Showing posts with label Rob Sand. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Rob Sand. Show all posts

Saturday, February 8, 2014

Historic value of power-line path knowingly ignored, professor claims

Published February 08, 2014, 10:46 PM

Historic value of power-line path knowingly ignored, professor claims

FARGO – Call it the second Battle of Killdeer Mountain – a clash between growing power needs associated with the oil boom and preservation of what one historian calls the Gettysburg of the Plains.
By: Patrick Springer, INFORUM

FARGO – Call it the second Battle of Killdeer Mountain – a clash between growing power needs associated with the oil boom and preservation of what one historian calls the Gettysburg of the Plains.
It’s a clash the power company, Basin Electric Power Cooperative, tried to avoid by purposefully ignoring the historic significance of a portion of the path of a proposed new electric transmission line, according to a Fargo history professor who has a grant to study the area.
“I think omissions were made knowingly. That is my belief,” said Tom Isern, the historian-director of the Center for Cultural Heritage Renewal at North Dakota State University, of the company’s review of the site.
Isern also questions why the state agency charged with historic preservation – a recipient of a donation of more than $1 million from a group of which Basin Electric is a member – hasn’t been more involved in speaking out about the power-line plan.
History long known
The Battle of Killdeer Mountain saw a huge engagement between the U.S. Army and Sioux Indians in a punitive attack by 2,200 soldiers against a native village encampment of 1,500 in 1864.
A state historic site located a half-mile north of the proposed transmission line commemorates the battle, which involved Sitting Bull and Gall as young warriors and is seen as a prelude to Custer’s defeat at the Little Bighorn in 1876.
The rugged Killdeer Mountains once were considered for inclusion in Theodore Roosevelt National Park, and were proposed as a freestanding national park by a prominent group of North Dakotans in 1919.
The National Park Service in 2010 noted the historical significance of the Killdeer Mountain Battlefield area, one of five Civil War-era battle sites in North Dakota it said are likely eligible for designation on the National Register of Historic Places.
Yet a cultural resources review by Basin Electric, which is proposing the $350 million transmission project, omitted mention of the sprawling battlefield, which the Park Service said could cover 17,340 acres, an area of roughly 36 square miles highlighted for further study.
The proposed power line route, which skirts the south side of the Killdeer Mountains in Dunn County, would run eight miles through the study area.
The battlefield omission came despite the fact that the consultant whose firm conducted the review twice earlier had publicly noted the area’s historic and archeological significance – even telling state oil and gas regulators of the National Park Service report.
“The excellent condition of these landscapes where U.S. Army and American Indian combatants fought provides a unique opportunity – all five of North Dakota’s Civil War battlefields could be protected completely and permanently,” the Park Service said.
The Park Service’s American Battlefield Protection Program noted, however, that “little effort has been made to formally protect these historic places,” and said rapid energy development made the Killdeer Mountain site the most threatened in North Dakota.
Isern calls the review “shoddy” and deliberately incomplete to avoid controversy that could jeopardize the transmission project.
He also said he wonders whether a $1.3 million gift from Touchstone Energy Partners, of which Basin Electric is a member, might have muzzled the State Historical Society of North Dakota, which is charged with historic preservation, on the issue.
A “chain of evidence,” including a letter and legislative testimony by the consultant who headed Basin Electric’s flawed cultural resources review, led Isern to conclude the omission was deliberate.
“I no longer believe mistakes were made,” he said.
A Basin Electric spokesman acknowledges that the consultant knew of the 2010 National Park Service report recommending preservation of the battlefield area, and could not provide an explanation for the area’s omission in the document listing areas of concern.
In written comments to both state and federal regulators reviewing the transmission project, Isern has called for preservation of the entire battlefield area, believed to be the site of the largest clash between the Army and American Indians.
The State Historical Society of North Dakota, which includes the State Historic Preservation Office, has not called for the transmission line to avoid the battlefield area.
It did, however, reach an agreement with Basin Electric to move a planned substation outside the battlefield area and to provide a “viewshed” study to show how the transmission line would alter the landscape.
Basin also agreed to perform a metal detector survey along the transmission line route in the battlefield area, with the aim of identifying any battlefield-related artifacts.
Those steps don’t go far enough to protect what Isern regards as North Dakota’s most significant historic site. The Center for Cultural Heritage Renewal, which Isern heads, received a grant from the National Park Service to study the Killdeer Mountain Battlefield area.
“This is trivializing the whole thing,” he said. “The problem is we’re building a physical structure on the battlefield,” he added, referring to towers that will support the transmission lines. “This is the Gettysburg of the Plains.”
The project is still seeking permit approval, both from federal and state officials. The company hopes to start construction later this year.
Filings omitted concern
The proposed route of Basin Electric’s proposed 197-mile transmission line first became known to the public Aug. 23, 2013, in a letter to the editor of the Dunn County Herald from a nearby landowner.
Basin Electric filed a letter of intent to build the transmission line, from its Antelope Valley station northwest of Beulah to its Neset substation on Dec. 5, 2011.
Representatives of Basin Electric repeatedly have said the cooperative first became aware of Isern’s planned study of the Killdeer Mountain Battlefield area Aug. 27, when one of its executives received a call from the State Historic Preservation Office.
But Basin Electric’s spokesman acknowledges that its cultural heritage consultant, Kimball Banks of Metcalf Archaeological Consultants, knew of the National Park Service’s 2010 report highlighting the battlefield’s importance and eligibility for preservation.
In fact, Banks wrote a letter to the North Dakota Industrial Commission dated Nov. 28, 2012, warning oil and gas regulators that inadequate management of oil development in the Killdeer Mountains could adversely impact “archaeological and historic sites important in and unique to North Dakota’s heritage.”
Also, on Feb. 7, 2013, Banks testified before lawmakers on behalf of a proposed $250,000 study, supported by state historic preservation officials, of the Killdeer Mountain Battlefield area, which has never been extensively surveyed despite its importance.
“This has national significance as well as state,” Banks said, according to legislative minutes.
Banks declined to be interviewed about why, since he knew of the historical significance of the Killdeer Mountain Battlefield, he neglected to mention it in the cultural resource report for Basin Electric. He referred questions to Basin.
Curt Pearson, the Basin spokesman, acknowledged that Banks knew of the National Park Service’s interest in preserving the Killdeer Mountain Battlefield area, but could not explain why Basin Electric’s filings for the project omitted noting the sprawling area as one of potential concern.
Basin Electric will use poles consisting of a single column to support the transmission wires, instead of the more obtrusive double-poled H-posts, typically five to seven per mile, Pearson said. The posts will be rusty, to blend in better with the background, he said.
So far, a metal detector survey of the battlefield area found two lead “Minnie balls” and a copper bullet cartridge that might be related to the battle, but cannot be precisely dated. Shovel tests at two locations found chipped stone debris.
Fern Swenson, the state’s deputy historic preservation director, said the state is fulfilling its responsibilities, although it has not sent representatives to testify at hearings, and has not been outspoken about the area’s historical significance.
“We do our job as the State Historic Preservation Office,” Swenson said. “We follow the regulations. We’ve been part of the process.”
Site sacred to tribes
The Killdeer Mountains are held as sacred to the Mandan and Hidatsa tribes. The Medicine Hole atop Killdeer Mountain plays a crucial role in their origin stories.
The battlefield area also contains the graves of Dakota and Lakota Sioux who were killed in the fighting. Their graves, near the area of combat, are north of the planned transmission line.
For those reasons, the United Tribes of North Dakota last fall passed a resolution opposing further development that would disturb the Killdeer Mountain Battlefield site.
Calvin Grinnell, a curator for the Mandan, Hidatsa and Arikara Nation, said many of the tribes’ members are resigned to the likelihood that the transmission line will be built on the proposed route.
“It should be protected more,” said Grinnell, who serves as president of the State Historical Society of North Dakota. “It’s deserving of protection. That definitely is an area that is sacred to us.”
As a form of mitigation, Grinnell would like to see Basin Electric contribute resources to native cultural preservation programming, as coal mining has done.
“We’re kind of pragmatic about it,” Grinnell said. “If there’s something that’s going to go through, it’s going to go through.”
Rob Sand, who ranches in the Killdeer Mountains and is a member of the Killdeer Mountain Alliance, a preservation advocacy group, said the state was “negligent” when lawmakers last year rejected the proposed study of the battlefield area.
Sand doesn’t fault the State Historical Society of North Dakota for not being a more vocal advocate for preservation of the battlefield.
“I don’t think it’s their way to be advocates,” he said. “That can be political and can go either way. But their mission is protection and preservation.”



Readers can reach Forum reporter Patrick Springer at (701) 241-5522
http://www.inforum.com/event/article/id/426111/
http://www.prairiebizmag.com/event/article/id/17767/#sthash.RBvPce04.dpuf

Friday, January 17, 2014

Tribal members speak out against power line plan near Killdeer Mountain Battle site

Published January 17, 2014, 09:05 AM

Tribal members speak out against power line plan near Killdeer Mountain Battle site

WATFORD CITY, N.D. – Members of North Dakota Native American tribes spoke in opposition Thursday to a proposed transmission line that would run through the Killdeer Mountain Battle site and urged that it at least be postponed until the battlefield can be studied.
By: Amy Dalrymple, Forum News Service

WATFORD CITY, N.D. – Members of North Dakota Native American tribes spoke in opposition Thursday to a proposed transmission line that would run through the Killdeer Mountain Battle site and urged that it at least be postponed until the battlefield can be studied.

But representatives of local electric cooperatives said delaying Basin Electric Power Cooperative’s proposal could mean turning out the lights for growing communities and oil and gas development projected to require more electricity.

About 15 people participated in a public hearing in Watford City to accept comments on a draft environmental impact statement on the project, hosted by Rural Utilities Service, an agency of the U.S. Department of Agriculture, which is considering funding the project.

The 345-kilovolt transmission line would start at the Antelope Valley Station near Beulah, head west through Killdeer, north through Williston and end at a substation near Tioga.

The environmental impact process considers three slightly different alternatives, but all three would affect an eight-mile area in the heart of the Killdeer Mountain Battle area, said Rob Sand, a spokesman for the Killdeer Mountain Alliance.

“The project must be sent back to the drawing board,” Sand said.

Basin Electric’s preferred route runs along U.S. Highway 85 and could be seen from up to 30 percent of the North Unit of Theodore Roosevelt National Park, said Park Superintendent Valerie Naylor. The other two alternatives would not affect the park, but all three would affect the Lewis and Clark National Historic Trail, she said.

LaDonna Brave Bull Allard, a member of the Standing Rock Sioux Tribe whose relatives fought in the Killdeer Mountain Battle and are buried there, said the project should wait for a North Dakota State University study to define the boundaries of the battle area.

“I’m not saying stop it, I’m saying do better planning,” she said.

Sara Jumping Eagle of Bismarck said she and other Native Americans consider Killdeer Mountain a sacred area for prayer, similar to a church.

“I don’t think that many people really understand the significance of that,” Jumping Eagle said. “If we tried to run pipelines and transmission lines through your church, I’m sure you’d have something to say about that.”

The battlefield area is primarily privately owned land. Craig Dvirnak, who owns the property that has been designated as the state’s historic marker for the battle, said he and all but one of his neighbors who live in the battlefield study area support the project. Dvirnak said Watford City needs the power for development such as new grocery stores, a proposed new school and a new hospital.

John Skurupey, general manager of McKenzie Electric Cooperative, said without the proposed transmission line, the cooperative will not be able to provide reliable electricity to meet the needs of residents and commercial development in the rapidly growing area. The cooperative will be forced to refuse service to current and future customers, Skurupey said.

“This is not a futuristic prediction but rather the road we’re traveling,” Skurupey said.

Claire Vigesaa, general manager for Upper Missouri G&T in Sidney, Mont., said project delays would lead to severe transmission limitations that would affect farmers, ranchers and residents in the region.

Several participants said they had little notice about Thursday’s meeting and that more would have attended if it had been advertised better. The Dakota Resource Council had called for the meeting to be delayed.

Curt Pearson, a spokesman for Basin Electric, said the meeting was advertised twice in newspapers along the route of the proposal at the end of December and beginning of January.

The project needs several permits to move forward, including the approval of the North Dakota Public Service Commission.

The U.S. Forest Service would have to grant a special use permit for the route that runs along Highway 85 because it affects public land, said District Ranger Jay Frederick.

“We don’t know which way we’re going to go just yet,” Frederick said.

The public comment period ends Feb. 3. Written comments on the scope of the environmental impact statement should be sent to dennis.rankin@wdc.usda.gov or Dennis Rankin, Environmental Protection Specialist, USDA, Rural Utilities Service, 1400 Independence Avenue, SW, Stop 1571, Washington, DC 20250-1571.

The supplemental draft environmental statement is available at www.rurdev.usda.gov/UWP-AVS-Neset.html.
- See more at: http://www.prairiebizmag.com/event/article/id/17451/#sthash.fmVDJUld.dpuf
http://www.bakkentoday.com/event/article/id/36041/

Wednesday, September 4, 2013

Hearing to be held on Killdeer Mountains power line

Published September 04, 2013, 08:24 AM

Hearing to be held on Killdeer Mountains power line

KILLDEER, N.D. — Basin Electric Power Cooperative will have to answer to a lot of angry people at a public hearing in Killdeer today.
By: Katherine Lymn, Forum News Service
KILLDEER, N.D. — 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 one-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
- See more at: http://www.prairiebizmag.com/event/article/id/15863/#sthash.8ol2UNEB.dpuf

http://www.prairiebizmag.com/event/article/id/15863/

Making the case for Killdeer Mountains

Making the case for Killdeer Mountains



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 are asking the Public Service Commission to reject this location for the following reasons:
-- The Killdeer Mountains are important to all North Dakotans for historic, archaeological, environmental, cultural and recreational reasons.
-- The mountains are one of 40 sites recently identified by Gov Jack Dalrymple and the Industrial Commission as deserving special protection.
-- The mountains hold deep significance for the Mandan, Hidatsa, Lakota, Dakota and other local tribes.
-- The proposed transmission line would negatively impact the view and experience of the Killdeer Mountains from surrounding highways, one of which is a North Dakota Scenic Byway.
-- The proposed line would pass within the boundaries of the historic Killdeer Mountain Battlefield as identified by the National Park Service. The substation and part of the transmission line would be in the core battlefield area.
-- Basin Electric’s archaeological finding of “no significant cultural sites” was based on the state Historic Preservation Office records for the battlefield boundaries, which are currently being updated and amended.
-- Funding has recently been approved for a major two-year study of the Killdeer Mountain Battlefield area. North Dakotans deserve to know the outcomes of this study before a decision is made that impacts the area.
-- Basin Electric now wants approval of a second transmission line to meet the needs of the oil and gas industry, and that second line is the alternative listed in its original proposal. This means its proposal no longer includes the “range of reasonable alternatives” required by the National Environmental Policy Act.
-- In addition, the entire environmental impact statement required by NEPA is still in draft stage and should be completed before a final decision is made.
For these reasons, we are asking the PSC to reject the present proposal. We invite anyone else who is concerned about this to voice their concerns at the Public Service Commission hearing at Killdeer City Hall today  at 9:30 a.m. MDT, or write directly to the Public Service Commission.
(Rob Sand and Lori Jepson are coordinators for the Killdeer Mountain Alliance.)

Thursday, August 22, 2013

After the 'gold rush'

After the 'gold rush'



LITTLE MISSOURI STATE PARK, N.D. — Gov. Jack Dalrymple spent more than nine hours Thursday touring nine western North Dakota sites of historical, cultural or ecological significance that are nestled smack-dab in the middle of oil country.
The tour, a first for a member of the state Industrial Commission since the legislative session, included a flyover of other areas from Belfield to Medora to Watford City. The Industrial Commission — chaired by the governor with members Attorney General Wayne Stenehjem and Agriculture Commissioner Doug Goehring — had said it would conduct the tour as a group, but Dalrymple said individual schedules have not allowed that.
Terry Steinwand, director of the North Dakota Game and Fish Department, and Mark Zimmerman, director of the North Dakota Parks and Recreation Department, accompanied Dalrymple on the tour.
Cities and counties in the West, as well as tourist destinations, have felt the crunch of energy development as it has encroached near their boundaries.
Since the 1970s, Badlands Trail Rides has co-existed with the state park, catering to riders who bring in their own stock or guiding them along the 50-some miles of trails that wind through the Badlands.
Twila and Tom Benz are one of three families in the area who lease land to the state park for trails. They also have five rental cabins but in the past couple of years, visitation has dipped. Jesse Hanson of the state Parks and Recreation Department said that has also been the case at the state park.
State Highway 22, which runs north of Killdeer 19 miles to the park's entrance, has been under construction for the past two years, and Hanson said between the construction, gas prices, the economy and truck traffic, visitation has been down.
He said last year the park had about 1,400 campers total. "We had been going up steadily," Hanson said.
It's a crunch other areas in the West have been feeling as well.
Dalrymple's tour included visits to the Theodore Roosevelt National Park north and south units, the Long X Divide, Lone Butte, Killdeer Mountains Wildlife Management Area, Killdeer Mountain Battlefield, Elkhorn Ranch and Twin Buttes.
Rob Sand, who lives in the Killdeer Mountains near the historic battlefield, is a member of a loosely formed group known as the Killdeer Mountain Alliance. The group has been urging the governor and the state to proceed cautiously during the permitting process with drilling and other oil activity near sensitive areas, as in the case of the battlefield.
Sand said he is not opposed to private landowners developing their land and minerals for energy production, but he would like to see some sort of strategy to establish infrastructure like roads, water and electricity ahead of time.
"Whatever they can do to mitigate things," Sand said.
Dalrymple said once Stenehjem and Goehring are able to tour the region first-hand, that type of planning can begin.
"We're not blind to the situation and the effect it has on the environment," the governor told reporters at the state park.
He said while landowners have the right to develop their property, the state can add special provisions to permits in sensitive areas. Dalrymple said those provisions, some of which have already been added by oil companies, could include altering locations of pads or roads.
"We have the power of the permit over them," he said. "That has been the new regime since I became governor ... and I think it has been working well."
Aside from the ecological and cultural issues, some worry about quality of life issues. With big oil and big money moving in at a frantic pace, western North Dakota has lost much of its charm and natural beauty, they say.
Florenda Holen is the volunteer host at the state park. From Wallhalla, she said, her family has moved to the western part of the state to earn a living. She has seen her son and his family move from Williston to Alexander because of an increase in crime and the high cost of living.
Holen said they are now considering a move to Bismarck to further distance themselves from the boom. She said she worries about the future of not just western North Dakota, but of North Dakota's way of life, which appears to vanishing.
"You look at the rim (Badlands horizon) at night and it's lit up by flaring," Holen said. She said when the boom is over one day, she hopes there will be something left for people to come back to. In the meantime, she said, it's tough to make a living and a life right now for many younger people who want to call western North Dakota home.
"We need something now so these people can keep a job ... they want a life, not a gold rush," Holen said.

Thursday, August 15, 2013

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/

Wednesday, March 13, 2013

Battle for Killdeer Mountain decided: Foes of drilling near historic site out of options


Published March 13, 2013, 12:00 AM

Battle for Killdeer Mountain decided; Foes of drilling near historic site out of options

FARGO — Oil developers appear to have won the battle for the Killdeer Battlefield, a historic site in the western North Dakota Badlands near where a New York-based company has begun laying groundwork for wells.
By: Dave Kolpack, The Associated Press
FARGO — Oil developers appear to have won the battle for the Killdeer Battlefield, a historic site in the western North Dakota Badlands near where a New York-based company has begun laying groundwork for wells.
Preparations by Hess Corp. come despite objections by some area residents, American Indians, historians and others who wanted further study on the idea before drilling started.
The company’s plans persuaded one couple who live near the Killdeer Mountains to hire an attorney and another couple to join them as leaders of a protest group. But most opposed to the oil development fear it’s too late to stop it.
“I don’t know if it’s a hopeless case yet. It looks that way,” said landowner Rob Sand, whose grandparents once owned the land in western North Dakota where U.S. Army and American Indian soldiers clashed nearly 150 years ago.
Hess officials declined to be interviewed but said in a statement they are “progressing with early site preparation” and expect construction to take place in the coming weeks.
“Hess Corporation is committed to meeting the highest standards of corporate citizenship by protecting the health and safety of our employees, safeguarding the environment and making a positive impact on the communities in which we do business,” the statement said. “We seek to minimize our impact on the environment in all aspects of our operations in North Dakota.”
Sand and his wife, Mary, along with fellow landowners, Loren and Lori Jepson, have led the opposition to the drilling plans and formed the Killdeer Mountain Alliance. The Jepsons have filed unsuccessful appeals with the state Industrial Commission — which granted drilling permits to Hess — but apparently have run out of options.
Thomas Gehrz, attorney for the Jepsons, said a lawsuit doesn’t appear likely at this point because it would cost too much.
“My clients throughout this whole thing have said, ‘Let’s sit down and talk about it.’ We don’t need to make a big fight out of it. We just want our concerns dealt with and we don’t think they’re unreasonable,” Gehrz said. “Hess was apparently not interested.”
The Industrial Commission, made up of Gov. Jack Dalrymple, Attorney General Wayne Stenehjem and Agriculture Commissioner Doug Goehring, in January approved a request from Hess to drill up to eight wells in the Killdeer Mountains area. The commission later rejected an appeal to reconsider by the Jepsons, who said state Mineral and Resource Director Lynn Helms was biased in his recommendation to approve the new wells in an area where four have already been approved.
“I just can’t predict where it’s going to go,” said Rob Sand, 65. “I have a personal love for the land. I grew up riding horses there and playing all over the place. And I have an interest in history. These things matter.”
Richard Rothaus, a Sauk Rapids, Minn., archaeologist who has an office in Fargo, and Tom Isern, a North Dakota State University history professor, have applied for a National Park Service grant to study the battlefield. They and other historians believe the 1864 skirmish may have been the most important encounter between the U.S. forces and Native Americans.
“For people who are Indian war buffs, this is the fight they should be looking at,” Isern said. “This sets the mold.”
During the one-day battle, Gen. Alfred Sully’s troops essentially formed a giant square with thousands of soldiers on the outside and horses and artillery on the inside. The group marched across the prairie toward Killdeer Mountain and the Dakota village, where U.S. soldiers destroyed tipis, belongings and the winter food supply.
“If you could view it from above, this would be like a Star Wars scene of some sort of futuristic warfare,” Isern said.
Although the U.S. soldiers claimed victory, Rothaus said the experience taught Indian warriors like Sitting Bull and others how to combat mountain howitzers.
“To me, that right there is the start of the war that ends in Little Big Horn and Wounded Knee,” Rothaus said.
Calvin “Bear” First, whose ancestors were among the Indian warriors at Killdeer battle, organized a “wipe away the tears” ceremony at the site in July 2001 to honor the participants and shed light on details from the event. He said the area has cultural meaning to many people and is worried that oil development will diminish its significance.
“The written history doesn’t show how important it really was,” said First, the compliance officer for the Fort Peck Tribes in Montana. “It really shaped the war for what happened after that. And really there are still so many unknowns about that time.”
The North Dakota Senate last month rejected a bill that would have provided a small amount of money to the state Historical Society to study the battlefield. Lawmakers from both parties originally lined up in favor of the bill, but backed off after complaints by some residents who said they didn’t want government in their business.
Rothaus said his study will continue, despite possible damage to the area around the Killdeer Mountain Battlefield, because “there are still large portions of the battlefield left.”
Loren Jepson said he’s mainly worried about oil traffic on what is a main road for Killdeer residents and one where children catch the school bus. He said alternate oil extraction options should have been considered, but “no one was willing to listen.”

This Nov. 25 photo provided by archaeologist Richard Rothaus shows a panoramic view of the Killdeer Mountains Battlefield site in western North Dakota. The historic battlefield is near the site where early oil well site preparations have begun, Hess Corp. said.

http://www.thedickinsonpress.com/event/article/id/66400/

Sunday, January 20, 2013

Saving Killdeer Mountain: Varied interests out to protect potential oil site


Sunday, January, 20, 2013 

Saving Killdeer Mountain: Varied interests out to protect potential oil site

KILLDEER — An area of Killdeer Mountain proposed for oil development has rich archeological resources with potential to be added to the National Register of Historic Places, said an archeologist who visited the area.
By: Amy Dalrymple, Forum News Service

KILLDEER — An area of Killdeer Mountain proposed for oil development has rich archeological resources with potential to be added to the National Register of Historic Places, said an archeologist who visited the area.

Archeologist Richard Rothaus took a preliminary survey of a section of state land where Hess Corp. proposes drilling up to eight oil wells and found numerous artifacts that may be related to the Battle of Killdeer Mountain.

Rothaus, along with a diverse group of landowners, Native Americans, hunters, historians and others, are urging the North Dakota Industrial Commission to preserve the section of land about 45 miles north of Dickinson, which is owned by the North Dakota Department of Trust Lands. The commission is scheduled to act on Hess’ permit request on Thursday.

“It’s a type of natural resource. It doesn’t make money like oil does, but it’s something that’s of value to the local citizens, to the Native community,” Rothaus said.

A recently formed group called the Killdeer Mountain Alliance suggests that Hess position its wells further south and drill four miles horizontally to access the minerals.

“This whole area is a state treasure,” said Rob Sand, a landowner in the area and member of the alliance. “We should do what we can to keep it from turning into an industrial area.”
But the alliance’s suggestion is not a technique being used in North Dakota currently, said Alison Ritter, spokeswoman for the state’s Department of Mineral Resources.

Typical Bakken wells are drilled two miles down and two miles horizontally. The state has two wells that have been drilled three mile horizontally near Lake Sakakawea, Ritter said.

No companies are drilling four miles horizontally in the state, which would require a rig capable of drilling to a total depth of six miles.

In a statement, a Hess spokesperson said the company is committed to meeting the highest standards of corporate citizenship and seeks to minimize the company’s impact on the environment.
“We are aware of the concerns and have made every attempt to address the issues raised with regard to our drilling program,” the statement read. “We design every well taking into the specific environmental considerations for that location.”

Lynn Helms, director of the Department of Mineral Resources, will make a recommendation to the Industrial Commission during its meeting on Thursday.

The issue was initially going to be on December’s agenda, but pushed back to allow more time to review the numerous comments submitted, Ritter said.

“There are so many interests that we have to look out for: surface owners, mineral owners, oil and gas operators,” Ritter said. “We have all these different parties that we have to protect. Every piece of this case has been gone over immensely.”

The Industrial Commission consists of Gov. Jack Dalrymple, Attorney General Wayne Stenehjem and Agriculture Commissioner Doug Goehring.

Anne Marguerite Coyle, a Jamestown College biology professor who did a study of golden eagles in the Killdeer area, is serving as a liaison for the groups who oppose the drilling proposal. A diverse group of people from neighboring landowners to hunters to Native Americans to biologists and others plan to attend Thursday’s meeting to show their opposition, Coyle said.

“We’re not against development, we’re against irresponsible and greed-driven development,” Coyle said.

Killdeer Public Schools Superintendent Gary Wilz was among the many people who wrote a letter expressing concerns about the proposal. Wilz asked the Industrial Commission to consider finding an alternate route to access the proposed wells because the additional traffic would make an already “precarious and worrisome bus stop” more hazardous.

There is oil development nearby, including some on the mountain, on privately owned land.
Rothaus, a Sauk Rapids, Minn., archeologist who owns consultant firm Trefoil Cultural and Environmental with an office in Fargo, also submitted his findings. Rothaus was contacted by people with concerns because of his expertise in studying history and archaeology of battlefields of the U.S.-Dakota War.

He was planning to study the Battle of Killdeer Mountain in 2014, but he’s now moving that up due to the oil development. Rothaus and North Dakota State University history professor Tom Isern submitted a grant application to the National Park Service American Battlefield Protection Program.
While the section of land being considered for oil development is nearly 3 miles from the historical marker of the Battle of Killdeer Mountain, the actual battlefield extended over a broad area, Rothaus said.

Rothaus, who holds a permit for cultural resource investigation from the State Historical Society of North Dakota, walked around the section of land in November and found numerous artifacts that indicate there’s a good chance than an encampment related to the Battle of Killdeer Mountain was located in that section. However, the actual nature of the archaeological sites require formal survey and evaluation, he said.

It’s unknown if the area could contain burial grounds of any of the approximately 150 Native Americans estimated to have died in the battle, Rothaus wrote in a letter.

In addition to the historical significance of the area, that section of land has soils that are unusually deep and intact, Rothaus said.

“I can assert that Section 36 has some of the highest potential for the presence of significant archaeological sites I have seen in North Dakota,” Rothaus says in a letter to state officials.
In addition to the historical significance, Killdeer Mountain is rich with cultural traditions for Native Americans and continues to be used for prayer and reflection, said Dakota Goodhouse, a program officer for the North Dakota Humanities Council and an enrolled member of Standing Rock Sioux tribe.

Goodhouse said because of the significance of the area, he’d like to see oil companies wait until technology advancements allow them to access the minerals with less disturbance to the area.
“The oil isn’t going anywhere,” Goodhouse said.

Lance Gaebe, commissioner for the North Dakota Department of Trust Lands, said if the wells are permitted, the department develops a surface impact agreement with Hess to make sure the wells have a minimal environmental impact.

The locations that are proposed are positioned in an area that’s flat, won’t create erosion, won’t impact drainage and doesn’t affect known historical resources, Gaebe said.

“They are in the best location they can be within that square mile,” Gaebe said.

Under the agreement, if an archaeological find is discovered during development, operations would cease and follow the guidance of a historical preservation office, Gaebe said.

Under law, state lands officials have a fiduciary responsibility to manage the minerals for the benefit of public schools and other public land owners.

Coyle said she understands the fiduciary responsibility to develop minerals on state lands, but preserving the area for purposes such as tourism should be another fiduciary responsibility.

“What’s the price of wildlife and what’s the price of archeology? There is no price. You can’t replace it,” Coyle said.

Rob Sand, member of the Killdeer Mountain Alliance, looks out at the area he and other landowners are trying to protect from oil development on Thursday.
This arrowhead was found by an archaeologist on Killdeer Mountain in an area proposed for oil development. Photo courtesy of Richard Rothaus
http://www.bakkentoday.com/event/image/id/600/headline/Arrowhead%20found%20on%20Killdeer%20Mountain/publisher_ID/82/

Oil development is proposed for an area of Killdeer Mountain, pictured here on Nov. 24, 2012, that an archaeologist says is rich with artifacts and historical significance. Photo courtesy of Richard Rothaus
http://www.bakkentoday.com/event/image/id/599/headline/Oil%20development%20planned%20for%20this%20area%20on%20Killdeer%20Mountain/publisher_ID/82/

One concern about oil development on an area of Killdeer Mountain is that truck traffic would create hazards for this school bus route pictured Thursday, Jan. 17, 2013. Amy Dalrymple/Forum News Service
http://www.bakkentoday.com/event/image/id/601/headline/Some%20say%20oil%20development%20would%20impact%20safety%20on%20this%20school%20bus%20route/publisher_ID/82/

Friday, January 18, 2013

Letter To the Editor: Oppose mountain drilling


Letter To the Editor: Oppose mountain drilling

Posted on 18 January 2013 by Bryce Martin
Dear Editor, We appreciate the many benefits oil development has brought to our area.
Posted Jan. 18, 2013
We’re also concerned about the relentlessness and rapidity of the development, especially when it threatens areas precious to all North Dakotans. The Killdeer Mountains, which include both private and public lands, are among those areas.
We invite everyone who cares about the Killdeer Mountains to join the Killdeer Mountain Alliance:
“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.”
If you’d like to help protect the Mountains, please contact us: Lori Jepson, 863-6653 or lorijepson@ndsupernet.com. Rob Sand, 863-7263 or killdeermtn@gmail.com.
Sincerely,
Mary Sand

A ‘mountain’ of a debate


A ‘mountain’ of a debate

Posted on 18 January 2013 by Bryce Martin
A two-mile stretch of North Dakota land will mean the difference between oil drilling and disrupting the slopes of the Killdeer Mountains for one global oil company.
Hess Corp., a Texas-based oil corporation, is making plans to drill on top of Killdeer Mountains. They have proposed drilling four additional wells on the Killdeer Mountains. They already have received permits and are in the process of now applying for four more to drill a total of eight wells.
Hess Corp., a Texas-based oil corporation, is making plans to drill on top of Killdeer Mountains. They have proposed drilling four additional wells on the Killdeer Mountains. They already have received permits and are in the process of now applying for four more to drill a total of eight wells.
By BRYCE MARTIN
Herald Editor
Posted Jan. 18, 2013
A two-mile stretch of North Dakota land will mean the difference between oil drilling and disrupting the slopes of the Killdeer Mountains for one global oil company.
Hess Corp., a Texas-based oil corporation, already maintains several oil well sites within Dunn County and has proposed drilling four additional wells on the Killdeer Mountains. They already have received permits and are in the process of now applying for four more to drill a total of eight wells.
A citizen action group known as the Killdeer Mountain Alliance (KMA), formed to protect the mountains from industrial development, urged both Hess and the state of North Dakota to relocate the drill site to two miles south of the mountain.
The decision now rests in the hands of the North Dakota Industrial Commission (NDIC).
Rob and Mary Sand are two local landowners and members of the KMA, expressing their strong concern over possible placement of Hess’s wells.
“This isn’t near (the mountains), this is on the mountains,” Rob Sand said.
Hess’s plans call for the wells to be placed along the south side of the Killdeer Mountains, within a public section of the slope that is designated as a school section. Two sections of every township in North Dakota are considered state school land and earmarked for funding public education. Monies from minerals discovered would be awarded to the state for education.
If permitted to begin drilling, Hess’s construction would span nearly three acres of land, with all topsoil being removed, the area leveled and an infrastructure consisting of access roads to be constructed.
Continental Resources Inc., an Oklahoma-based company, has leases directly east of where Hess maintains several leases. They proposed drilling on the mountains in the past, but moved farther away off the mountains when urged by residents.
“If (Hess) were to drill where they propose, it puts them right on top of archeology,” Rob said. “It’s a hunting area, it’s a very scenic area and it’s public land.”
Archeologists claimed there are findings of historical and cultural significance around the proposed dig site that they want to further explore and evaluate. The area is also one part of the mountain that has public access.
“Almost anywhere in the Killdeer Mountains, if you come to a gopher hole and you kick the soil, you’re going to come across some sort of artifact,” Mary Sand said. “It is one of the richest archeological sites. Once they start messing with the surface, that is lost.”
As landowners and others come forward to voice opposition to Hess’s proposed dig, the matter heads to the NDIC for approval.
“This is one place where the public can speak up,” Rob said. “When it’s on private land, there’s not a whole lot we can say.”
On state lands in North Dakota, oil companies need only the approval of the Oil and Gas Division of the NDIC for site location. Unlike decisions related to federal lands, the NDIC is not obligated to protect archaeological and historical artifacts if such protection impedes financial gain for the state.
“In some cases, however, state officials have worked with industry to relocate wells on lands where there are concerns about wildlife habitat or archaeological artifacts,” Rob said. “We hope that will be the case here.”
The NDIC is scheduled to meet Jan. 24 at the North Dakota State Capital building to make a decision regarding Hess’s permits to drill at that location. The final decision ultimately is up to the state.
“They really need to be more considerate of what the public interest is,” Rob said.
Consensus among landowners in the area remains clear – drilling on the mountains is unacceptable. A location the KMA suggested for Hess to relocate is two miles south, combining the unit they’re presently applying for and the unit directly below them, which is also under their ownership.
“It’s not going to change the financial gain – they’re still able to access those minerals,” he said. “We’re just trying to change the location. Apparently it’s easier to drill two miles than it is four miles.”
A spokesperson for Hess acknowledged the situation in the Killdeer Mountains and offered a written statement to the Herald.
“We seek to minimize our impact on the environment in all aspects of our operations in North Dakota,” a company spokesperson said. “We are aware of the concerns and have made every attempt to address the issues raised with regard to our drilling program. We design every well taking into the specific environmental considerations for that location. In this case, we have also worked closely with the North Dakota Department of Trust Lands, who is the surface owner and a major mineral owner under the well in question.
“Hess Corp. is committed to meeting the highest standards of corporate citizenship by … safeguarding the environment and making a positive impact on the communities in which we do business.”
Regardless of the situation, Rob said their intention is not to make the oil companies the “bad guy.”
“They’re just trying to follow their standard practices, and since we know it’s possible to drill from a farther distance, we’re asking that the state change the permit and the location,” he said.
“It’s both the state and Hess that we’re appealing to.”
The Sands plan to attend the upcoming open meeting in Bismarck and eagerly await a decision over their beloved mountains.
“It is an area that we think is a treasure – the whole mountain is, but that particular area is public land and that’s why we’re feeling like we should be able to say something.”
http://www.dunncountyextra.com/661/