The Big Lie Going Around About a Tribe, a Pipeline, And Too Much Federal Regulation
It always amazes how different people can look at the same set of facts, an event, or even a conversation and walk away with completely different impressions. In four decades of reporting, I have never seen a story with as wide a gulf over what is actually occurring at the Standing Rock Sioux reservation, where thousands of indigenous people and allies have gathered to protect the Missouri River from an oil pipeline.
The government of North Dakota sees this extraordinary event as a minor glitch in its rush toward more profits from North Dakota oil. And so many of the characterizations are written as if none of the top government officials—the governor, members of Congress, the state’s power structure—have ever been to the site that they know so much about. But that’s me being generous: They have not been there, and they are clear about their intentions to never go.
That’s why is this a fight about story, and who gets to tell it?
North Dakota Officialdom wants the public to believe three stories: lawlessness, “sound science and engineering,” and an overzealous regulatory structure.
The first story is quickly erased by anyone who takes the time to travel to the camps. And it is the same with the second story, the debate about science and engineering, because that telling only works when you ignore climate science.
That leaves the third story, the one about an “overzealous regulatory structure.” Folks: This one is the whopper. And it must be challenged every time it’s told. The fact is that the Dakota Access pipeline was designed to avoid federal regulatory oversight. The whole point was to make certain that there was no serious environmental assessment.
As in his decision against the tribe’s injunction, “A project of this magnitude often necessitates an extensive federal appraisal and permitting process. Not so here.”
Not so here. Three potent words that should wipe out the narrative of over-regulation.
The fact is that the Dakota Access Pipeline was designed to avoid federal regulatory oversight.
The judge continued: “Domestic oil pipelines, unlike natural-gas pipelines, require no general approval from the federal government. In fact, DAPL needs almost no federal permitting of any kind because 99 percent of its route traverses private land. The only regulatory role for the federal government in this case “concerns construction activities in federally regulated waters at hundreds of discrete places along the pipeline route. The Corps needed to permit this activity under the Clean Water Act or the Rivers and Harbors Act—and sometimes both. For DAPL, accordingly, it permitted these activities under a general permit known as Nationwide Permit 12.”
But what happens when a federal agency does not do its job?
The Obama administration’s answer is take a second look. That is the so-called overzealous regulatory framework. Or, as the state’s Republican candidate for : “It’s really not fair to the company at this point to expect them to put the sands back in the bottle, so to speak.”
After all, the company spent a nearly billion dollars before it had all of the permits required under The Easy-peasy Regulatory Scheme.
But then, the state of North Dakota and the Army Corps of Engineers have a rich history of rolling over tribes in this region, ignoring treaties, water law, and science, in order to build dams along the Missouri River. As Commissioner of Indian Affairs Philleo Nash once said: These projects “caused more damage to Indian land than any other public works project in America.”
So being fair to a company fits with the history of overzealous regulation, and it must be far more important than getting the answer right.
Except, not this time. Easy-peasy is on hold.
This article was originally published at and was edited by ´óÏó´«Ã½ Magazine.
Mark Trahant
is editor-at-large for Indian Country Today. Trahant leads the Indigenous Economics Project, a comprehensive look at Indigenous economics, including market-based initiatives. Trahant is a member of the Shoshone-Bannock Tribes and has written about American Indian and Alaska Native issues for more than three decades. He is a member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences and has held endowed chairs at the University of North Dakota and University of Alaska Anchorage, and has worked as a journalist since 1976. Trahant is a ´óÏó´«Ã½ contributing editor.
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