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Appeals Court ruling blocks company from bottling water near Lake Superior – Superior Telegram

BAYFIELD COUNTY — The Wisconsin Court of Appeals on Tuesday (June 11) blocked a company from bottling and selling water from a private well in the Lake Superior watershed.

The ruling is the latest development in a years-long legal battle. In 2021, startup Kristle KLR was denied a county permit that would have allowed it to operate a pumping facility in Bayfield County.

At the time, opponents feared the project would allow the company to exploit a loophole in a historic agreement banning diversions of water from the Great Lake. Proponents argued that the well would access a confined aquifer that would not harm the surrounding water table, wetlands or Lake Superior.

Ice shards line the foreground as light from the setting sun casts a soft paint-like look on Lake Superior along Wisconsin Point in Superior, February 8, 2023.

Jed Carlson / File / Duluth Media Group

The company appealed the county's decision, unsuccessfully, before taking it to the local circuit court and ultimately to the court of appeals. Kristle KLR's plan faced opposition from environmental groups and the Chippewa Tribe of the Red Cliff Band of Lake Superior.

In December 2022, Midwest Environmental Advocates filed a brief with the appeals court on behalf of Lake Superior Not for Sale, an organization created to oppose “water commercialization” in the Lake Superior basin.

Rob Lee, attorney for Midwest Environmental Advocates, said in a news release that Lake Superior is an environmental, cultural and economic treasure.

“Midwest Environmental Advocates was honored to work with Lake Superior No For Sale and the rest of the community to prevent exploitation of this valuable resource,” he said.

In a statement, Jen Boulley, of the group Lake Superior Not for Sale, said the organization was “greatly pleased” that the Court of Appeals upheld a Bayfield County Circuit Court ruling that blocked the project.

Wisconsin Public Radio can be heard locally on 88.5 WSSU-FM and 91.3 KUWS-FM and on

wpr.org.

© Copyright 2024 by Wisconsin Public Radio, a service of the Wisconsin Educational Communications Board and the University of Wisconsin-Madison

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