewood, and that the company maintains its Tartan Park golf course and recreational area in the city.
"We want to sit down and talk in a non-litigious way, and we're looking forward to establishing a new relationship [with 3M]."
Lake Elmo is one of four communities — the others are Woodbury, Oakdale and Cottage Grove — where PFCs were legally dumped for decades.
The family of chemical compounds was developed by 3M in about 1950 for use in consumer products until the company stopped producing and using them in 2002, although other firms continue to do so. They're still found in such things as fast-food wrappers and in products treated with Teflon, Stainmaster and Gore-Tex.
The three other cities also had been asked by the attorney general's office to join the state's lawsuit, filed against the company in December 2010, but they declined. Like Lake Elmo, hundreds of residents in those communities work at the company headquarters, and a 3M plant in Cottage Grove employs about 700 people.
The state is seeking damages from alleged harm, and potential future harm, to the environment from the PFC dumping. 3M, which estimates it has spent $100 million to clean up sites in the four communities, asserts that the compounds pose no risk to people at levels typically found.