CPOY

CPOY 72 Domestic Picture Story Silver: Oil and Water

On February 7, 2017 the US Army Corps of Engineers granted the controversial Dakota Access oil pipeline an easement to pass beneath Lake Oahe and the Missouri River, north of the Standing Rock Sioux Reservation. Since early 2016, thousands of Native Americans have been fighting to prevent the pipeline’s completion. In the final days of Barack Obama’s presidency the White House put the construction on hold pending further assessments, and for a while the protesters believed they had won. Crowds celebrated with fireworks on the snow covered prairie of North Dakota. But everything changed with the arrival of President Donald Trump. Within days of Trump taking office, an executive memorandum was issued calling for the pipeline to proceed. And two weeks later, the president’s order was followed through, and the Army Corps granted the easement. For the Sioux people who opposed this venture and the coalition of 200 tribal nations that joined them, this development is a crushing blow.

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November 25, 2016

Andrew Waupekenay of the Menominee Indian Tribe of Wisconsin stands as he faces authorities on the other side of the Cantapeta Creek which runs into the Missouri River after barbed wire was placed along the shore near the Oceti Sakowin Camp on Army Corps of Engineers land bordering the Standing Rock Indian Reservation in Cannon Ball, North Dakota on November 25, 2016.

A $3.8 billion project by Energy Transfer Partners to construct a 1,172-mile pipeline transporting crude Bakken oil from North Dakota across South Dakota, Iowa and into Illinois has sparked conflict and controversy at a key construction site on US Army Corps land bordering the Standing Rock Indian Reservation.

Joel Angel Juarez / San Francisco State University
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