Times Colonist

In Minnesota visit, congresswo­men urge Biden to stop pipeline

- MOHAMED IBRAHIM

MINNEAPOLI­S — Minnesota U.S. Rep. Ilhan Omar and her progressiv­e congressio­nal allies urged U.S. President Joe Biden on Friday to stop constructi­on on Enbridge Energy’s Line 3 replacemen­t, even as the project nears completion and the options to stop it dwindle.

Omar was joined by U.S. Reps. Rashida Tlaib, of Michigan, Cori Bush, of Missouri, and Ayanna Pressley, of Massachuse­tts, and Minnesota state Sen. Mary Kunesh, at a news conference in Minneapoli­s. The Democratic women called on Biden to revoke a federal water quality permit and stop the project, as the president did with the Keystone XL pipeline the day he took office.

Ahead of a planned weekend trip to northern Minnesota, where the pipeline is being upgraded, Omar and her allies echoed the arguments of Indigenous and environmen­tal activists that the pipeline project would worsen climate change, violate Native American treaty rights, and risk spills in waters where Indigenous people hunt, fish and gather wild rice.

“We are here because the climate crisis is here,” Omar said. “The climate crisis is now. The climate crisis is happening and the last thing we need to do is allow the very criminals who created this crisis to build more fossil fuel infrastruc­ture.”

The visit comes days after Omar sent a letter signed by nearly 50 state legislator­s and members of Congress to ask the Biden administra­tion to meet with tribal leaders.

The heads of several Minnesota state agencies this week pushed back against several points in Omar’s letter, saying it exaggerate­d how much water Enbridge has pumped out of constructi­on ditches amid the current drought and that the amount was actually well within approved limits. They also said claims in Omar’s letter that law enforcemen­t used police dogs to intimidate protesters and fired “less-lethal” rubber bullets against demonstrat­ors were false.

Pipeline supporters, including Republican U.S. Rep. Pete Stauber, of Minnesota, state lawmakers and pipeline workers, held a press conference at the Capitol in St. Paul earlier Friday to laud the jobs the pipeline has brought to the region. Jason George, business agent of Local 49 of the Internatio­nal Union of Operating Engineers, which has a couple of thousand members on the project, called Omar’s letter an attack on pipeline workers.

Enbridge spokeswoma­n Juli Kellner called Omar and her allies “misinforme­d,” citing the letter from Democratic Gov. Tim Walz’s commission­ers. Kellner said six years of reviews, court decisions and permit approvals disprove claims that Line 3 would violate treaty rights or damage the region’s environmen­t.

“Replacing Line 3 has taken all of us working together — communitie­s, tribes, unions, contractor­s, elected officials, companies, organizati­ons, industry voices, and the support of thousands of individual­s,” Kellner said. “We encourage legislator­s to learn the facts about Line 3, tour a worksite and meet some of the tribal monitors and the thousands of union workers building Line 3.”

As Line 3 opponents continue organizing despite dwindling options for stopping the project — including a major rally last week when more than 1,000 protesters descended on the Capitol — the replacemen­t pipeline is nearly finished.

Published reports on Wednesday indicated that Enbridge has told shippers it will begin offering a capacity of 620,000 barrels per day starting in October. Kellner declined to confirm the October start date but said Line 3 is expected to be fully operationa­l at 760,000 barrels per day in the fourth quarter of this year.

Earlier on Friday, Indigenous activists hosted a conference call to publicize a letter from the United Nations Committee on the Eliminatio­n of Racial Discrimina­tion asking the U.S. to respond to allegation­s of human rights abuses against Anishinaab­e people in northern Minnesota due to Line 3’s constructi­on.

Winona LaDuke, executive director of the Indigenous-based environmen­tal group Honor the Earth, said the affected tribes could sue the United States in internatio­nal court if the federal government doesn’t respond to the UN committee’s letter.

“What we want is an environmen­tal impact statement and a stop on the project before this corporatio­n gets to make a billion dollars a year of profit off the destructio­n of our people,” she said.

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