Albuquerque Journal

Cleanup needed at DAPL camp

U.S. Army Corps of Engineers wants to accelerate the work

- BY BLAKE NICHOLSON ASSOCIATED PRESS

BISMARCK, N.D. — The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers plans to hire a contractor to accelerate cleanup at a camp in southern North Dakota that has housed hundreds, sometimes thousands, of Dakota Access pipeline opponents.

Officials fear the camp near the Cannonball River will soon flood due to warm weather and rapid snowmelt. They worry trash and debris left by people who have departed recently might pollute the Missouri River and other nearby waterways.

“With the amount of people that have been out there, and the amount of estimated waste and trash out there, there is a good chance it will end up in the river if it is not cleaned up,” Corps spokesman Capt. Ryan Hignight said.

Local and federal officials estimate there’s enough trash and debris in the camp to fill about 2,500 pickup trucks. Garbage ranges from trash to building debris to human waste, according to Morton County Emergency Manager Tom Doering.

The camp has dwindled to a few hundred people as the battle over the $3.8 billion project to move North Dakota oil to Illinois has largely moved into the courts. The Standing Rock Sioux and others believe a pipeline leak under the Missouri River would contaminat­e water for millions of people. Developer Energy Transfer Partners says the pipeline is safe.

The tribe has asked protesters to leave the area and has been coordinati­ng cleanup at the camp since late last month. Chairman Dave Archambaul­t said at the time it was being funded from $6 million in donations the tribe received to support its pipeline fight.

Gov. Doug Burgum, State Engineer Garland Eberle and state Environmen­tal Health Chief Dave Glatt on Tuesday issued a statement pushing for an accelerate­d cleanup. “There’s more garbage down there than anybody anticipate­d,” Doering said Wednesday.

Corps officials and a contractor will travel to the site later this week to assess the situation, though actual cleanup work won’t happen until the area is deemed safe for workers, Hignight said.

The Corps said earlier this month it will close the camp Feb. 22 to get people out of harm’s way and safeguard the environmen­t.

Hignight said Wednesday that the contractor will “clean up the land to a preprotest state.” The effort will be funded through the Corps budget, meaning taxpayers ultimately will foot the bill.

The county and state are looking for more contractor­s to further speed up the process and some of that cost ultimately could fall on taxpayers, according to Doering. Local authoritie­s are hoping for a presidenti­al disaster declaratio­n to open up the prospect of federal aid.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States