WASHINGTON — Minnesota Rep. Betty McCollum introduced a bill Wednesday that would permanently remove roughly 234,000 aces of federal wilderness lands and waters from sulfide-ore and copper mining.
McCollum said her bill is an effort to treat Minnesota's iconic Boundary Waters Canoe Area Wilderness "with the same respect as the Grand Canyon" and other natural wonders.
The fate of the Boundary Waters remains a flash point of passionate debate because of nearby sulfide-ore copper mining leases granted by the Trump administration to the Chilean mining company Twin Metals.
McCollum says mining threatens to pollute the Boundary Waters with acid-runoff and destroy the tourist industry. She proposed "permanent protections for this vulnerable and fragile ecosystem."
Her legislation, co-sponsored by fellow Democratic Rep. Dean Phillips of Minnesota, carved out an exception for the removal of "sand, gravel, granite, iron ore and taconite" with Forest Service approval.
Nevertheless, the bill drew a quick, angry rebuke from Republican Rep. Pete Stauber, who represents the area and says his constituents need good-paying mining jobs.
"In northern Minnesota, mining is our past, our present, and our future," Stauber said in a statement. "For decades, we have responsibly mined under the strongest environmental and labor standards in the world ... This utter disregard for our way of life is insulting."
The validity of Twin Metals' leases is being challenged in court, said Becky Rom of the Campaign to Save the Boundary Waters.