Once applications are complete, it can take the MPCA months to assign a permit engineer to begin the technical review process. Additionally, Minnesota requires companies to complete air dispersion reviews before work on an application can occur. In other states, such as Illinois or Iowa, permit engineers can work on the application while the modeling is taking place.
If Minnesota’s air permitting review process matched that of other states in the study, the state would see hundreds of millions in additional economic activity, according to the analysis. For example, if Minnesota’s air permitting review process was like that of Iowa, the state would see an additional $800 million in economic activity and 3,000 full-time jobs, according to the analysis. If the state’s review process was like that of Illinois or Wisconsin, it would see an additional $910 million in economic activity and 3,400 full-time jobs.
To improve the air permitting process, the analysis recommends the state make updates such as: issuing construction permits separately from operating permits; revising its approach to determining whether an application is complete; reviewing the format and organization of air permits; collecting and publishing more detailed data on air permit processing timelines; and more.
To improve the environmental review process, the analysis recommends the state update its environmental review projects database, narrow the focus of content required on Environmental Assessment Worksheets, and revise scoping requirements for mandatory Environmental Impact Statements.
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