Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 113, No. 183, Ed. 1 Wednesday, February 1, 2017 Page: 4 of 46
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Cleanup begins Monday at a North Dakota encampment near Cannon Ball where Dakota Ac-
cess oil pipeline opponents have protested for months.
Cleanup begins at
protest encampment
to take weeks.”
The camp is dose to where the
Cannonball River flows into the
Missouri, a water source for mil-
lions of people, including the
tribe. Hundreds and sometimes
thousands of people have camped
there since August to protest a
pipeline that they worry will
threaten drinking water and Na-
tive American cultural sites.
The four-state, 1,200-mile
pipeline would skirt the tribe’s
reservation as it carries North
Dakota oil through the Dakotas
and Iowa to a shipping point in
Illinois. Texas-based developer
Energy Transfer Partners says
the pipeline is safe.
Standing Rock’s environmen-
tal protection agency organized
the camp cleanup with the help of
the Thunder Valley Community
Development Corp. from South
Dakota’s Pine Ridge Reservation,
which has arranged for heavy
equipment including front-end
loaders, dump trucks and skid-
steer loaders.
“We’ll be here eight to 10
hours a day all week. Then we’ll
reassess the situation,” returning
next week if necessary, said Nick
Tilsen, Thunder Valley’s execu-
tive director.
People who still have not left
the camp are helping, bringing
the total on the job to about 100,
said Tilsen, who is among the
workers. Cost of the cleanup
isn’t yet known, but the tribe will
use money from the $6 million
in donations it has received to
support its pipeline fight, Ar-
chambault said.
The tribe hasn’t asked for
help from the state or Morton
County.
Republican Gov. Doug Bur-
gum, who has traveled to the
Standing Rock Sioux Reserva-
tion twice in the past week to be
briefed about the situation, is-
sued a statement saying the
cleanup is “an important step to-
ward addressing the safety and
environmental risks posed by
imminent flooding.”
By Blake Nicholson
Associated Press
BISMARCK, N.D. - Cleanup
of a North Dakota encampment
where opponents of the Dakota
Access oil pipeline stayed for
months to protest the $3.8 billion
project is expected to take weeks,
a leader of the tribe that organized
the protest said Tuesday.
The Standing Rock Sioux
hopes to complete the work be-
fore any spring floodwaters from
the Cannonball River can wash
debris into the Missouri River —
the very waterway pipeline op-
ponents are working to protect.
The camp has seen an exodus in
recent weeks due to winter
weather, pipeline work being
stalled and the tribe’s recent call
for people to leave.
Protesters have left behind not
just trash, but tents and even cars.
“There’s more than anticipat-
ed, and it’s under a lot of snow,”
Tribal Chairman Dave Archam-
bault said. “I wouldn’t say it’s go-
ing to get done in days; it’s going
Senator: Army Corps told to
approve pipeline easement
BISMARCK, N.D. (AP) -
The Army Corps of Engineers
was ordered to allow construc-
tion of the Dakota Access pipe-
line to proceed under a disput-
ed Missouri River crossing,
North Dakota Sen. John Hoe-
ven said on Tuesday, the latest
twist in a months-long legal
battle over the $3.8 billion pro-
ject.
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The Standing Rock Sioux,
whose opposition to the project
attracted thousands of support-
ers from around the country to
North Dakota, immediately
vowed to again go to court to
stop it.
Hoeven announced late
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Tuesday that the acting Secre-
tary of the Army, Robert Speer,
had directed the Army Corps of
Engineers to “proceed” with an
easement necessary to complete
the pipeline. Hoeven said he also
spoke with Vice President Mike
Pence, just a week after Presi-
dent Donald Trump signed an
executive order signaling his
support for the project.
A spokesman for the U.S.
Army did not immediately re-
spond to requests for comment
Tuesday night. Hoeven spokes-
man Don Canton says that
Speer’s move means the ease-
ment “isn’t quite issued yet, but
they plan to approve it” within
days.
James MacPherson/AP
Signs are displayed Jan. 25 in the bitter weather at an en-
campment near Cannon Ball, N.D., to protest the Dakota Ac-
cess pipeline.
then-President Barack Oba-
ma’s administration of delay-
ing the matter until he left of-
fice. Two days before he left the
White House, the Corps
launched a study of the cross-
ing that could take up to two
years to complete.
President Donald Trump on
Jan. 24 — just four days after he
took office — signed an execu-
tive action telling the Corps to
quickly reconsider the Dec. 4 de-
cision.
The company appears poised
to begin drilling under the lake
immediately. Workers have al-
ready drilled entry and exit holes
for the Oahe crossing, and the
company has put oil in the pipe-
line leading up to the lake in an-
ticipation of finishing the pro-
ject, its executive vice president
Joey Mahmoud said in court
documents filed earlier this
month.
Hundreds and at times thou-
sands of pipeline opponents
who have dubbed themselves
“water protectors” have camped
on federal land near the crossing
site since last August, often
clashing with police and
prompting more than 625 ar-
rests. The camp’s population has
thinned to fewer than 300 due
to harsh winter weather and a
plea by Standing Rock Chair-
man Dave Archambault for the
camp to disband before the
spring flooding season.
“This is a good
indicator of what
this country is going
to be up against in
the next four years.
So America has to
brace itself ”
— Standing Rock Chairman
Dave Archambault
“If it does become a done deal
in the next few days, we’ll take it
to the judicial system,” Archam-
bault said. He added: “This is a
good indicator of what this
country is going to be up against
in the next four years. So Amer-
ica has to brace itself”
The developer, Texas-based
Energy Transfer Partners, says
the pipeline would be safe.
An environmental assess-
ment conducted last year de-
termined the crossing would
not have a significant impact
on the environment. However,
then-Assistant Army Secretary
for Civil Works Jo-Ellen Darcy
on Dec. 4 declined to issue an
easement, saying a broader en-
vironmental study was war-
ranted in the wake of opposi-
tion by the Standing Rock
Sioux.
The crossing under Lake
Oahe, a wide section of the
Missouri River in southern
North Dakota, is the final big
chunk of work on the four-
state, $3.8 billion pipeline to
carry North Dakota oil through
South Dakota and Iowa to Illi-
nois. President Donald Trump
on Jan. 24 called on the Army
Corps of Engineers to recon-
sider its December decision to
withhold permission until
more study is done on the
crossing.
The pipeline has been the
target of months of protests led
by the Standing Rock Sioux,
whose reservation lies near the
pipeline’s route and who have
argued that it’s a threat to wa-
ter.
The tribe has vowed to chal-
lenge any granting of the ease-
ment in court, and Chairman
Dave Archambault renewed
that vow Tuesday night.
Energy Transfer Parters
called Darcy’s decision politi-
cally motivated and accused
—
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Parks, Scott K. Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 113, No. 183, Ed. 1 Wednesday, February 1, 2017, newspaper, February 1, 2017; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1131775/m1/4/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; .