Penticton Herald

Tribe files challenge to stall pipeline Company says 1,900-km line is safe, could be operationa­l within 3 months

- By The Associated Press

CANNON BALL, N.D. — Constructi­on crews have resumed work on the final segment of the Dakota Access pipeline, and the developer of the long-delayed project said Thursday that the full system could be operationa­l within three months.

Meanwhile, an American Indian tribe filed a legal challenge to block the work and protect its water supply.

The Army granted Energy Transfer Partners formal permission Wednesday to lay pipe under a North Dakota reservoir, clearing the way for completion of the 1,900-kilometre pipeline. Company spokeswoma­n Vicki Granado confirmed that constructi­on began “immediatel­y after receiving the easement.”

Workers had already drilled entry and exit holes for the segment, and oil had been put in the pipeline leading up to Lake Oahe in anticipati­on of finishing the project.

“The estimate is 60 days to complete the drill and another 23 days to fill the line to Patoka,” Granado said, referring to the shipping point in Illinois that is the pipeline’s destinatio­n.

Work was stalled for months due to opposition by the Standing Rock Sioux and Cheyenne River Sioux tribes. Both tribes argue that the pipeline threatens their water supply and cultural sites.

In a statement, Cheyenne River Sioux Chairman Harold Frazier said the water “is our life. It must be protected at all costs.”

The Cheyenne River reservatio­n in South Dakota borders the Standing Rock reservatio­n, which straddles the North Dakota-South Dakota border. The last piece of the pipeline is to pass under the lake on the Missouri River, which marks the eastern border of both reservatio­ns.

A separate court battle unfolded between the developer and the Army Corps of Engineers, which oversees the federal land where the last segment is now being laid. President Donald Trump last month instructed the Corps to advance pipeline constructi­on.

The Cheyenne River Sioux on Thursday asked a federal judge to stop the work while a lawsuit filed earlier by the tribes proceeds. Attorney Nicole Ducheneaux said in court documents that the pipeline “will desecrate the waters” that the Cheyenne River Sioux rely on.

Energy Transfer Partners, which maintains the pipeline is safe, did not immediatel­y respond in court to the filing. U.S. District Judge James Boasberg said he would hear arguments from attorneys on Monday.

The tribes’ lawsuit, filed last summer, has been on hold while the dispute over the final pipeline segment played out.

“The sanctity of these waters is a central tenet of their religion, and the placement of the pipeline itself, apart from any rupture and oil spill, is a desecratio­n of these waters,” Ducheneaux wrote.

Standing Rock Sioux attorney Jan Hasselman has said that tribe will also try to block the constructi­on in court.

An assessment conducted last year determined that building the final segment of the pipeline would not have a significan­t effect on the environmen­t. However, the Army decided in December that further study was warranted to address tribal concerns.

The Corps launched an environmen­tal study on Jan. 18, but Trump signed an executive action six days later telling the Corps to allow the company to proceed with constructi­on. Legal experts have disagreed on whether the Army can change its mind simply because of the change in White House administra­tions.

 ?? The Associated Press ?? Protest organizer Russell Mokhiber gathers the crowd Thursday at the Hancock, Md., community centre during a TransCanad­a open house to explain a proposed gas pipeline beneath the Potomac River.
The Associated Press Protest organizer Russell Mokhiber gathers the crowd Thursday at the Hancock, Md., community centre during a TransCanad­a open house to explain a proposed gas pipeline beneath the Potomac River.

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