Austin American-Statesman

Tribe offers Dakota pipeline protesters a place to overwinter

- By James McPherson

The Standing Rock Sioux’s tribal council has voted to make tribal land available for those protesting the Dakota Access oil pipeline, though an organizer from another tribe said many of the hundreds gathered will remain on federal land without a permit.

The council voted 8-5 Tuesday to use the reservatio­n land — about 2 miles south of the large Oceti Sakowin, or Seven Council Fires, camp on U.S. Army Corps of Engineers property — so permanent structures can be built to protect protesters from North Dakota’s notoriousl­y brutal winter weather.

“The cold is coming, and the snow is coming,” tribal Chairman Dave Archambaul­t II said Wednesday.

But the offer is too late, said Cody Hall, a protest organizer who is part of the Cheyenne River Sioux tribe in South Dakota.

“Some people might move, but I don’t think the major- ity of them will,” Hall said of the camp’s population, which averages 500 to 700 people, though it sometimes swells to well over a thousand. “The (Standing Rock) tribe sat on its heels too long, and people started losing faith.”

Archambaul­t countered that it took time to identify a spot for a new encampment on the 2.3 million-acre reservatio­n that straddles North Dakota and South Dakota.

The camp, overflow from smaller private and permitted protest sites nearby, began growing in August and at one point was called the largest gathering of Native American tribes in a century.

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