“We feel the Division of Water Quality withdrew that water quality certificate more out of frustration with the ongoing judicial hearing than because of any real reasons for lack of information,” Len Strong, vice president of the High Rock Lake Association, told the Dispatch. “The information that they’re (state) claiming wasn’t there in fact was there … two years ago. Alcoa made that information totally available to our board as well as to the general public. But the state is claiming, ‘oh we didn’t know.’ So our feeling is this was a political maneuver.”
Strong later added, “There is a gut issue here. More delays means that all of those agreements relative to shoreline management, relative to water levels and so on, are up in the air and not really enforceable. We feel the lack of having that relicensing agreement is depriving all of the property owners and stakeholders from those agreements they worked so hard to get.”
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