An October 2022 Google image showing the Bulmahns' farm at right and the site of the planned Exurban smelter at left behind the trees. | Google Streetview[/caption]
Owners of a farm across the road from a planned e-scrap smelter in Indiana filed a lawsuit seeking to halt the project, arguing that a facility of its type isn't allowed by the local zoning code.
The dispute centers on metals recycling startup Exurban USA's plan to build a smelter and refinery in Fort Wayne, Ind. The facility, estimated to cost at least $350 million, would take in scrap circuit boards and other metals-bearing scrap and produce purified metals.
A company co-founder told E-Scrap News in May the goal is to provide a low-carbon, domestically available circular economy option for the industry.
But the Bulmahn family isn't keen on the project, which was approved by the Fort Wayne Plan Commission on Oct. 17.
Owners of a 57-acre farm across Paulding Road from the proposed site, the Bulmahns filed a lawsuit on Nov. 10 in an Allen County court asking a judge to nix the plan commission's approval. The lawsuit was filed by David Bulmahn and his father and mother, Ronald and Janet Bulmahn, against the Fort Wayne Plan Commission, the Fort Wayne Department of Redevelopment, Exurban USA and Exurban Indiana LLC.
In their petition for judicial review, the Bulmahns argue that the facility does not meet the definition of a "recycling processing facility" allowed in the I2 General Industrial zone, which applies to the 76-acre property in question. They claim the zoning law limits "recycling processing facilities" to those more akin to a materials recovery facility (MRF) that handles paper and packaging from households.
The Bulmahns also argue that the smelter will greatly reduce the value of their farmland, which the family has owned and worked for about 150 years.
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An October 2022 Google image showing the Bulmahns' farm at right and the site of the planned Exurban smelter at left behind the trees. | Google Streetview[/caption]
Owners of a farm across the road from a planned e-scrap smelter in Indiana filed a lawsuit seeking to halt the project, arguing that a facility of its type isn't allowed by the local zoning code.
The dispute centers on metals recycling startup Exurban USA's plan to build a smelter and refinery in Fort Wayne, Ind. The facility, estimated to cost at least $350 million, would take in scrap circuit boards and other metals-bearing scrap and produce purified metals.
A company co-founder told E-Scrap News in May the goal is to provide a low-carbon, domestically available circular economy option for the industry.
But the Bulmahn family isn't keen on the project, which was approved by the Fort Wayne Plan Commission on Oct. 17.
Owners of a 57-acre farm across Paulding Road from the proposed site, the Bulmahns filed a lawsuit on Nov. 10 in an Allen County court asking a judge to nix the plan commission's approval. The lawsuit was filed by David Bulmahn and his father and mother, Ronald and Janet Bulmahn, against the Fort Wayne Plan Commission, the Fort Wayne Department of Redevelopment, Exurban USA and Exurban Indiana LLC.
In their petition for judicial review, the Bulmahns argue that the facility does not meet the definition of a "recycling processing facility" allowed in the I2 General Industrial zone, which applies to the 76-acre property in question. They claim the zoning law limits "recycling processing facilities" to those more akin to a materials recovery facility (MRF) that handles paper and packaging from households.
The Bulmahns also argue that the smelter will greatly reduce the value of their farmland, which the family has owned and worked for about 150 years.
An October 2022 Google image showing the Bulmahns' farm at right and the site of the planned Exurban smelter at left behind the trees. | Google Streetview[/caption]
Owners of a farm across the road from a planned e-scrap smelter in Indiana filed a lawsuit seeking to halt the project, arguing that a facility of its type isn't allowed by the local zoning code.
The dispute centers on metals recycling startup Exurban USA's plan to build a smelter and refinery in Fort Wayne, Ind. The facility, estimated to cost at least $350 million, would take in scrap circuit boards and other metals-bearing scrap and produce purified metals.
A company co-founder told E-Scrap News in May the goal is to provide a low-carbon, domestically available circular economy option for the industry.
But the Bulmahn family isn't keen on the project, which was approved by the Fort Wayne Plan Commission on Oct. 17.
Owners of a 57-acre farm across Paulding Road from the proposed site, the Bulmahns filed a lawsuit on Nov. 10 in an Allen County court asking a judge to nix the plan commission's approval. The lawsuit was filed by David Bulmahn and his father and mother, Ronald and Janet Bulmahn, against the Fort Wayne Plan Commission, the Fort Wayne Department of Redevelopment, Exurban USA and Exurban Indiana LLC.
In their petition for judicial review, the Bulmahns argue that the facility does not meet the definition of a "recycling processing facility" allowed in the I2 General Industrial zone, which applies to the 76-acre property in question. They claim the zoning law limits "recycling processing facilities" to those more akin to a materials recovery facility (MRF) that handles paper and packaging from households.
The Bulmahns also argue that the smelter will greatly reduce the value of their farmland, which the family has owned and worked for about 150 years.
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