NYTs: “Environmentalists Target Bankers Behind Pipeline”

Here.

Ninth Circuit Materials in Sturgeon Matter (on remand from SCOTUS)

Here are the new briefs:

Sturgeon Brief

Federal Brief

Mentasta Amicus Brief

Oral argument video here.

News Profile of Mni Wiconi Rural Water Supply System

Here is “Pipeline protesters say they are fighting to protect clean water for 200,000 South Dakotans.”

Obama Administration Takes Action to Protect and Restore Puget Sound

Here.

Linda Hogan: “Why We Are Singing for Water—In Front of Men With Guns and Surveillance Helicopters”

From Yes! Magazine, here.

D.C. Circuit Court Dissolves Emergency Injunction Pending Appeal on Dakota Access Pipeline

As has been reported elsewhere, the D.C. Circuit denied Standing Rock’s injunction of building the pipeline pending appeal. Order here. Previous coverage here.

The court wrote:

Although the Tribe has not met the narrow and stringent standard governing this extraordinary form of relief, we recognize Section 106 of the National Historic Preservation Act was intended to mediate precisely the disparate perspectives involved in a case such as this one. Its consultative processdesigned to be inclusive and facilitate consensusensures competing interests are appropriately considered and adequately addressed. But ours is not the final word. A necessary easement still awaits government approvala decision Corps’ counsel predicts is likely weeks away; meanwhile, Intervenor DAPL has rights of access to the limited portion of pipeline corridor not yet clearedwhere the Tribe alleges additional historic sites are at risk. We can only hope the spirit of Section 106 may yet prevail.

Joint Statement from DOJ, DOI, and Army Corps:

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE OPA
MONDAY, OCTOBER 10, 2016 (202) 514-2007
WWW.JUSTICE.GOV TTY (866) 544-5309

JOINT STATEMENT FROM DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE, DEPARTMENT OF THE ARMY AND DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR REGARDING D.C. CIRCUIT COURT OF APPEALS DECISION IN STANDING ROCK SIOUX TRIBE V. U.S. ARMY CORPS OF ENGINEERS

WASHINGTON – The Department of Justice, the Department of the Army and the Department of the Interior today issued the following statement regarding the D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals’ decision in Standing Rock Sioux Tribe v. U.S. Army Corps of Engineers:

“We appreciate the D.C. Circuit’s opinion.

“We continue to respect the right to peaceful protest and expect people to obey the law.

“The Army continues to review issues raised by the Standing Rock Sioux Tribe and other Tribal nations and their members and hopes to conclude its ongoing review soon. In the interim, the Army will not authorize constructing the Dakota Access Pipeline on Corps land bordering or under Lake Oahe. We repeat our request that the pipeline company voluntarily pause all construction activity within 20 miles east or west of Lake Oahe.

“We also look forward to a serious discussion during a series of consultations, starting with a listening session in Phoenix on Tuesday, on whether there should be nationwide reform on the Tribal consultation process for these types of infrastructure projects.”

# # #

16-1184

PLEASE DO NOT REPLY TO THIS MESSAGE. IF YOU HAVE QUESTIONS, PLEASE USE THE CONTACTS IN THE MESSAGE OR CALL THE OFFICE OF PUBLIC AFFAIRS AT 202-514-2007.

The dear Tribal Leader letter and the consultation dates are here.

Energy Tribes Testify against Federal Oversight in House Resources Committee Hearing

Here is the witness list with links to testimony (and a link to the hearing itself):

The Honorable James M. “Mike” Olguin
Tribal Council Member
Southern Ute Indian Tribe
Ignacio, CO
(Disclosure Form)

The Honorable Jack Ferguson
Confederated Tribes of the Colville Reservation
Representative, Intertribal Timber Council
Nespelem, WA
(Disclosure Form)

Mr. Richard Glenn
Executive Vice President, Lands & Natural Resources
Arctic Slope Regional Corporation
Barrow, AK
(Disclosure Form)

Mr. Louis Denetsosie
President & CEO
Navajo Nation Oil and Gas Co.
Window Rock, AZ
(Disclosure Form)

Mr. Eric Henson
Senior Vice President, Compass Lexecon
Research Affiliate, Harvard Project on American Indian Economic Development
Tuscon, AZ
(Disclosure Form)

Indianz.com Coverage of DAPL Arguments in D.C. Circuit

Here.

The oral argument audio is here.

Sisseton-Wahpeton Oyate Effort to Stop Road (Mostly) Fails

Here are the materials in Sisseton-Wahpeton Oyate of the Lake Traverse Reservation v. United States Corps of Engineers (D.S.D.):

90-sisseton-brief

us-army-corps-brief

92-sisseton-reply

93-dct-order

An excerpt:

For the reasons explained above, the Court denies Plaintiffs’ request for an injunction against the Corps, remands to the Corps for reconsideration whether the 2009 gully crossings were the type of undertaking that could affect historic properties under 36 C.F.R. § 800.3(a) and to complete the Section 106 process if so necessary, and denies all other requests for relief requested by Plaintiffs. Judgement will enter accordingly.

Commentary on Schaefer Riley’s Column on the DAPL Case

Naomi Schaefer Riley offered commentary on the Dakota Access Pipeline matter in her regular column in the New York Post, “How the Standing Rock Sioux should have been able to stop that pipeline.” This column continues NSR’s mockery of Indian peoples’ economic and cultural interests expressed in The New Trail of Tears.

The lede says it all:

Quick quiz: What’s the best way to stop a company from building an oil pipeline on a piece of land you find valuable? Answer: Buy the land.

Assuming that the Standing Rock Sioux Tribe and other affected tribes had the resources to do so, it probably wouldn’t have mattered — energy companies usually just confiscate the land under their delegated power of eminent domain, as Dakota Access has. Sure, property ownership helps, but in the end, the law is tipped in the pipeline companies’ favor.

NSR cites to the Mormons (huh?) in a strange fictional scenario, and the friends of Langston Hughes in a more realistic scenario, who could purchase cultural property that might otherwise be destroyed through development:

But the results haven’t been satisfactory to the tribe. So let’s imagine a different scenario — in which any group of people in the United States wanted to block development on a certain site. Perhaps it’s the Mormons who hear a skyscraper will be going up in the place where Joseph Smith saw the golden tablets.

Or take a real-life example: The home where the poet Langston Hughes once lived is up for sale. A group of people want to turn it into a museum. In order to do so they’re raising money to buy the building from its current owner.

A pipeline developer’s power of eminent domain would wipe all that out. Really, the only thing that could stop the exercise of that power by an energy or utility company is tribal trust property, the very thing NSR criticizes as “dead capital,” to borrow Hernando de Soto’s phrase. Inspired by de Soto, NSR recommends (in a massive non sequitur) confiscating tribal trust property (never mind the Fifth Amendment’s takings clause) and awarding that property to individual Indians (much like she does in TNToT). The US tried that when it was called allotment and then again when it was called termination — both failed miserably. Peru tried it, too, following de Soto’s recommendations. Was it successful? Not so much. Other countries too (quoting from a Slate article that described the failures):

Reports from Turkey, Mexico, South Africa, and Colombia suggest similar trends. “In Bogota’s self-help settlements,” writes Alan Gilbert, a London professor of geography who has done extensive research on land issues in Colombia and other parts of Latin America, “property titles seem to have brought neither a healthy housing market nor a regular supply of formal credit.”

Indian country is the subject of a lot of predatory lending and redlining — NSR’s ideas very likely would mean massive windfalls for businesses exploiting poor people (kinda like Donald Trump’s claim that profiting from poor people in the housing crisis is “good business” in last night’s debate). Something tells me NSR doesn’t have the best interests of Indian people in mind.