SUPERIOR, Wis. (Wisconsin News Connection) – Later this month, Indigenous leaders will speak before a United Nations panel about their ongoing concerns with a controversial oil pipeline in the Great Lakes region.
Enbridge Energy’s Line 5 operation is likely to come up when the Permanent Forum on Indigenous Issues convenes in New York.
Back in the Midwest, organizations such as Earthjustice represent the Bad River Band of Lake Superior Chippewa.
The tribe has been contesting Line 5 in Wisconsin as Enbridge seeks to re-route the pipeline.
Earthjustice Senior Attorney Stefanie Tsosie said the proposal isn’t an improvement in minimizing the effect on tribal lands.
“The Bad River Band is already at a risk of an oil spill because the pipeline is going directly through their reservation,” said Tsosie, “and the re-route, if you look at the map, it’s basically hugging the reservation boundaries.”
She said her team is preparing for litigation if permits for the re-route are issued.
The tribe has previously filed lawsuits against Line 5 in an effort to shut it down, prompting the latest route plans. Similar cases have been active in Michigan.
Enbridge argues the pipeline is a key source of energy and rejects claims and legal decisions that it’s trespassing on tribal lands.
On the Michigan side, opponents say they’re worried about Enbridge’s latest Line 5 plans to construct an oil tunnel beneath the Straits of Mackinac, a connecting waterway.
The company says it would be safer than the existing pipeline section, but Native American Rights Fund Senior Staff Attorney Wes Furlong said there’s real concern about a worst-case scenario.
“If a leak happened within that tunnel, it would cause a catastrophic failure,” said Furlong, “pumping crude oil into the Straits and into the Great Lakes.”
He said pushing back against Line 5 aligns with calls to reduce the use of fossil fuels, citing their connection to climate change and the impact on treaty-reserved resources Midwest tribes rely on.
First built in 1953, the pipeline can transport up to 23 million gallons of oil and natural gas liquids per day.
Original Wisconsin News Connection / Public News Service article
The Ithaca School District Goes to Referendum
9/14/2024 | Jo Ann Krulatz
Residents of the Ithaca School District will be seeing a referendum question on the ballot next month. That question will ask the voters to authorize the Ithaca School District to exceed the revenue limit by $1.3 million per year for four years for non-recurring purposes. The reason for the ask is both simple and complex. […]
Elijah Vue Has Been Found
9/14/2024 | Jo Ann Krulatz
Missing three year old, Elijah Vue, has been found. Two Rivers Police Chief Ben Meinnert: Police say a hunter discovered Elijah’s remains last weekend on private property near in the Town of Two Rivers. They were positively identified by the Wisconsin Crime Lab through DNA testing. The 3-year-old was reported missing February 20th of this […]
Surface Water Grants Available
9/14/2024
The Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources (DNR) will award more than $6 million to local groups to protect and improve surface water. Interested and eligible organizations are encouraged to apply for a surface water grant. A pre-application must be submitted by this Sunday (September 15), to compete for a grant in November. Eligible organizations include […]
Wisconsin State Senate Candidate Believes Voters Want Change in District 18
9/13/2024 | Teri Barr
Democratic State Senate Candidate Kristin Alfheim discusses respectful dialogue, compromise, and problem-solving on the Matenaer on Air show.
Two Rivers Police: Elijah Vue has been found
9/13/2024
Elijah Vue has been found. The human skeletal remains found in the Town of Two Rivers in Manitowoc County have been positively identified as those of the missing 3-year-old.