Minnesota delay imperils “getting Waukesha right”

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Representatives from Great Lakes states and Canadian provinces met in Chicago to study diversion request. Image: Gary Wilson

Representatives from Great Lakes states and Canadian provinces met in Chicago to study diversion request. Image: Gary Wilson

 Commentary

By Gary Wilson

CHICAGO – I’ve long said that the Great Lakes region needs to “get Waukesha right.”

That’s the process and precedent-setting decision that will determine if Waukesha — the Wisconsin city just outside the Great Lakes basin — can have access to Lake Michigan water.

Gary Wilson.

Gary Wilson.

But a stunt by Minnesota this week could jeopardize “getting it right.”

The review process for Waukesha’s request is in the home stretch.

Representatives from the Great Lakes states plus Ontario and Quebec have been meeting in person and via webinar for weeks. They’ve analyzed, discussed, studied and modified, leaving no stone unturned as they prepare to recommend what to do to their governors who have the ultimate decision.

The best outcome would be for all the states — Ontario and Quebec don’t get a vote — to agree on a consensus that may not be perfect for every state but one each state could live with. And one that protects the integrity of the Great Lakes Compact.

How’d it go?

Swimmingly. Almost.

I attended all but one of the of the five meetings and they were impressive.

True collaboration was in the air as state officials pored over documents, parsing and clarifying phrases and definitions. Hard questions were asked and answered.

Eric Ebersberger from the Wisconsin DNR responded to every question with patience, even if it was clearly a redundant one that he’d answered minutes earlier.

Michigan’s Grant Trigger was the de facto leader for the states and he meticulously applied his engineering rigor to the issues.

Ohio’s Jim Zehringer chaired the proceedings and bent over backwards — more than I would have — to make sure every voice was heard and every position and concern were considered.

chicagoview USE THIS ONEWhile there were disagreements, there were no arguments. OK, I did see a few eyes roll on occasion, but that was the exception.

And Waukesha executives who were observing the proceedings were on their best behavior. They swallowed tough medicine when things didn’t go their way and never once rattled a legal sabre.

The process was working.

Issues big and small were resolved.   A consensus for recommending Waukesha’s request with conditions was forming.

Then comes Minnesota Wednesday with a last second curve ball.

Just before the chair was going to poll the representatives to see if there was a consensus recommendation, Minnesota representative Julie Ekman requested a week long delay in the process.

Why?

“We’ve identified areas of ongoing concern” Ekman explained in an email response. She said the recess was needed “so that our governor could review the changes that had been made to the Declaration of Findings.”

Really?

None of the “areas of ongoing concern” her governor was going to review were new. They’ve all been known for years. And one would think that throughout the weeks long process Ekman would have been keeping her governor informed on which way the wind was blowing.

While no one likes a last minute surprise to a long and arduous process, Minnesota’s request was granted. That was a charitable move by the chair as there was no basis for Minnesota’s request.

I followed up, asking Ekman why these issues of “concern” were raised at the last minute.

And didn’t Minnesota’s action put the comity and collaboration exhibited by the states, provinces, Wisconsin and Waukesha at risk?

Ekman didn’t respond before deadline for this column.

I come to public meetings on Great Lakes issues with skepticism. Too often they appear perfunctory. Outcomes are pre-determined and the meeting is simply a procedural requirement.

That wasn’t the case with the Waukesha decision.

There was nothing perfunctory about these meetings. All the right questions were asked and answered. The process was open to the point that I’ve never seen meeting participants so accessible and willing to talk to the media.

It was all positive.

Until Minnesota’s sudden last minute “concern” surfaced.

The Great Lakes region is on a losing streak with water stewardship.

The Flint and Toledo water crises cast a negative halo over our ability to manage 20 per cent of the Earth’s fresh surface water. Lake Erie’s algae problem is out of control with no solution in sight. As a region we look incompetent and clueless on drinking water quality.

In short, the region needs a water stewardship win and getting Waukesha right could be it.

Perhaps New York’s representative Don Zelazny summed it up best.

He told me his goal was to “provide a long term (water) solution for Waukesha residents” while adhering to the letter of the Compact.

That brass ring was within grasp.

Until Minnesota delayed the process.

A delay that borders on disrespect for the proceeding at best and is irresponsible at worst.

One thought on “Minnesota delay imperils “getting Waukesha right”

  1. The Minnesota representative, Julie Ekman, to the Waukesha proceeding didn’t respond to questions by the deadline last week but did today, May 16th. Here’s the response.

    “Over the course of the Regional Body’s deliberations, Minnesota has expressed particular interest in 4 main areas around the application: the proposed service area; the accountability and mechanisms to enforce conditions of the project, if it is approved; public input throughout the Regional Body and Compact Council process; and the physical and water quality impacts to the Root River and Lake Michigan. I requested a week’s recess so that I could confer with my management and Governor Dayton regarding the revised Declaration of Finding and how it addresses these issues prior to casting Minnesota’s vote on the Regional Body.
    The work of the Regional Body has been highly collaborative and thorough and I don’t believe the recess in any way puts our relationship at risk. All along the way, the members have acknowledged that each jurisdiction has its own perspectives and internal processes that must be respected.
    The Regional Body’s job is to evaluate the application and develop Declaration of Finding. The Declaration can be forwarded to the Compact Council with or without the unanimous consensus of the Regional Body members. The Regional Body is not empowered to approve or reject the project and the Regional Body members have clearly distinguished their task from the Compact Council’s ultimate decision on whether to approve the project. The Declaration of Finding will inform the Governors in their decision on the application.
    The recess provides an opportunity to review the revised draft Declaration of Finding.”

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