The Trustees of Mesabi Trust announced that Richard G. Lareau, a Trustee of Mesabi Trust since 1989, will be retiring and resigning from his position as a Trustee of Mesabi Trust. Mr. Lareau's resignation as Trustee of Mesabi Trust will be effective as of the date his successor is appointed by a majority in interest of the Trust Certificate holders at a special meeting called for such purpose. The Mesabi Trustees also announced that they have nominated Robin Radke to stand for appointment by Trust Certificate holders to serve as successor Trustee to Mr. Lareau. Ms. Radke has over twenty-five years of business and legal experience, including nearly fifteen years in private and in-house legal practice. Since 2014, Ms. Radke has been Associate General Counsel at Merced Capital, L.P. Effective October 2, 2018, Mr. Richard Lareau also resigned from serving as Trustee of the Mesabi Land Trust, of which the Mesabi Trust is the sole Trust Certificate holder. Pursuant to their authority under the Mesabi Land Trust Agreement, the Mesabi Trustees appointed Ms. Radke to succeed Mr. Lareau as Trustee of the Mesabi Land Trust, also effective October 2, 2018.
Mesabi Trust is a royalty trust organized to derive income from an iron mine (the Peter Mitchell Mine) located near Babbitt, Minnesota, at the eastern end of the Mesabi Iron Range. The Trust is a pass-through entity. It operates in one segment, which is iron ore mining. The mine is operated by Northshore Mining Company (Northshore), a subsidiary of Cleveland-Cliffs Inc. (CCI). Northshore mines the ore, which is in the form of taconite, a hard rock containing approximately 21% recoverable iron, crushes it, separates the iron particles from the non-metallic, and forms the resulting concentrate into pellets which are shipped for use in steel-producing blast furnaces of customers of CCI. Northshore pays royalties to the Trust primarily based on the selling price of pellets shipped from Northshoreâs pellet plant at Silver Bay, Minnesota, on Lake Superior approximately 45 miles from the mine, plus a significantly smaller royalty based on tons of ore extracted at the mine.