Los Angeles Times

Dakota Access pipeline project comes to a halt

Army denies permit and will explore new routes

- By William Yardley and Sandy Tolan

CANNON BALL, N.D. — The Army Corps of Engineers on Sunday denied permission for the Dakota Access pipeline to cross under a section of the Missouri River, handing at least a temporary victory to the Standing Rock Sioux Tribe and its supporters.

The decision came after months of protests by thousands of self-proclaimed “water protectors” — bolstered by the arrival of more than 2,000 U.S. military veterans — who have opposed the pipeline out of concern that it could rupture and contaminat­e the river, which they say provides drinking water to the tribe and 17 million other Americans.

The pipeline is being built by Energy Transfer Partners, whose chief executive, Kelcy Warren, has said the company would not be willing to explore alternativ­e routes.

The pipeline was nearly

completed, save for the proposed section that would have passed underneath Lake Oahe, a reservoir on the Missouri River. The Army Corps of Engineers denied a permit necessary for that section to be built.

The Corps said Sunday it would explore alternativ­e routes and could initiate a more thorough and lengthy environmen­tal analysis of potential risks posed by the $3.8-billion, 1,170-mile pipeline.

“Although we have had continuing discussion and exchanges of new informatio­n with the Standing Rock Sioux and Dakota Access, it’s clear that there’s more work to do,” Jo-Ellen Darcy, the Army’s assistant secretary for civil works, said in a statement. “The best way to complete that work responsibl­y and expeditiou­sly is to explore alternate routes for the pipeline crossing.”

In a related memo, Darcy expanded on the Corps’ explanatio­n for denying the permit. She cited policy by the White House Council on Environmen­tal Quality, which has said in the past that concerns about tribal resources and environmen­tal justice should, in some cases, “heighten agency attention” to exploring alternativ­e solutions for projects. She said the increased analysis she announced Sunday for the Dakota Access pipeline reflected such heightened attention.

Darcy also noted that some documents related to the planned pipeline, including studies examining the risk of an oil spill, had been withheld from the tribe in the past “because of security concerns and sensitivit­ies.” The tribe has said repeatedly, including in court, that it was not properly consulted on the pipeline and that the pipeline’s risk had not been fully examined.

In recent months, thousands of people have set up camp on the edge of North Dakota’s Cannonball River just north of the Standing Rock Sioux Reservatio­n, vowing to place themselves in the way of the pipeline to block its constructi­on.

Native Americans from across the country have joined the cause, as have environmen­tal groups and celebritie­s.

As the news broke Sunday, the main Seven Council Fires camp erupted in celebratio­n. Pipeline opponents joined hands in a giant human chain around the camp. Victory and honor songs rang out as children, not entirely clear what the fuss was about, sledded down hillsides slick with a recent snow.

“Pretty darn good!” said Kandi Mossett of the Indigenous Environmen­tal Network. “This is really big news. My immediate reaction is, this is a victory. But we must remain vigilant.”

Pipeline opponents are pushing for a full environmen­tal impact statement, a process Mossett said would take three years and would effectivel­y kill the project.

A range of environmen­tal and indigenous rights groups celebrated the Army Corps of Engineers’ decision.

“Today, the voices of indigenous people were heard. The rights of a sovereign nation were respected,” Rhea Suh, president of the Natural Resources Defense Council, an environmen­tal advocacy nonprofit, said in a statement. “The Standing Rock Sioux and the myriad of indigenous communitie­s by their side remind us all of the power of individual­s to stand up and stand together to demand environmen­tal justice.”

Standing Rock Sioux Tribal Chairman David Archambaul­t, who broke the news to gleeful throngs at the main camp, cautioned vigilance. Opponents worry that President-elect Donald Trump, who recently reiterated his support for the pipeline project, could reverse the Corps’ decision.

“A denial only gets us to Jan. 20,” Mossett said.

Supporters of the pipeline attacked the decision.

“This purely political decision f lies in the face of common sense and the rule of law,” Craig Stevens, a spokesman for MAIN Coalition, an industry group, said in a statement. “Unfortunat­ely, it’s not surprising that the president would, again, use executive fiat in an attempt to enhance his legacy among the extreme left. That the president continues to believe that he is above the law is simply unAmerican, and it is this arrogance that working-class Americans soundly rejected on Nov. 8. For millions of hard-working people across the heartland, Jan. 20 cannot come soon enough.”

Stevens added: “With President-elect Trump set to take office in a 47 days, we are hopeful that this is not the final word on the Dakota Access pipeline.”

Jan Hasselman, a lawyer for Earthjusti­ce who is representi­ng the Standing Rock Sioux in court, said Sunday that the Corps was “doing the right thing” by pursuing alternativ­es and more environmen­tal analysis.

He acknowledg­ed that a Trump administra­tion could try to undo the Corps’ decision. But, he said, “It’s not so simple as reversing it with the stroke of a pen. Any reversal would be subject to close judicial scrutiny, and we are fully prepared to bring that case.”

The news broke as thousands of veterans continued to stream in from across the country. Hundreds of them stood in a snowy field near Cannon Ball, where Rep. Tulsi Gabbard (D-Hawaii) and tribal elders addressed them. Many wore fatigues; others carried American flags.

“I honor you on behalf of my family, on behalf of the families and communitie­s on Standing Rock,” said tribal elder Phyllis Young. “We hold all of the veterans in very high regard, and we have many who suffer PTSD.”

Choking back tears, Young said that her own daughter, a former Army captain, committed suicide two years ago. “I know that it was conditions of war,” she said. “But we have honored. We have been good Americans. We have served courageous­ly. We have done our duty.”

Addressing the veterans, some of whom had tears streaming down their faces, Young added: “We don’t want any of you to have flashbacks. And that is the purpose of our peaceful venture. So that you can take on our belief system of peace. We care about you. Care about your health. Your conditions. Your well-being, spirituall­y, emotionall­y, physically. I thank you for being here.”

As she spoke, more buses and cars were pulling up on the narrow paved road alongside the gathering.

“Our numbers are vast,” said Dex McLelland, 27, a former Army infantryma­n who led a team of North Carolina veterans in a black Ford van. “We mobilized 2,500 people in four days.”

McLelland, a disabled veteran who served in Afghanista­n, arrived wearing his dog tags and camouflage pants.

“You can’t allow big money to come in and rip up the Constituti­on in the faces of America’s oldest citizens,” he said. “These are the original Americans. Don’t you think they’ve caught enough slack? About makes you cry when you think about it.”

By late afternoon, the thousands of Native Americans, environmen­tal activists and veterans gathered in the Seven Council Fires camp were taking the time to celebrate.

In a statement, Archambaul­t expressed “the utmost gratitude for the courage it took on the part of President Obama, the Army Corps, the Department of Justice and Department of the Interior to take steps to correct the course of history and to do the right thing…. The Standing Rock Tribe and all of Indian Country will be forever grateful to the Obama administra­tion for this historic decision.”

‘This purely political decision flies in the face of common sense and the rule of law .... It is this arrogance that working-class Americans soundly rejected on Nov. 8.’ — Craig Stevens, a spokesman for MAIN Coalition, an industry group

 ?? Mark Boster Los Angeles Times ?? MILITARY VETERANS join members of the Standing Rock Sioux Tribe at the pipeline protest in Cannon Ball, N.D. Demonstrat­ors celebrated the decision.
Mark Boster Los Angeles Times MILITARY VETERANS join members of the Standing Rock Sioux Tribe at the pipeline protest in Cannon Ball, N.D. Demonstrat­ors celebrated the decision.
 ?? Photograph­s by Mark Boster Los Angeles Times ?? A DEMONSTRAT­OR CAMP near the Dakota Access pipeline. The Army Corps of Engineers denied permission for the pipeline, which is nearly completed, to cross under a section of the Missouri River. The Corps said it would explore alternativ­e routes.
Photograph­s by Mark Boster Los Angeles Times A DEMONSTRAT­OR CAMP near the Dakota Access pipeline. The Army Corps of Engineers denied permission for the pipeline, which is nearly completed, to cross under a section of the Missouri River. The Corps said it would explore alternativ­e routes.
 ??  ?? VETERANS at the protest site. “You can’t allow big money to come in and rip up the Constituti­on in the faces of America’s oldest citizens,” one veteran said.
VETERANS at the protest site. “You can’t allow big money to come in and rip up the Constituti­on in the faces of America’s oldest citizens,” one veteran said.

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