The Protests Over the Dakota Access Pipeline Explained
What you are seeing in the news and in the print
media is an example of mob rule and not what it appears to be. Anti-fracking activists are using the public’s
misunderstandings of the Dakota Access Pipeline to paint the multi-state
project as a blight against American Indians and the environment. But
some details about the hotly contested project might dispel some of those
misconceptions.
Protesters and members
of the Standing Rock Sioux tribe have
relentlessly blasted the $3.8 billion pipeline,
arguing the DAPL’s construction would trample on tribal lands and destroy
ancient tribal artifacts. They also argue it could potentially poison
waterways, including rivers such as the Missouri River and Lake Oahe.
Here are a few pieces of information to keep in mind when considering
what to make of the pipeline’s construction.
The Tribe Never Took
Part In The Initial Consulting Process
The Army Corps of
Engineers attempted
more than a dozen times between 2014 and 2016,
according to court documents, to discuss the DAPL route with the Standing Rock. The
tribe either failed to respond to requests for consultation or dragged its feet
during the process. The Corps sent a letter to the tribe in October of 2014
with information about the proposed pipeline routes as well as maps documenting
the known cultural sites the Corps had identified.
“In addition, the letter requested that any party interested in
consulting on the matter reply within thirty days,” the U.S. District Court for
the District of Columbia wrote in August. “No response was received from the
Tribe.”
The head of the North Dakota Public Service
Commission mirrored the judge’s decision earlier, telling reporters that the tribe
had plenty of time to voice concerns before the pipeline’s construction.
Julie Fedorchak, who
serves as the chairman of the commission, told
National Public Radio in an interview Wednesday
that Standing
Rock Sioux did not participate in the nearly 30 hours of meetings held to
determine the pipeline’s southern route.
The tribe’s decision to drag its feet on the
issue is odd considering it usually does engage with the commission on other
issues, Fedorchak added. It’s also strange based on the sheer amount
of angst the project has received in recent months.
The DAPL Runs Parallel to
An Already Existing Pipeline
The DAPL runs parallel to an already existing
pipeline built back in 1982 called the Northern Border Pipeline, which already
runs through the areas currently being disputed by Standing Rock.
The Northern Border line
never received any protests or complaints from demonstrators associated with Standing Rock, according to the Federal Energy Regulatory
Commission’s Environmental Impact Statement for
the pipeline.
The Government Rerouted
DAPL Several Times To Avoid Tribal Lands
Cultural surveys conducted prior to the pipeline
receiving the approval show 91 of the 149 eligible sites contained stone
features considered sacred American Indian tribes.
The pipeline, which is expected to shuttle more
than 500,000 barrels of Bakken oil from North Dakota to Illinois, was rerouted and modified to avoid all 91 of
those areas, and all but nine of the other potentially eligible sites.
The modifications
convinced the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia to deny a motion for a preliminary injunction in September by the Standing Rock Sioux Tribe, citing
the inability of the tribe to show how the pipeline would damage the group’s
sacred ground.
The Pipeline Does Not
Cut Through Standing Rock’s Reservation
The DAPL route does not
cut through Standing Rock’s reservation — in fact, the entire area is privately
owned, meaning the route is located
several miles North of the tribe’s ancestral land.
One of the prevailing
lies: “This demolition is
devastating,” Standing Rock Chairman David Archambault II told
reporters in October. “These grounds are the resting places of our ancestors.
The ancient cairns and stone prayer rings there cannot be replaced. In one
day, our sacred land has been turned into hollow ground.”
The Pipeline Was Moved
Over Environmental Concerns
Energy Transfer Partners
moved the project South near the Standing Rock reservation because it was
11 miles shorter and considered less damaging to the environment, according to a report the Army Corps of Engineers. The new pipeline also cost $23 million less than the
initial route.
The U.S. Army Corps
of Engineers evaluated the Bismarck
route, eventually concluding it was not a viable
option because of the project’s close proximity to the capital’s municipal
water supply wells. The department also determined the northern route would
have made it difficult to stay 500 or more feet away from homes, a policy
required in North Dakota.
Army Corps of Engineers, in
fact, would later deem the new pipeline route crossing Lake Ohae safe in an
environmental assessment, arguing that the ETP has “developed response and
action plans, and will include several monitoring systems, shut-off valves, and
other safety features to minimize the risk of spills and reduce…any potential
damages.”
Eminent Domain Was Never
Used On The North Dakota Route
Energy Transfer Partners relied on voluntary
easements, which are non-possessory rights to use the property of a landowner
without owning the land itself, to construct the pipeline’s southern route near
Standing Rock Sioux’s reservation. Much of the land that protesters are
occupying during their demonstrations is private property owned by farmers.
Still, federal officials
are refusing to evict those hunkered down at makeshift campsites along the DAPL route. Officials
believe booting the protesters would harm free speech rights, despite
the fact that the land is privately owned.
Here we are with intentional misleading coverage about what should
be a non-issue. Yet, a mob has encroached on private property because they are
not getting their way. All based on bogus claims.
No comments:
Post a Comment