In the Matter of the Determination of the Need for an Environmental Impact Statement for the Mankato Motorsports Park. ...

Court: Court of Appeals of Minnesota
Date filed: 2023-11-27
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                   This opinion is nonprecedential except as provided by
                         Minn. R. Civ. App. P. 136.01, subd. 1(c).

                                STATE OF MINNESOTA
                                IN COURT OF APPEALS
                                      A23-0091

    In the Matter of the Determination of the Need for an Environmental Impact Statement
                              for the Mankato Motorsports Park.

                                 Filed November 27, 2023
                                 Reversed and remanded
                                      Cochran, Judge

                                    City of Eagle Lake
                                  Resolution No. 2022-46

David M. Robbins, Marshall H. Tanick, Meyer Njus Tanick, PA, Minneapolis, Minnesota
(for relators Citizens Against Motorsports Park (CAMP), Michael Guentzel, Erin
Guentzel)

Paul Donald Reuvers, Andrew A. Wolf, Iverson Reuvers, Bloomington, Minnesota (for
respondent City of Eagle Lake)

Bradford Development, Mankato, Minnesota (respondent)

         Considered and decided by Cochran, Presiding Judge; Johnson, Judge; and

Klaphake, Judge. ∗

                            NONPRECEDENTIAL OPINION

COCHRAN, Judge

         In this certiorari appeal, relators challenge respondent’s decision that an

environmental impact statement (EIS) is not needed for a proposed motorsports park (the

project) following a remand by this court. See In re Determination of Need for Env’t


∗
 Retired judge of the Minnesota Court of Appeals, serving by appointment pursuant to
Minn. Const. art. VI, § 10.
Impact Statement for Mankato Motorsports Park, No. A20-0952, 2021 WL 1604359, at *1

(Minn. App. Apr. 26, 2021) (CAMP I). Relators argue that respondent’s determination that

the project does not have the potential for significant environmental effects is arbitrary,

capricious, and unsupported by substantial evidence because the respondent inadequately

considered (1) impacts to wildlife and (2) cumulative potential effects.          Because

respondent’s determination regarding impacts to wildlife is not supported by substantial

evidence and respondent failed to adequately consider the potential cumulative impacts

from greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions resulting from the project, we reverse and remand

for a new determination on the need for an EIS.

                                            FACTS

         Respondent Bradford Development (the developer) proposes to construct the

Mankato Motorsports Park in the city of Eagle Lake. 1 Respondent City of Eagle Lake (the

city) is the responsible government unit (RGU) charged with determining what level of

environmental review is required for the project. See Minn. R. 4410.0200, subps. 75-76

(defining “responsible government unit” and “RGU”), .4300, subp. 36.A. (requiring an

EAW for the conversion of 80 or more acres of agricultural land and designating the local

governmental unit as the RGU) (2021).

         The project site encompasses approximately 230 acres of agricultural land, most of

which is farmland but some of which contains wetlands. The project site is adjacent to the

southeastern shore of Eagle Lake, a designated wildlife lake, and is bounded on the



1
    The developer has not filed a brief with this court.

                                                2
southern side by U.S. Route 14, a four-lane highway with a 65 mile-per-hour speed limit.

CAMP I, 2021 WL 1604359, at *1. The project site is also near the Mankato Regional

Airport. The developers located the project near the airport because the project is intended

to be a “destination course.”

       The project would include a three-mile track for high-performance vehicles, a track

clubhouse, car condos, 2 associated parking lots, a hotel, and a golf entertainment center. 3

Id. The track would be a private club for members “to drive at their desired pace in order

to experience the optimal performance of their automobiles.” Id. The track also would be

available to the public during “driving events, including performance driving schools, teen

driving school, and exotic car rentals.” Id. The track would be open seasonally from April

through October.

       Because the project would convert approximately 230 acres of agricultural land to

industrial use, the project required an Environmental Assessment Worksheet (EAW) to

determine whether a full EIS is required for the project. Id.; Minn. R. 4410.4300, subps. 1,

36 (2021). As the RGU, the city was responsible for complying with the EAW process

and hired a consultant to prepare an EAW. CAMP I, 2021 WL 1604359, at *1; Minn. R.

4410.4300, subps. 1, 36. Based on the EAW and related public comments, the city council


2
 Based on the EAW, “car condos are multi-unit ‘seasonable living areas’ that include a
garage.” CAMP I, 2021 WL 1604359, at *1 n.2. While car condos are not residences, they
do provide storage for cars as well as amenities for car owners. Id.
3
  In response to comments on the EAW, the city explained that the hotel and golf
entertainment center were “no longer being considered as part of this development.”
CAMP I, 2021 WL 1604359, at *1-2. The city confirmed this position in its second
decision on the need for an EIS.

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determined that the project did not have the potential for significant environmental effects

and therefore an EIS was not required for the project to move forward. CAMP I, 2021 WL

1604359, at *2.

       Relators Citizens Against Motorsports Park (CAMP), Michael Guentzel, and Erin

Guentzel appealed the city’s initial negative declaration on the need for an EIS, arguing

that the city’s decision was arbitrary and capricious and unsupported by substantial

evidence. Id. at *1. This court concluded that substantial evidence supported the city’s

determination that an EIS was not required to address “noise impacts on humans, waste

storage and disposal, land alterations, and wetlands.” Id. But, because the city “did not

rely on substantial evidence to determine whether the project would have the potential for

significant effects on wildlife and failed to address agency and county concerns about the

potential for cumulative effects from greenhouse gas emissions,” we reversed and

remanded “for a new determination on the need for an EIS.” Id. Regarding wildlife, we

specifically noted that “the record contains no evidence about the project’s effect on

wildlife because there was no attempt to identify, survey, or catalog the wildlife in the

project area.” Id. at *7.

       Supplemental EAW

       Following our decision, the city’s consultant prepared a supplemental EAW to

further evaluate whether the project has the potential for significant environmental effects.

Below, we summarize the supplemental EAW’s analysis of the project’s potential impacts

on wildlife and the project’s potential for cumulative effects from GHG emissions.




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       Potential Effects on Wildlife

       Regarding the 230-acre project site itself, the supplemental EAW considers the

potential impacts on wildlife in very general terms and does not identify or list the wildlife

that use or inhabit the project site. The supplemental EAW notes that wildlife in the project

area may be disturbed by the construction and by “human activity and noise associated

with the proposed road course and associated development.” The supplemental EAW also

states that “[m]ost of the wildlife species in the study area already tolerate some measure

of human activity along the project corridor.” And the supplemental EAW concludes that

the project “is expected to have little effect on wildlife resources found in the project area

since the entire project is located within an existing agricultural field.”          But the

supplemental EAW reaches this conclusion without listing or identifying the wildlife

species that use or inhabit the project site.

       With regard to wildlife in the vicinity of nearby Eagle Lake, the supplemental EAW

does identify some of the wildlife species that may use or inhabit the lake.             The

supplemental EAW explains that Eagle Lake, a designated “wildlife lake,” is a shallow

lake and that “shallow lakes provide important habitat for waterfowl, other water birds,

fur-bearing mammals, amphibians, reptiles and fish,” as well as breeding grounds for

over-water nesting waterfowl. The supplemental EAW also identifies individual species

that have been known to visit or inhabit Eagle Lake in the past, using information from two

resources: (1) Department of Natural Resources (DNR) surveys of south Eagle Lake

(conducted in 2003 and 2010) and Eagle Lake as a whole (conducted in 1953, 1970, 2002,

and 2011), and (2) a U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (USFWS) “screening” of species under


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its jurisdiction. But the supplemental EAW specifically recognizes that the DNR surveys

“do not provide an exhaustive list of all species that may use Eagle Lake” because the

surveys were conducted on a single day in each of the relevant years—the most recent of

which was 2011. And the USFWS screening identifies only two migratory birds—the Bald

Eagle and the Lesser Yellowlegs—as being in or near the project area. 4

       In addition to identifying these species, the supplemental EAW discusses the

potential effects on Eagle Lake wildlife. The analysis focuses primarily on the potential

impacts to waterfowl from noise that would be generated by the project. The supplemental

EAW notes that a second sound study was conducted in 2022 “to determine the increase in

noise levels of the proposed track on Eagle Lake.” The study considered the impact of

noise from the proposed track and noise from the nearby highway. Based on the results of

the study, the supplemental EAW concluded that the increase in noise from the project

would be negligible and noise from the project “will not affect nesting waterfowl along the

lake shore.”

       The supplemental EAW also addresses the potential effects from lighting associated

with the project on wildlife. The supplemental EAW explains that the buildings and

parking areas would be lighted in accordance with city ordinances but that the driving track

would not be lighted. The supplemental EAW also notes that the project would not include




4
  The supplemental EAW stated that the Bald Eagle was most likely to be in the project
area from January through April, while the Lesser Yellowlegs was most likely to be in the
project area in March. The supplemental EAW also identified the Bald Eagle’s breeding
season as December through August.

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flashing lights or shine lights into the sky. For these reasons, the supplemental EAW

concludes that “[l]ighting is not anticipated to affect wildlife in or near the project area.”

       Lastly, the supplemental EAW acknowledges that human and vehicle traffic

associated with the project could disturb some species, leading to relocation or possibly

increased mortality for species less tolerant of the disturbances. But the supplemental

EAW nevertheless concludes that such traffic likely would not affect wildlife.

       Based on the foregoing information, the supplemental EAW concludes that the

project will not increase “known wildlife disturbances to a level that will affect wildlife on

Eagle Lake.” “Therefore, an in-depth wildlife study of Eagle Lake was not conducted.”

       Potential Effects from Air Emissions

       The supplemental EAW also considered the project’s effects on “global climate

change” primarily by estimating the project’s annual GHG emissions. After evaluating

(1) agricultural emissions data from 2008, (2) automobile emissions data from 2019,

(3) facility operations emissions data from 2021, (4) water energy estimates, and

(5) emission estimates from a similar motorsports park project in California, the

supplemental EAW estimated that the project would increase GHG emissions in the area

by 35,221.87 metric tons of carbon dioxide equivalent per year. Based on this estimate,

the supplemental EAW concluded that the project’s contribution to GHG emissions in the

area would be “negligible” in light of other development and emphasized that its

“incremental contribution to global GHGs cannot be translated into effects on climate

change globally or regionally.” The supplemental EAW did not consider whether the




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project would increase air travel to and from the Mankato Regional Airport and therefore

did not include emissions from air travel in its emissions estimate.

         Public Comments and Responses

         The supplemental EAW was published in the Environmental Quality Board Monitor

on September 20, 2022. The 30-day public-comment period ran from September 20, 2022

to October 20, 2022, pursuant to Minn. R. 4410.1700, subp. 2.A (2021).

         During the public-comment period, the city received comments from 17 parties,

including the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, the Minnesota Department of Transportation

(MnDOT), DNR, and 13 members of the public. On November 7, 2022, the city council

voted to postpone “its EIS decision” until December 5, 2022, to give the developer an

opportunity to “provide a response to all substantive comments which they have not yet

provided.” Below is a summary of the relevant comments and the developer’s responses. 5

         DNR

         With respect to wildlife impacts, the DNR expressed concerns about the

supplemental EAW’s reliance on the 2022 noise study and the DNR wildlife surveys.

Starting with the noise study, the DNR stated that the noise modeling “does not appear to

cumulate the effect of noise” from Highway 14 and the project. The DNR also expressed

concerns that the noise study did not account for the change to ambient noise conditions

throughout the year. In response, the developer stated that “[n]oise from highway and

development cannot be cumulated.” The developer also stated that “[n]oise propagates



5
    The comments from the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers and MnDOT were not substantive.

                                             8
best under inversion conditions which typically occur at nighttime and early morning

hours” and that the “[t]rack will not operate at night.” Therefore, according to the

developer, “maximum noise from the track typically is not at the same time as maximum

noise from [the] highway.”

       Regarding the Eagle Lake wildlife surveys, DNR emphasized that the DNR surveys

relied upon by the city in the supplemental EAW “illustrate a one-day visit and are not

intended to provide a full picture of wildlife use from day to day or throughout the year.”

DNR recommended that “an in-depth wildlife use study (focusing on avian use) for the

lake including nesting, migration, and other activities” be completed at “biologically

relevant times.” The developer responded by stating: “Current research indicates that noise

is unlikely to be a factor on avian use and will unlikely change the findings of the EAW.”

The developer then cited a 2012 study titled: “Population, Behavioural and Physiological

Responses of an Urban Population of Black Swans to an Intense Annual Noise Event.”

The developer did not address any other potential impacts to wildlife.

       Lastly, with respect to GHG emissions, DNR stated that the supplemental EAW

identifies the project as “a destination location for those traveling in from the local airport”

but does not quantify how much increased air traffic would contribute to the project’s

overall GHG emissions. DNR asserted that “[emissions] from airplane travel are a

significant source of [GHGs] and should be included in the analysis.” In response, the

developer stated that the “[p]roject is not anticipated to have an impact on adjacent airplane

or railroad travel and therefore these emission levels should remain static regardless of the

proposed project” but did not provide any support for this statement.


                                               9
       Members of the Public

       Comments from members of the public addressed similar concerns as those

expressed by DNR. One person with degrees in ecology and conservation biology and

expertise in “avian ecology and wildlife management” specifically commented that the

supplemental EAW erroneously excluded species that the person had observed recently in

the project area. The developer “noted” this person’s concerns.

       Second Negative EIS Declaration

       On December 5, 2022, the city council approved findings of fact and a decision on

the need for an EIS. Based on the information generated through the supplemental

environmental-review process, the city again concluded that the proposed project “does

not have the potential for significant environmental effects” and that an EIS is not required.

The city also concluded that “[a]reas where potential environmental effects have been

identified . . . will be addressed” and that mitigation measures would be incorporated into

the project design and permitting processes.

       Relators now seek review by way of a petition for a writ of certiorari.

                                        DECISION

       The city’s decision not to require an EIS is subject to review under the appeal

provisions of the Minnesota Administrative Procedure Act—Minnesota Statutes

sections 14.63-.69 (2022). Minn. Stat. § 116D.04, subd. 10 (2022); In re City of Cohasset’s

Decision on the Need for an Env’t Impact Statement for the Proposed Frontier Project,

985 N.W.2d 370, 377 (Minn. App. 2023) (noting that this court applies the standards set

forth in Minn. Stat. § 14.69 in its review of a negative EIS declaration). We may reverse


                                             10
or modify the city’s decision if it is, among other things, “arbitrary or capricious” or

unsupported by substantial evidence. Minn. Stat. § 14.69. An RGU’s decision is “arbitrary

and capricious” if it “(1) is based on factors that the legislature did not intend for the RGU

to consider; (2) entirely fails to address an important aspect of the problem; (3) offers an

explanation that is counter to the evidence; or (4) is so implausible that it could not be

explained as a difference in view or the result of the RGU’s decision-making expertise.”

Friends of Twin Lakes v. City of Roseville, 764 N.W.2d 378, 381 (Minn. App. 2009).

Stated differently, the RGU’s decision is arbitrary and capricious if it “represents [the

RGU’s] will and not its judgment.” In re Denial of Contested Case Hearing Requests &

Issuance of NPDES/SDS Permit No. MN0071013, 993 N.W.2d 627, 646 (Minn. 2023)

(quotation omitted). An RGU’s decision is unsupported by substantial evidence if it is not

supported by (1) “such relevant evidence as a reasonable mind might accept as adequate to

support a conclusion;” (2) “more than a scintilla of evidence;” (3) “more than ‘some

evidence;’” (4) “more than ‘any evidence;’” and (5) “evidence considered in its entirety.”

CARD, 713 N.W.2d at 832 (quotation omitted). The party challenging an RGU’s decision

bears “the burden of proving that its findings are unsupported by the evidence as a whole.”

Friends of Twin Lakes, 764 N.W.2d at 381.

       Relators argue that the city’s second negative EIS declaration is arbitrary,

capricious, and unsupported by substantial evidence. Before turning to the merits of

relators’ arguments, we begin by summarizing Minnesota’s environmental-review process.




                                             11
       A.     Minnesota’s Environmental-Review Process

       Minnesota requires different types of environmental review depending on the nature

of the project being proposed. See, e.g., Minn. R. 4410.1000 (projects requiring an EAW),

.2000 (projects requiring an EIS) (2021). If a project proposes to convert 80 or more acres

of agricultural land to a different use, an EAW is required.         Minn. R. 4410.4300,

subp. 36.A. An EAW is “a brief document which is designed to set out the basic facts

necessary to determine whether an environmental impact statement is required” for the

proposed project. Minn. Stat. § 116D.04, subd. 1a(c) (2022).

       By contrast, an EIS is a more “exhaustive environmental review,” required when a

project has the potential for significant environmental effects. CARD, 713 N.W.2d at 824;

Minn. Stat. § 116D.04, subd. 2a(a) (2022). An EIS provides information to governmental

units, the project proposer, and other interested parties so that they may evaluate the

project, consider possible alternatives, and “explore methods for reducing adverse

environmental effects.” Minn. R. 4410.2000, subp. 1.

       When an RGU is determining whether a proposed project has the potential for

significant environmental effects and therefore requires an EIS, the RGU must

consider: (1) the “type, extent, and reversibility of environmental effects”; (2) the

“cumulative potential effects” of the project; (3) “the extent to which the environmental

effects are subject to mitigation by ongoing public regulatory authority”; and (4) “the

extent to which environmental effects can be anticipated and controlled as a result of other

available environmental studies,” such as an EIS. Minn. R. 4410.1700, subp. 7 (2021).




                                            12
The RGU must balance all four factors when deciding whether to require an EIS. See

CARD, 713 N.W.2d at 825.

         Here, the city determined that the project does not have the potential for significant

environmental effects because: (1) the project “includes various measures to reduce

adverse impacts to the environment and existing natural resources”; (2) “there are no

known cumulative impacts”; (3) the project is subject to city, county, state, and federal

laws, and the proposer will acquire all necessary permits and adhere to them; and (4) the

project’s environmental effects “can be adequately anticipated, controlled, and mitigated,”

in light of “the results of environmental review and permitting processes for similar

projects.”

         B.     Relators’ Challenges to the City’s Second Negative EIS Declaration

         Relators argue that the city’s second negative EIS declaration is arbitrary,

capricious, and unsupported by substantial evidence because the city did not adequately

consider the project’s potential effects on wildlife or cumulative potential effects. 6 We

agree.

                1.     Wildlife

         Relators contend that the city’s determination that the project does not have the

potential for significant effects on wildlife is arbitrary and unsupported by substantial

evidence for two reasons. First, relators contend that the city made no attempt to catalog

the species in the project area and instead relied on resources that provide “mere snapshots”


6
 We treat relators’ arguments regarding the supplemental EAW as included within their
challenge to the city’s second negative EIS determination.

                                               13
of wildlife in and around Eagle Lake. Second, relators assert that the city did not

adequately consider the project’s potential effects on wildlife.      Relators specifically

challenge “the validity of the noise studies” and echo DNR’s concerns that the noise studies

“do[] not appear to cumulate the effect of noise” from Highway 14 and the project on local

wildlife.

       The city argues that it reasonably determined that the project “would not

significantly affect Eagle Lake wildlife.” The city notes that it conducted a supplemental

noise study on Eagle Lake and that this study established that the project would not

significantly affect local waterfowl, rendering an inventory of species unnecessary. The

city also asserts that its noise studies were valid and accurately modeled the cumulative

effects of noise from Highway 14 and the project on wildlife.

       In CAMP I, we concluded the city’s negative declaration on the need for an EIS was

unsupported by substantial evidence in part because the city made “no attempt to identify,

survey, or catalog the wildlife in the project area.” CAMP I, 2021 WL 1604359, at *7-8.

We conclude that the city’s second negative EIS declaration suffers from the same

deficiency. Neither the EAW nor the supplemental EAW contain a complete discussion of

the species that use or inhabit the 230-acre project site, a portion of which will be paved

over to accommodate the track, track clubhouse, car condos, parking lots, and other

elements of the project. Likewise, neither the EAW nor the supplemental EAW provide a

current or complete discussion of the species that use or inhabit Eagle Lake, a designated

wildlife lake. The supplemental EAW does list some species that have been observed in

or near Eagle Lake in the past, but it does not identify the species currently known to use


                                            14
or inhabit the area. Without knowing which species use or inhabit a project area, an RGU

cannot ascertain the “type, extent, and reversibility of environmental effects” on wildlife

in that area. Minn. R. 4410.1700, subp. 7. And without knowing a project’s environmental

effects on wildlife, an RGU cannot determine whether the project has the potential for

significant environmental effects. See id.; CARD, 713 N.W.2d at 825. Accordingly, the

city’s determination that the project does not have the potential for significant effects on

wildlife is arbitrary and not supported by substantial evidence.

       We are not persuaded otherwise by the city’s argument that it was not required to

catalog the species in the project area because the supplemental noise study suggests that

the project would not have any effect on birds residing in or near Eagle Lake. We reject

this argument for two reasons. First, the supplemental noise study focused only on the

potential effects of noise on wildlife—it did not consider other potential effects, such as

habitat loss from the construction and use of the three-mile track, the track clubhouse, the

car condos, and the associated parking lots. Second, the supplemental noise study centered

on the potential effects of noise from the project on waterfowl alone, rather than all the

species in the project area. Thus, the city’s reliance on the supplemental noise study is

unavailing.

       We also note that, while we did not expressly require the city to catalog the species

in the project area in CAMP I, we did indicate that the city’s decision on the need for an

EIS would lack substantial evidence if the city failed to “attempt to identify, survey, or

catalog the wildlife in the project area.” 2021 WL 1604359, at *7. Because the city

neglected to identify the species that use or inhabit the project area on remand, it did not


                                            15
take the necessary “hard look at the problems involved,” nor did it “genuinely engage[] in

reasoned decision-making.”        CARD, 713 N.W.2d at 832 (quotations omitted).                We

therefore conclude that the city lacks substantial evidence to support its determination that

the project does not have the potential to significantly affect wildlife and that the

determination is arbitrary and capricious. 7

               2.     Cumulative Potential Effects

       Relators argue that the supplemental EAW fails to fully address the cumulative

potential effects of GHG emissions associated with the project.               This argument is

persuasive.

       As discussed above, an RGU must consider the “cumulative potential effects” of a

proposed project when determining whether the project has the potential for significant

environmental effects. Minn. R. 4410.1700, subp. 7.B. “Cumulative potential effects” are

environmental effects resulting “from the incremental effects of a project in addition to

other projects in the environmentally relevant area” that may affect the same resources.

Minn. R. 4410.0200, subp. 11a (2021). This criterion “put[s] the proposed project into

context . . . to determine whether the project, which may not individually have the potential


7
  We acknowledge that no statute or rule requires an RGU, in the context of an EAW, to
undertake the type of in-depth wildlife study that the DNR requests. But our decision is
based on the city’s failure to undertake any effort to identify the species that currently use
or inhabit the project site itself. It is also based on the fact that the city’s effort to identify
species that currently use or inhabit adjacent Eagle Lake was minimal at best. On remand,
we defer to the city to determine how best to identify the species that use or inhabit the
project area. While the city may choose to conduct an in-depth wildlife study, we
acknowledge that there may be other methods of identifying species short of an in-depth
study that would allow the city to properly assess the “type, extent, and reversibility of
environmental effects” on wildlife in the project area. Minn. R. 4410.1700, subp. 7.A.

                                                16
to cause significant environmental effects, could have a significant effect” in light of other

existing or future projects. CARD, 713 N.W.2d at 829.

       In CAMP I, we concluded that the city’s determination that the project would not

have any significant cumulative effects was arbitrary and capricious because the city failed

to address the project’s potential for cumulative effects from GHG emissions. CAMP I,

2021 WL 1604359, at *1, 11. In response to our decision, the supplemental EAW includes

a discussion of GHG emissions. The supplemental EAW estimates that the project would

increase GHG emissions in the area by 35,221.87 MTCO2e per year. But the supplemental

EAW’s estimate does not include anticipated GHG emissions from visitors who arrive by

plane, even though the project includes a “destination course,” intentionally located near

the Mankato Regional Airport.

       The city’s decision not to consider emissions from air travel appears to be based on

the city’s conclusion (set forth in its response to comments) that the project would not

“have an impact on adjacent airplane . . . travel.” There is no evidence in the record to

support this conclusion. Indeed, the only relevant evidence in the record supports the

contrary conclusion. The supplemental EAW explains that the project “needed to be near

the Mankato Regional Airport” because it would be a “destination course.” The only

reasonable conclusion from this statement is that the project would increase regional air

travel because at least some patrons would reach the project through the Mankato Regional

Airport. By declining to consider how regional air travel to the project would affect the

project’s overall GHG emissions, the city “entirely fail[ed] to address an important aspect

of the problem” and ignored evidence in the record. Friends of Twin Lakes, 764 N.W.2d


                                             17
at 381. We therefore conclude that the city’s analysis of the potential GHG emissions

associated with the project is arbitrary, capricious, and not supported by substantial

evidence.

       In conclusion, because the city failed to adequately consider which species use or

inhabit the project area and ignored an important source of GHG emissions from the

project, the city’s determination that the project does not have the potential for significant

environmental effects is arbitrary, capricious, and not supported by substantial evidence.

Accordingly, we conclude that the city’s negative EIS declaration is arbitrary and

capricious, and we reverse and remand for a new decision on the need for an EIS. We

again express no opinion about whether an EIS is required.

       Reversed and remanded.




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