The Palm Beach Post

U.S. judge rejects tribes’ plea to halt Dakota oil pipeline

- By Sam Hananel Associated Press

WASHINGTON — A federal judge Monday rejec ted a request by t wo American Indian tribes for an emergency order halting constructi­on of the remaining section of the Dakota Access oil pipeline.

U.S. District Judge James Boasberg, in Washington, D.C., said that as long as the oil isn’t flflowing through the pipeline, there is no immed i a t e h a r m t o t h e Cheyenne River and Standing Rock Sioux tribes, which are suing to stop the project. But he said he’d consider the arguments more thoroughly at another hearing Feb. 27.

The tribes requested the temporary injunction last we e k a f t e r Te x a s - b a s e d Energy Transfer Partners got federal permission to lay pipe under a Missouri River reservoir in North Dakota. That’s the last big section of the $3.8 billion pipeline that would need to be constructe­d before it could carry oil from North Dakota to Illinois.

The tribes say the pipeline would endanger their cultural sites and water supply. They added a religious freedom component to their case last week by arguing that clean water is necessary to practice the Sioux religion and that the mere presence of the pipeline renders the water impure.

At the hearing, though, Boasberg said the harm to the tribe apparently would come from the pipeline being turned on and the oil flflowing through it, not from the pipeline’s mere presence.

Energy Transfer Partners received fifinal approval from the Army last week to lay pipe under the reservoir and to complete the 1,200-mile pipeline, which would move North Dakota oil to a shipping point in Illinois. Drilling work began immediatel­y under Lake Oahe, which is the water source for both tribes.

The company’s attorneys fifiled court documents early Monday urging Boasberg to reject the tribes’ request, calling the new religious freedom argument “exceedingl­y tardy,” “not constructi­on-related” and a “last- minute delay tactic.”

“Dakota Access has the greatest respect for the religious beliefs and traditions of (tribes). The emergency relief sought here simply is not necessary to protect the exercise of those beliefs or preserve those traditions,” wrote William Scherman, an attorney for the company.

The Corps also fifiled court documents Monday arguing that a work stoppage isn’t warranted, saying the tribes will have plenty of time to make their case before oil flflows through the pipeline.

Work under Lake Oahe had been held up in the courts until President Donald Trump last month instructed the Army Corps of Engineers to advance constructi­on. The Army is involved because its engineerin­g branch manages the river and its system of hydroelect­ric dams, which is owned by the federal government.

T h e d r i l l i n g w o r k i s expected to take about two months.

Energy Transfer Partners maintains that the pipeline is safe and disputes that cultural sites have been afffffffff­fffected. But an encampment near the constructi­on in southern North Dakota drew thousands of protesters last year.

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