National Post

Standing Rock protesters win Dakota pipeline battle.

Water safety an issue at Dakota Access project

- James MacPherson

• U. S. Army Corps of Engineers said Sunday it won’t grant an easement for the Dakota Access oil pipeline in southern North Dakota, a victory for the several thousand camped near the constructi­on site who’ve said for months that the four- state, US$3.8-billion project would threaten a water source and cultural sites.

The pipeline is largely complete except for the now-blocked segment underneath Lake Oahe, a Missouri River reservoir. According to a news release, Assistant Secretary for Civil Works JoEllen Darcy said her decision was based on the need to “explore alternate routes” for the pipeline’s crossing.

Veterans Stand for Standi ng Rock’s GoFundMe.com page had raised more than US$ 1 million of i ts $ 1.2- million goal by Sunday — money due to go toward food, transporta­tion and supplies. Cars waiting to get into the camp Sunday afternoon were backed up for more than a kilometre.

“People are fighting for something, and I thought they could use my help,” said navy veteran and Harvard graduate student Art Grayson. The 29- year- old from Cambridge, Mass., flew the first leg of the journey, then rode from Bismarck in the back of a pickup truck. He has finals this week, but told professors, “I’ll see you when I get back.”

Steven Perry, a 66- yearold Vietnam veteran who’s a member of the Little Traverse Bay band of Odawa Indians in Michigan, spoke of one of the protesters’ main concerns: that the pipeline could pollute drinking water. “This is not just a native issue,” he said. “This is an issue for everyone.”

Art Woodson and two other veterans drove 17 hours straight from Flint, Mich., a city whose lead-tainted water crisis parallels with the tribe’s fight over water, he said.

“We know in Flint that water is in dire need,” the 49- year- old disabled Gulf War veteran said. “In North Dakota, they’re trying to force pipes on people. We’re trying to get pipes in Flint for safe water.”

The company constructi ng the pipeline, Dallasbase­d Energy Transfer Partners, had said it was unwilling to reroute the project. It and the Morton County Sheriff ’s Office, which has done much of the policing of the protests, didn’t have immediate comment.

The federal government has ordered people to leave t he main encampment, which is on Army Corps of Engineers’ land, by Monday. But demonstrat­ors say they’re prepared to stay, and authoritie­s say they won’t forcibly remove them.

Earlier Sunday, an organizer with Veterans Stand for Standing Rock said tribal elders had asked the military veterans not to have confrontat­ions with police.

 ?? SCOTT OLSON / GETTY IMAGES ?? Activists celebrate on Sunday after learning an easement had been denied for the Dakota Access Pipeline at Oceti Sakowin Camp on the edge of the Standing Rock Sioux Reservatio­n in North Dakota.
SCOTT OLSON / GETTY IMAGES Activists celebrate on Sunday after learning an easement had been denied for the Dakota Access Pipeline at Oceti Sakowin Camp on the edge of the Standing Rock Sioux Reservatio­n in North Dakota.

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