Showing posts with label Killdeer Mountain Alliance. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Killdeer Mountain Alliance. Show all posts

Friday, January 17, 2014

Killdeer Mountain Alliance statement


Killdeer Mountain Alliance · 267 like this
January 17 ·  · 
  • Killdeer Mountain Alliance statement at the Rural Utility Service hearing, presented by Rob Sand and researched by Ed Dickey. Both are Killdeer Mountain landowners. Thank you, Rob and Ed!

    ***

    Thank you for the opportunity to make a statement at this public hearing concerning this important project. I am speaking on behalf of The Killdeer Mountain Alliance, a group of individuals working to preserve the cultural, spiritual, ecological, archaeological, and historical integrity of the Killdeer Mountains.

    We learned of this meeting as a result of a press release dated January 10, 2014 published by Basin Electric and made available on the internet. Apparently the Rural Utility Service limited its notifications to other media as no other information regarding the meeting is available on the internet, which we as a scattered membership must rely upon for timely information.

    Yesterday we learned that a Federal Register Notice was published by the Rural Utilities Service on Tuesday, January 14, just two days ago regarding this project. It states: “RUS will hold an open-house public hearing in January 2014 once the SDEIS is published. The time and location of the meeting will be well advertised in local media outlets a minimum of 15 days prior to the time of the meeting.” This commitment was not met; the notice of this meeting appeared in the Dunn County Herald on January 10, just six days ago. This edition of the Herald has not yet even been received by its mail subscribers. The January 14th Federal Register notice further states: “Public Participation: Pursuant to 36 CFR 800.22(d)(3), it is the intent of RUS to use its NEPA procedures for public involvement in lieu of the public involvement requirements of 36 CFR 800.3 through 800.7.” If you pursue this reference, you will find it does not exist; apparently the Rural Utilities Service intended to refer to CFR 800.2(d)(3) which authorizes the use of agency procedures for public involvement under the National Environmental Policy Act.

    The rush to hold this meeting is more than contemptuousness of the public input element of the NEPA process, it is reflective of the haste and superficiality of the investigations and analysis of alternatives that support this project in general and the Supplemental Draft Environmental Impact Statement (SDEIS) in particular.
    The SDEIS for the Antelope Valley Station to Neset Transmission Project was developed to expand the alternatives considered because the original ones would not meet the current demand projections for movement of electrical energy in Western North Dakota. Equally important from our perspective was that for the first time the Rural Utility Service and the other cooperating agencies more appropriately recognized the extent and significance of the Killdeer Mountain Battlefield as an important element of America’s Civil War experience. It is truly an important historical and cultural site from the perspective of both the Union Army forces and the Native Americans who fought and died there.

    The fundamental problem with the SDEIS is that it develops no alternative that would avoid constructing eight miles (that is right, eight miles) of transmission lines though the heart of the Killdeer Mountain Battlefield. Consequently it fails to comply with the requirements of the National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA).

    Section 1502.1 of the Council on Environmental Quality’s NEPA implementing regulations states: “The primary purpose of an environmental impact statement is to serve as an action-forcing device to insure that the policies and goals defined in the Act are infused into the ongoing programs and actions of the federal government. It shall provide full and fair discussion of significant environmental impacts and shall inform decisionmakers and the public of the reasonable alternatives which would avoid or minimize adverse impacts or enhance the quality of the human environment.”

    Section 1502.14 of The Council on Environmental Quality’s regulations further requires agencies to: “Rigorously explore and objectively evaluate all reasonable alternatives, and for alternatives which were eliminated from detailed study, briefly discuss the reasons for their having been eliminated.” The National Park Service recognizes the Killdeer Mountain Battlefield as a place eligible to be placed on the National Registry of Historic Places. Proceeding to degrade a noteworthy historic site without even analyzing alternatives which would avoid doing so is unconscionable and fails to comply with the requirements of NEPA and the Council on Environmental Quality’s Implementing Regulations (40 CFR Parts 1500-1508).

    It must be kept in mind that the reason that an Environmental Impact Statement is being prepared is because Basin Electric is requesting Federal taxpayer subsidies for constructing the transmission project. As concerned citizens, we find it to be absurd that one agency of the Federal government, in this case the Department of Agriculture’s Rural Utility Service, would even consider using its funds to degrade the Killdeer Mountain Battlefield. After all, its sister Federal agency, the National Park Service of the Department of the Interior, used taxpayer money to study and to identify the battlefield site as a place worthy of protection through its inclusion on the National Register of Historic Places.

    What must be done to avoid degrading this unique historical and cultural site on the 150th anniversary of the Battle of Killdeer Mountain, which took place on July 28, 1864? The project must be sent back to the drawing board. Alternatives that avoid crossing the battlefield must be evaluated in a detail comparable to analysis of the present alternatives. It must be demonstrated that it is not practicable to avoid degrading the Battlefield site. Only then will the requirements of the Environmental Protection Act be satisfied, and we as citizens and taxpayers can have confidence that the decisions of government are indeed in the public interest.

Basin Electric members and tribal members testify at RUS hearing

Basin Electric members and tribal members testify at RUS hearing

The proposed north Killdeer loop will deliver power into member cooperative McKenzie Electric Cooperative’s service territory.
John Skurupey   
John Skurupey, McKenzie Electric CEO and
general manager, testifies in favor of Basin
Electric's proposed north Killdeer loop transmission
line segment.
Representatives of Basin Electric member cooperatives testified in favor of a proposed Basin Electric transmission project in the Williston Basin at a public hearing held by the Rural Utilities Service (RUS) Jan. 16 in Watford City, ND.
Basin Electric plans to build, operate and maintain an approximately 278-mile 345-kilovolt (kV) transmission project from Antelope Valley Station (AVS) to Neset in western North Dakota. The RUS, an agency within the U.S. Department of Agriculture, is considering funding the project and is preparing an environmental impact statement (EIS) for the project.
The Jan. 16 hearing gave the public an opportunity to comment on a supplemental draft EIS that evaluates an additional transmission line segment that would interconnect with the previously proposed AVS to Neset project at a switchyard near Killdeer, ND. The project, called the north Killdeer loop, includes 60 miles of 345-kV transmission line and two substations that will deliver power into member cooperative McKenzie Electric Cooperative’s service territory.
About 20 people attended the Jan. 16 hearing. Representing Basin Electric Basin Electric were Curt Pearson, manager of media and community relations; Kelly Suko, property and right of way project coordinator; and Cris Miller, senior environmental project administrator. Basin Electric members Claire Vigesaa, Upper Missouri G & T Electric Cooperative manager, and John Skurupey, McKenzie Electric CEO and general manager, testified at the hearing.
Skurupey said that the cooperative’s rapid growth warrants construction of the additional line segment.
“Without this additional north Killdeer loop, members who may want additional electricity or new members wanting electricity at a new home site, water well or commercial location will eventually be refused service for the sake of keeping the lights on for those who are currently being served,” Skurupey said. “This is not a futuristic prediction but rather a road we’re traveling and a stop sign we’re already slowing down for.”
Several members of North Dakota Native American tribes and a member of the Killdeer Mountain Alliance spoke against the proposed route of the AVS to Neset line at the hearing. As proposed, the line would run south of the Killdeer Mountain Battlefield State Historic Site, though cross about 27 square miles of a proposed study of privately-owned lands near the designated historic site.
The north Killdeer loop project requires authorization from the North Dakota Public Service Commission and several federal and state agencies to move forward in the federal EIS process. Basin Electric plans to start construction on the transmission line segment in 2016, with the line in service in 2017.
The public comment period ends Feb. 3. Written comments on the scope of the EIS should be sent todennis.rankin@wdc.usda.gov or:
Mr. Dennis Rankin, environmental protection specialist
USDA, Rural Utilities Service
1400 Independence Avenue, SW, Stop 1571
Washington, DC 20250-1571
The supplemental draft EIS is available at www.rurdev.usda.gov/UWP-AVS-Neset.html.

http://www.basinelectric.com/News_Center/Publications/News_Briefs/basin-electric-members-and-tribal-members-testify-at-rus-hearing.html

Wednesday, September 4, 2013

Basin Electric plans power line through Killdeer Mountains

Published September 04, 2013, 12:00 AM

Basin Electric plans power line through Killdeer Mountains

KILLDEER — Basin Electric Power Cooperative will have to answer to a lot of angry people at a public hearing in Killdeer today. The company, citing booming oil development and its ripple effects, has proposed a new transmission line that would go through the Killdeer Mountain Battlefield site, alarming many.
By: Katherine Lymn, The Dickinson Press

KILLDEER — Basin Electric Power Cooperative will have to answer to a lot of angry people at a public hearing in Killdeer today.
The company, citing booming oil development and its ripple effects, has proposed a new transmission line that would go through the Killdeer Mountain Battlefield site, alarming many.
The $300 million project would route a 200-mile, 345-kilovolt transmission line from the existing Antelope Valley Station near Beulah, west through Killdeer and then north through Williston, ending at a substation near Tioga.
It would run through the boundaries of a National Park Service study led by North Dakota State University history professor Tom Isern, who characterizes the battlefield as the most significant historic site in the state.
The 1864 Battle of Killdeer Mountain was a faceoff between native Dakota and Lakota fighters and Brig. Gen. Alfred Sully’s forces. With more than 2,000 fighters on each side, Isern said, “it’s the largest military engagement ever to take place on the Great Plains.”
For its entire nine-state service area, Basin projects needing to grow by more than 1,600 megawatts by 2025 — and 1,000 megawatts of that is just for oil-related growth.
“There’s a lot of demand being placed on everybody because of what’s going on in western and northwestern North Dakota,” Basin spokesman Daryl Hill said. “This is just one part of the challenges everybody faces to cope or to keep up with this oil development that’s occurring.”
Hill said an archeologist Basin hired didn’t see anything of significance in a preliminary survey, but Basin only recently learned of the NDSU study, so “this isn’t the end of the story.”
Basin spokeswoman Mary Miller cautioned, though, that Basin has had this route planned for a while and it’s not the company’s intent to move the line.
Some opponents of the project have questioned whether Basin’s archeologist did a thorough enough look at the project site.
Conservationist Rob Sand, who lives near the site and fights for the mountain’s preservation with the Killdeer Mountain Alliance, said the battlefield is not just a 1-acre site with a monument on it, but in fact “covers a great deal of area.”
“Unfortunately it had to be a citizens’ group that noticed it and put it together,” he said.
“I think [Basin] looked at each spot where they were gonna put a power pole and just did a minimal survey — a required survey — of that and didn’t look at the big picture,” Sand said.
Public Service Commission Chair Brian Kalk said the size of this project is the reason for three different public hearings — Tioga and Williston will also have hearings on Thursday and Thursday, Sept. 12, respectively.
“Of all the things that we do, power lines are by far the most difficult and the most contentious,” he said.
The PSC can’t tell a company how to do a project, but it can reject an application and explain why, Kalk said.
Sand said he’s also concerned with what the power lines would do to the viewscape.
“This is a real serious problem and needs to be resolved,” Sand said, “and I’m sure hoping that Basin Electric and the Public Service Commission will see this as an opportunity to do the right thing and move it off of the battlefield for sure but also look at the whole viewscape of the Killdeer Mountains.”
Kalk encouraged members of the public to bring their own recommendations for the project if they’re unhappy with the current plan.
This project is the latest in a series of apparent threats to the Killdeer Mountains, as oil development seeped in and the Alliance has been working to stop further drilling.
“It’s pretty overwhelming to try to even think what’s gonna happen because [the Mountains] could easily just be covered with oil wells and with roads and with power lines,” Sand said.
“We have to be hopeful that there can be some kind of a sensitive resolution to these problems.”
The public hearing will be at Killdeer City Hall, 165 Railroad St. SE at 9:30 MDT.

Statement of the Killdeer Mountain Alliance to the North Dakota Public Service Commission Regarding the Proposed Antelope Valley Station to Neset Transmission Project, Case #: PU-11-696


Statement of the Killdeer Mountain Alliance to the North Dakota Public Service Commission Regarding the Proposed Antelope Valley Station to Neset Transmission Project, Case #: PU-11-696

September 4, 2013

We are deeply concerned that Basin Electric Power Cooperative is proposing to construct new transmission lines and a 12-acre substation along the south face of the Killdeer Mountains. We ask the Public Service Commission to reject this part of the proposed route for the following reasons:

·         The Killdeer Mountains are important to all North Dakotans for historic, archaeological, ecological, cultural, and recreational reasons.
·         The Mountains hold deep historical and cultural significance for the Mandan, Hidatsa, Arikara, Lakota, Dakota, and other tribes.
·         In spite of mitigation efforts, the proposed transmission line and substation would negatively impact the view and experience of the beautiful Killdeer Mountains, both from the highways and from higher on the Mountain. 
·         The proposed transmission line and substation would pass within the boundary of the 70,000+-acre Killdeer Mountain Battlefield area, as identified in the 2010 National Park Service study* (see attached map). The proposed substation would have been in the core battlefield area (inner circle on map).  We are pleased this location has now been removed from the proposal, but the proposed transmission line route remains a concern.
·         Basin Electric’s archaeological finding of “no significant cultural sites” was apparently based on State Historic Preservation Office records for the battlefield boundaries, which were not current at the time. These records are in the process of being updated now to match the battlefield boundaries identified in the National Park Service study.*
·         However, the National Park Service study was published in 2010 with the State Historic Preservation Office as a respondent on the document. We believe the 2010 date of document completion precedes Basin Electric’s proposal of their transmission routes, so that information was available to the Basin Electric archaeologist and on the Internet.
·         In other words, it appears that the Historic Preservation Office did not communicate adequately with the Basin Electric archaeology consultant about this, and vice versa.
·         In addition, the State Historic Preservation Office surely knew that the Killdeer Battlefield qualified for the National Register of Historic Places.
·          If either of these pieces of information had been communicated to Basin Electric in their planning process, today’s discussion would probably not be happening, because, according to their own testimony, they said that they avoided every site in this project that was known to be eligible for the National Register of Historic Places. We ask the Commission to request that Basin Electric submit a revised route based on the amended information.
·         Another reason to delay this decision is that funding has recently been approved for a two-year collaborative study of the Killdeer Mountain Battlefield area. North Dakotans deserve to know the outcomes of this study before a decision is made about a transmission line through or near the Killdeer Mountain area.
·         Basin Electric now wants approval of a second transmission line to meet the needs of the oil and gas industry, and the second line they are proposing is the alternative they originally presented to the Killdeer Mountain route. Does this mean that their proposal no longer lists the “range of reasonable alternatives” that are required by the National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA)?   If it doesn't meet that requirement, they should be required to develop other alternatives.
·         In addition, the entire environmental impact statement required by NEPA is still in draft stage.  Will it be completed before a final decision is made?
·         Related to this, the proposed route is a major threat--through electrocutions and line strikes--to nesting, hunting, dispersing, and migrating golden eagles. According to eagle researcher Dr. Margi Coyle, the portion near the Killdeer Mountains would run adjacent to three golden eagle nesting territories and directly through golden eagle hunting territory. 
·         Furthermore, we have been told that the Sisseton Wahpeton tribe has not been consulted in the Environmental Impact Statement and has not received a copy of the cultural resource report.  We ask that you look into this and ensure that they, as descendants of some of those who fought in the Killdeer Mountain Battle, are consulted.
·         Finally, the Killdeer Mountains are included on the recent list of forty special places identified by the Governor and the North Dakota Industrial Commission as having unique historical, cultural, and recreational significance to North Dakotans. Although our focus is on protecting the Killdeer Mountains, we respectfully ask the Public Service Commission to reject any portion of this proposed transmission line that would negatively impact these forty places.  We owe this to our children, our grandchildren, and ourselves.

You have asked that we make recommendations for alternatives.  We recommend that it be moved to a location that addresses all of the concerns we have described today. Thank you.
Sincerely,
Rob Sand (Killdeer) and Lori Jepson (Killdeer)
Coordinators, Killdeer Mountain Alliance


Contact information
Rob Sand, 93 112th Avenue NW, Killdeer, ND 58640; killdeermtn@gmail.com; 863-7263
Lori Jepson, 11430 Main Street, Killdeer, ND 58640; lorijepson@ndsupernet.com; 863-6653

Killdeer Mountain Alliance
The Killdeer Mountain Alliance is a loose alliance of local landowners, Native Americans, hunters, outdoor enthusiasts, scientists, historians, archaeologists, and others who love the Killdeer Mountains and agree with the mission statement: "The Killdeer Mountain Alliance exists to preserve the cultural, spiritual, ecological, archaeological, and historical integrity of the Killdeer Mountains of western North Dakota and protect them from industrial development that harms the American Indian sites, plant and wildlife habitat, ranching, hunting, tourism, scenic beauty, and recreation for which the Killdeer Mountains are known and loved."


For more information, see our facebook site—Killdeer Mountain Alliance.  See also a separate site: The Battle for Killdeer Mountain < http://savekilldeermountain.blogspot.com/>

Thursday, August 15, 2013

Alliance wants a second look

Alliance wants a second look

August 15, 2013
JILL SCHRAMM - Staff Writer (jschramm@minotdailynews.comMinot Daily News
KILLDEER An alliance working to protect the environment and history of the Killdeer Mountains wants the North Dakota Industrial Commission to reconsider how oil is being tapped in the area.
The Killdeer Mountain Alliance has asked members of the commission Gov. Jack Dalrymple, Agriculture Commissioner Doug Goehring and Attorney General Wayne Stenehjem to include the Killdeer Mountains on a proposed tour of culturally important sites.
The alliance includes landowners, former residents, historians, Native Americans, archeologists, wildlife biologists, hunters and others.
The alliance also is asking the commission to delay any further drilling on public land set aside as "school land" on the west side of the Killdeers until considering its alternative drilling plan. That plan would access the same oil from a different location, which would require three miles of horizontal drilling but would be safer and less archaeologically damaging, according to the group.
"I would like to specifically show them, on the ground, the alternative we are suggesting and how that would help," said Rob Sand, coordinator of the alliance. "It's public land that has been enjoyed for ages by hunters, by lease holders, by cattle, by just sight-seers," he said. "Native Americans have taken quite an interest in this whole issue because they have held this as a sacred ground."
Jeff Zent, spokesman in Gov. Jack Dalrymple's office, said Industrial Commission members have not been able to coordinate their schedules for a joint tour of culturally sensitive sites but will be touring individually. They are open to looking at possible new approaches to drilling, he said.
Alison Ritter, public information specialist with the Department of Mineral Resources, said Lynn Helms, the department director, is expected to be involved in the tours but the locations to be included have yet to be determined.
"It's still pretty early in the planning stages," she said.
Hess Corp. holds the lease on the land where the alliance is proposing the alternative drilling. Last January, the Industrial Commission approved drilling for eight new wells, and Sand said two wells have been drilled so far. The location is on the west tip of the Killdeer Mountains, northwest of Killdeer.
The existing wells are on the southwest side of the school section. A second pad on the southeast end for four more wells is on land that is untilled, rich in history and likely archeologically significant, the alliance informed Industrial Commission members in a letter earlier this month.
The site is believed to be part of a historical Native American battleground that may provide archeological findings. The alliance reported that the lack of an archeological survey was a factor in its inability to persuade the commission against allowing drilling in the area. Now North Dakota State University in Fargo has funding to conduct a survey, which is another reason to postpone drilling, according to the alliance.
Although not opposed to oil development on private and public land, Sand said, the alliance wants development conducted in as environmentally friendly a manner as possible.
"Most people in this state look at the Killdeer Mountains, I believe, as a scenic place that they want to enjoy as unspoiled as possible," he said.

Group seeks to protect Killdeer Mountains from oil

Group seeks to protect Killdeer Mountains from oil



MINOT, N.D. — An alliance working to protect the environment and history of the Killdeer Mountains in western North Dakota's oil patch wants state regulators to reconsider how oil is being tapped there.
The Killdeer Mountain Alliance has asked members of the state Industrial Commission to include the Killdeer Mountains on planned tours of culturally important sites. The group also wants the commission to delay any further oil drilling on public land on the west side of the mountains until considering its alternative drilling plan.
That plan would access the same oil from a different location, which would require three miles of horizontal drilling but would be safer and cause less archaeological damage, according to the group that includes landowners, former residents, historians, Native Americans, archeologists, wildlife biologists, hunters and others.
"I would like to specifically show them, on the ground, the alternative we are suggesting and how that would help," said landowner Rob Sand, coordinator of the alliance. "It's public land that has been enjoyed for ages by hunters, by lease holders, by cattle, by just sightseers. Native Americans have taken quite an interest in this whole issue because they have held this as a sacred ground."
Industrial Commission members have not been able to coordinate their schedules for a joint tour of culturally sensitive sites but will be touring individually. They also are open to looking at possible new approaches to drilling, said Jeff Zent, spokesman for Gov. Jack Dalrymple, who sits on the Industrial Commission with Agriculture Commissioner Doug Goehring and Attorney General Wayne Stenehjem.
State Department of Mineral Resources Director Lynn Helms also is expected to be involved in the tours but the locations to be included have yet to be determined, said department spokeswoman Alison Ritter.
The Industrial Commission last January approved drilling for eight new wells in the Killdeer Mountains area, and later rejected an appeal to reconsider. Sand said two wells have been drilled so far. The drilling has sparked protests from ranchers and American Indians concerned about sacred or historic sites, including the site of an historic 1864 battle between Army soldiers and Indians.
The alliance is not opposed to oil development but wants it conducted in an environmentally friendly manner, Sand said.
"Most people in this state look at the Killdeer Mountains, I believe, as a scenic place that they want to enjoy as unspoiled as possible," he said.
Hess Corp., which is doing the drilling, has said it is committed to safeguarding the environment.
http://www.miamiherald.com/2013/08/15/3564094/group-seeks-to-protect-killdeer.html#morer

Alliance fights to protect Killdeer Mountains from drilling

Published August 15, 2013, 07:15 AM

Alliance fights to protect Killdeer Mountains from drilling

Rob Sand has one last hope. As part of the Killdeer Mountain Alliance, he has worked to protect the mountains he grew up hunting and riding horses on from oil drilling.
By: Katherine Lymn, Forum News Service
KILLDEER, N.D. -- Rob Sand has one last hope.
As part of the Killdeer Mountain Alliance, he has worked to protect the mountains he grew up hunting and riding horses on from oil drilling.
His group represents archaeologists, historians, hunters, Native Americans and biologists who are concerned about the area where the soil is untilled and “rich with possibility,” said Mary Sand, Rob’s wife.
The North Dakota Industrial Commission in January approved drilling in the area, and then squashed an appeal. The southwest section of the “school lands” now has wells, but the alliance is still working to prevent that from spreading to the southeast end.
It’s running out of time, too. The area it wants to protect is already staked for wells.
Now, the alliance is taking a more grassroots approach, sending a letter to Gov. Jack Dalrymple and gathering supporters on a Facebook page. Members hope the Industrial Commission, which Dalrymple serves on with Attorney General Wayne Stenehjem and Agriculture Commissioner Doug Goehring, will visit the site as part of a state effort to protect historical sites from drilling.
Because of their busy schedules, the commission members plan to tour sites individually, and Karlene Fine, executive director of the Industrial Commission, said they may have already started.
Citizens added sites to the list in various ways, from letters like the Killdeer Mountain Alliance’s to a conversation with a commission member, Fine said.

Protecting western N.D.
The Dickinson Press obtained a preliminary list of about 40 sites for which citizens have requested further review. The places include specific sites with drilling planned on them, like in Killdeer, and larger areas that people have pre-emptively requested be saved from any future plans.
Killdeer Mountains and several other western North Dakota sites are on the list. A set of some of the sites is part of the Prairie Legacy Wilderness plan, which calls for permanently protecting about 4 percent of the Dakota Prairie Grasslands.
“While oil and gas development historically forecasts a boom-and-bust economic scenario, permanently protected public land … offers insightful long-range benefits,” the proposal states.
In its letter to the governor, the alliance also provided an alternative drilling plan that would move the rest of the planned wells a mile south. That land’s owner approves of the plan because he also supports preserving the Killdeer Mountains, Rob Sand said.
“It’s sort of like this public trust,” he said. “It’s one little part of the mountain that the public has access to.”
If the 3-mile horizontal wells proposed by the alliance work, the oil company and mineral owners could get their oil and gas while keeping off the surface of the mountains, according to the proposal.
Dalrymple has said that with horizontal drilling, there are many opportunities to avoid sensitive areas, but that derricks can still disrupt scenic views.

‘Such an assault’
Sand can still point out the spots on the Killdeer Mountains where he shot his first deer at age 13, and where his mother was born.
But a lot has changed.
He gestures to a nearby house whose occupants now shut their blinds at night to avoid light brought on by an oil well across the road.
“All North Dakotans deserve to know what is at stake here,” Sand and co-coordinator Lori Jepson wrote in their Aug. 7 letter to Dalrymple.
Sand waves at the oil trucks and white pickups that drive by — every few minutes they come — despite his concerns over what they’re doing to his mountains.
After spending time in the mountains growing up, Sand returned with his wife in 2001 to live full time.
“I came back to enjoy the peace and quiet up here,” he said, chuckling at the irony.
The Killdeer Mountains are tough, geologically. Much of their interesting landscape comes from resistance to the erosion that carried away other sediments.
Standing atop one of his favorite rock formations — deemed “Old Ben’s Nose” for its distinct triangular shape — Sand looks out onto the machinery that has popped up.
“It’s such an assault,” he said.
http://www.grandforksherald.com/event/article/id/270773/
http://www.thedickinsonpress.com/event/article/id/71189/

Tuesday, July 16, 2013

Badlands Conservation Alliance: In Celebration of the Killdeer Mountains

In Celebration of the Killdeer Mountains
Badlands Conservation Alliance: A Voice for Wild North Dakota Places

Join BCA in celebrating the Killdeer Mountain Alliance and the special place for which they speak. Meet landowners, tribal members, archeologists and historians who know this landscape intimately. Discover and rediscover a North Dakota landmark, learn its stories, see firsthand the impacts of oil and gas development, and help mold its future.

Hear enrolled member of Standing Rock Sioux Tribe Dakota Goodhouse narrate the significance of the Killdeers, and particularly the 1864 conflict between Lakota and Dakota people and the US Army under Brigadier General Sully. Discussion will include the 17,340-acre study area outlined in 1993 and the NPS study of June 2010. Currently 1 acre of the site is managed by the State Historical Society of ND.

We will visit the state school land section with the controversial “Jepson well” that prompted the KMA into action, and take a quick peek at wells on the Mountain’s shoulder to learn about their siting and see ongoing erosion.

Lunch time will be at ND’s Killdeer Mountain Wildlife Management Area, considered the “gem” of the system. Despite new roads, new wells, and new pipelines it is still a place of remarkable beauty. We will discuss ongoing mitigation strategies and the power of negotiation & advocacy. Plan plenty of time for exploration of this 7,050-acre treasure.

We’ll top off the day with a hike to Medicine Hole as afternoon light turns to evening. With luck we may see the bats come out for their evening scavenge. Medicine Hole is the perfect place for an overview of our day’s experience.

When: Saturday, July 27, 2013 at 9 AM MT/10 AM CT.
Where: Meet at Killdeer’s city park on the corner of Central AVE SE and 1st ST SW to partner up before heading to the Mountain.
Bring: Whatever gear will keep you happy… but for sure sturdy footwear, sack lunch, plenty of snacks and water, protection from sun and insects. Camera? Binocs? Field guides?

RSVP to bcajan@bis.midco.net or call with questions at 701-255-4958.


http://badlandsconservationalliance.org/?id=22&event_id=30

Tuesday, July 2, 2013

EcoFlight over the Bakken Oil Boom including Killdeer Mountain Battlefield




On June 2, 2013 EcoFlight with Killdeer Mountain Alliance members flew over the Bakken oil fields including Killdeer Mountain Battlefield and many other significant locations in western North Dakota.
Visit EcoFlights webpage for further details, photographs, or to make a donation to support their work.



Friday, February 8, 2013

How Best To Preserve The Story Of The Killdeer Mountain Conflict



FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 8, 2013


How Best To Preserve The Story Of The Killdeer Mountain Conflict

An image of a soldier engaged in hand-to-hand combat with a warrior. The image is engraved upon the elevator doors on the ground floor and main floor. 

BismarckN.D. – The polished hall outside the Missouri Room of the Bismarck State Capital building gradually filled with archaeologists, historians, tribal representatives and land owners from around Killdeer Mountain, all from different disciplines and walks of life, all concerned citizens of a proud state.


The study area of the Killdeer Mountain Conflict within the purple boundary.
The citizenry gathered in little groups here and there to introduce themselves and exchange greetings. It seemed like a fellowship of near universal concerns that brought everyone together, and life is like that. Sometimes it takes one thing to bring people together who might not have met in another situation.


An alarming amount of existing wells and proposed wells within the Killdeer Mountain Conflict area.
The hearing was scheduled at 2:00 PM CST and the fellowship exchanged the hall of polished stone and brass for the quiet cell of the Missouri River Room. A coterie of archaeologists clustered together in one corner, the tribal representatives quietly moved themselves to a corner close to the front, and historians scattered amongst the throng. Chit chat grew to a loud buzz, and though the Government and Veteran Affairs Committee was delayed an hour the motley collection of citizens didn't seem to grow impatient.

This is North Dakota, and sometimes things happen when they’re scheduled to, and other times things happen when they should. Farmers might call it natural time, Indians would agree.


Senator Triplett explains that next year marks the 150th anniversary of the Killdeer Mountain Conflict. "Its an opportunity for the state to reflect on the tragedy that shaped our statehood and include the story that has been under represented these long years," said Triplett, or something like that - my pen could not move fast enough.

The good people who made up the committee apologized for their unexpected delay and things quickly got started when Chairman Dever (Dist. 32, Bismarck) brought the gavel down with great ceremony and authority.  The hearing was to hear Senate Bill 2341, a proposal by senators on either end of the political spectrum, introduced by Sen. Wardner (Dist. 37, Dickinson) but the voice of the bill was provided by Senator Triplett (Dist. 18, Grand Forks).

Senate Bill 2341 proposed to appropriate $250,000 to do an archaeological and historical survey of the Killdeer Mountain conflict study area. A packed room of about forty-five people, including the good senators, heard testimony from several individuals representing various entities, and a few who spoke as private citizens.


Paaverud maintained an impeccable composure of respect for the committee as he endorsed the Heritage Center's support of the bill.

Mr. Merlan Paaverud and Ms. Fern Swenson represented the interests of the State Historical Society of North Dakota and voiced the SHSND’s endorsement of this bill. Ms. Swenson offered that the Killdeer Mountain study area consists of 17,433 acres or about 23 square miles, a core area of about 5,421 acres and only about 569 acres has been surveyed. Swenson also shared that the site has had a continual cultural occupation for the past 3,000 years.


Dr. Isern addresses the committee. He said his piece in about five minutes or less and gave some handouts with points explaining the nature of heritage preservation. 

Dr. Tom Isern, Director of the Institute for RegionalStudies, rendered a concise and wonderful explanation of the intrinsic value of Killdeer Mountain as a heritage site and acknowledged the attraction of the site to hikers and lovers of history and nature who would be drawn to this site, as many like-minded visitors have in the past. Dr. Isern expressed his institute’s support of the bill.


An immaculately groomed Aaron Barth (looking at the camera) visited with Mr. Jepson of Killdeer.

A few concerned citizens took to offering their support of this bill. Mr. Aaron Barth, founding writer of The Edge Of The Village, shared the need to survey and catalogue the Killdeer Mountain as a start to preserve the story of the site, if the natural integrity of the site is to be developed. “There’s a story to tell, and we must do all we can to share it,” as he compared the need to tell the stories of all combatants, like the American Civil War.


Without waver or hesitation, Young shared a resolution regarding sacred places from the National Congress of American Indians.

Ms. WaÅ¡tÄ›'WiÅ‹ Young, Standing Rock Tribal Historic Preservation Officer, took the stand and pointedly stated that “the Indian voice has yet to be heard.” Young boldly shared with the committee a resolution adopted by the National Congress of American Indians in October of 2012 regarding the protection and preservation of sacred places. She read the whole thing, expressed her office’s support of Senate Bill 2341, and quietly departed.


Bravebull-Allard representing Standing Rock Tourism supports this bill.

Ms. LaDonna Bravebull-Allard, Director of Standing RockTourism, shared her lineage going back to survivors who were at Killdeer Mountain when General Sully forced his command on the Yanktonai Dakota, Hunkpapa Lakota and Santee Dakota. Bravebull-Allard spoke about how Killdeer Mountainwas a sacred site, not just to the Dakota and Lakota people, but the Mandan, Hidatsa, Chippewa and Assiniboine. With practiced confidence of a story-teller she shared that the site was where Sun Dreamer ascended Killdeer Mountain in 1625. Bravebull-Allard’s office supports this bill.


St. John spoke with dignified authority, less than two minutes, and left many of the committee nodding their heads in approval of her gracious support.
Ms. Tamara St. John, Sisseton-Wahpeton Tribal Historic Preservation Officer, eloquently and briefly echoed Young’s and Bravebull-Allard’s sentiments of protecting a special site like KilldeerMountain and her office’s support of the bill.


Sand called for the state to move carefully and deliberately to preserve North Dakota's heritage sites.
Mr. Rob Sand, a representative of the Killdeer MountainAlliance, a tall gentleman with the gait of a lifelong rancher took to the podium briefly and passionately encouraged oil development to wait. Sand offered the support of the Killdeer Mountain Alliance in favor of the bill.


Rothaus, self-described hard-boiled skeptic, put the bill on a scale but explained the overwhelming need to preserve as much of the story of Killdeer as possible and endorsed the bill.

Dr. Richard Rothaus, founder and director of TrefoilCultural and Natural, drove like a mad man from his office in Sauk Rapids, MN to render cold and succinct explanation of the Killdeer Mountain conflict’s standing in US military history as one of the largest, if not the single largest, Indian-White conflict in the west and why North Dakota needs to preserve as much of the conflict site and stories as possible. A former university professor, Rothaus came across brutally blunt but also exceptionally honest. He also endorsed his support of the bill.


Dvirnak proudly wore a Fighting Sioux windbreaker to the hearing. He forgot to bring one for me.
Lastly, Mr. Bryan Dvirnak, a lifelong rancher on family-owned and managed land at KilldeerMountain, shared his family’s generations-long commitment to the preserving the cultural and historic integrity of the conflict site. “No one has done more to preserve and protect the site. We’re all for preserving the property,” said Dvirnak in a moving testimony to the committee. Dvirnak expressed that his brother could best articulate how their family has forged relationships with various Indian communities in state and  into Canada. The Dvirnaks have graciously allowed traditional ceremonies and prayers to be conducted on their land throughout the years.

Dvirnak, regardless of his family’s openness to the American Indian presence on his family’s land, managed to convey his open skepticism of the bill. “What will the [archaeological] study do?” he wondered aloud. Dvirnak conveyed his disillusionment with the bill, the sharpest point of his argument manifested itself in his question about what the bill would mandate him to do on his own land.

The bill doesn’t mandate anyone to do anything on their own private land. In fact, the bill mandates that the archaeologists who conduct the investigation must acquire the permissions of all landowners in the study and core areas of the Killdeer Mountain conflict. Senator Dever, the chairman of the Government and Veterans Committee, understood Mr. Dvirnak’s position and told Sen. Triplett to include language in Senate Bill 2341 that expressly and clearly articulates a mandate for archaeologists to acquire permission of landowners to survey on their land.

Mr. Dvirnak and his family have the best intentions, a family mission taken to heart, passed down from father to sons, to preserve the heritage of Killdeer Mountain. They opened their lands in the past to the Indian communities. They also donated a tidycollection of artifacts from the KilldeerMountain conflict to Dickinson State University.

They did this because there’s a story that needs to be preserved and shared, and that’s something that everyone who testified can agree.