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Search resuls for: "Dakota Access Pipeline"


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Kristi Noem is now barred from entering nearly 20% of her state, The Associated Press reported. The governor has now been barred from land belonging to the Yankton Sioux Tribe and the Sisseton-Wahpeton Oyate tribe, adding to her previous bans from the reservations of the Oglala, Rosebud, Cheyenne River, and Standing Rock Sioux tribes, per the report. The moves mean Noem will be refused entry to the reservations of six out of the state's nine Native American tribes. AdvertisementTrump seemingly stood by the governor amid the backlash, saying of Noem: "Somebody that I love. She's been with me, a supporter of mine and I've been a supporter of hers for a long time."
Persons: , Kristi Noem, We've, Noem, Frank Star, Janet Alkire, Kristi Noem's, ROBYN BECK, Donald Trump's, Trump, She's, I've Organizations: Service, Dakota Gov, Associated Press, Yankton Sioux Tribe, Oglala, Business, Oglala Sioux, AP, Sioux, Dakota, Pipeline, Dakota Access Pipeline, Politico Locations: Yankton, Rosebud, Cheyenne, Sioux, Pine Ridge, COVID, Cannon, North Dakota
BISMARCK, N.D. (AP) — North Dakota is set to take the federal government to trial Thursday for the costs of responding to the Dakota Access Pipeline protests, the culmination of an unusual and drawn-out court fight. The state filed the lawsuit in 2019, seeking $38 million from the federal government for policing the protests. In an interview, North Dakota Attorney General Drew Wrigley said the trial will show examples of numerous requests to the federal government for help and the “complete refusal” to offer resources and financial support in response. North Dakota relied on compacts to bring in law enforcement officers from around the region and the country for help, he said. The document laid out options of denying the easement and removing or abandoning the line's river segment, granting the easement with no changes or with additional safety measures, or rerouting the pipeline north of Bismarck.
Persons: Daniel Traynor, General Drew Wrigley, , ” Wrigley, Kyle Kirchmeier, , Kirchmeier, North Dakota ”, Wrigley, Donald Trump Organizations: N.D, Dakota, Pipeline, U.S, North Dakota, U.S . Justice Department Locations: BISMARCK, North Dakota, Missouri, State, Morton, United States, Bismarck
Raven Chacon’s Sound-and-Art Symphony
  + stars: | 2024-02-08 | by ( Holland Cotter | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: +1 min
A single work of art can get into your system and stay there. I’ve been living with — haunted by — one by the Navajo composer and sound artist Raven Chacon since encountering it in the 2022 Whitney Biennial. Titled “Silent Choir (Standing Rock),” it had no visual element. Even then, the only sound was the rustle of breathing, of bodies shifting and of the high-up buzz of surveillance helicopters. The same year as the Biennial, Chacon was awarded the Pulitzer Prize for music for a different, more traditionally “musical” piece, “Voiceless Mass” (2021).
Persons: I’ve, Raven Chacon, Chacon, John the Evangelist Organizations: Navajo, Access Pipeline, Roman Catholic Cathedral Locations: St, Milwaukee
For the second time as governor of South Dakota, Kristi Noem has been banished from the Pine Ridge Indian Reservation. Noem’s mention of the gang, he said, was the first time he had heard of it or its possible presence on the reservation. In 2018, as a Representative in the South Dakota Legislature, she proposed legislation that would allow federal authorities to arrest people on tribal lands for state crimes. Tony Mangan, a spokesperson for the South Dakota Attorney General’s office, said the Ghost Dancers are affiliated with a motorcycle gang called the Bandidos. Around the country, tribal nations adopted the practice, and in South Dakota it became part of one of America’s most infamous massacres.
Persons: Kristi Noem, , Frank Star, Donald Trump, Noem, Ian Fury, didn’t, Tony Mangan, Mangan, ” Noem, Bull, Sitting Bull, Trump, Nick Estes, , hasn’t, ___ Graham Brewer, Trisha Ahmed, @TrishaAhmed15 Organizations: Oglala Sioux Tribe, Oglala Sioux, Republican, South Dakota Legislature, South Dakota Attorney, U.S, Pipeline, Oglala, Oglala Sioux Tribal, American Civil Liberties Union of, American Indian Studies, University of Minnesota, Trump, Associated Press, America Statehouse News Initiative, America Locations: South Dakota, Pine, Oglala, Texas, U.S, Mexico, American, Rapid City, resiliency, Sioux, Oglala Sioux, American Civil Liberties Union of South Dakota, Lower Brule Sioux, States, Connecticut
Doug Burgum, governor of North Dakota and 2024 Republican presidential candidate, speaks with members of the media in the spin room following the Republican primary presidential debate hosted by Fox News in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, US, on Wednesday, Aug. 23, 2023. Doug Burgum ended his campaign for the Republican presidential nomination on Monday despite a stronger-than-expected showing fueled by a gift card-for-campaign donation gimmick that helped get him on the debate stage. The tactic drew skepticism over its legality, though Burgum's campaign said its legal advisers had reviewed and approved the method. And it appeared that he would also not qualify for the fourth debate, which is being held Wednesday in Alabama. Burgum was a political newcomer in 2016 when he staged an upset over the longtime attorney general in North Dakota's Republican gubernatorial primary.
Persons: Doug Burgum, Joe Biden's, Donald Trump, Mike Pence, Sen, Tim Scott of, Larry Elder, Perry Johnson, Will Hurd, Miami Mayor Francis Suarez, Burgum, Theodore Roosevelt, He's Organizations: Republican, Fox News, North Dakota Gov, Committee, Biden, RNC, Heartland, Miami Mayor, Dakota, Plains Software, Microsoft Locations: North Dakota, Milwaukee , Wisconsin, Alabama, Iowa, New Hampshire, Hampshire, Tim Scott of South Carolina, Texas, Milwaukee, North, Medora
Never has “silence” been more resounding. (Chacon went on to win the Pulitzer Prize in music last year.) My 2023-24 go-to list includes other potentially horizon-expanding group shows, all historical. During the “global” moment a few decades back New York museums, large and small, regularly gave us valuable introductory samplings of unfamiliar (here, anyway) contemporary work from Asia. “Only the Young: Experimental Art in Korea, 1960s-1970s” at the Guggenheim Museum (Sept. 1-Jan. 7) is in the line of such shows and welcome in the present international spotlighting of Korean culture.
Persons: Harry Smith ”, Raven Chacon, , Chacon Organizations: Whitney Museum of American, Miller Institute for Contemporary Art, Carnegie Mellon University, Dakota, Pipeline, , Guggenheim Museum Locations: Pittsburgh, New York, Asia, Korea
REUTERS/Brendan McDermid/File Photo Acquire Licensing RightsHOUSTON, Aug 24 (Reuters) - A draft environmental impact statement for the Dakota Access oil pipeline is now expected to be released in fall, a spokesperson for the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers said on Thursday. The review was initially expected to be completed last year and earlier was pushed back to spring of this year. A U.S. court last year ordered the federal government to undertake a more intensive environmental study of the pipeline's route under a lake that straddles the border of North Dakota and South Dakota. It is the biggest oil pipeline from the Bakken shale oil basin and can transport up to 750,000 barrels of oil per day from North Dakota to Illinois. "It's a real threat that DAPL could be shut down or shut down to temporarily move it," Lynn Helms, director at North Dakota regulator, Department of Mineral Resources, said last week.
Persons: Edwin Drake's, Brendan McDermid, Lynn Helms, Arathy Somasekhar, Gary McWilliams Organizations: Drake, Titusville , Pennsylvania U.S, REUTERS, Rights, Dakota, U.S . Army Corps of Engineers, South Dakota . Pipeline, Energy, North, of Mineral Resources, Thomson Locations: Titusville , Pennsylvania, U.S, North Dakota, South Dakota, Illinois, Dallas, Missouri, Houston
Ed Fischbach, on his farm in Spink County, S.D., said no to the carbon pipeline on his land. But some energy experts say safety is an issue with carbon capture pipelines — carbon dioxide doesn’t like to stay put, and the fear is that a pipeline could rupture and leak. Asked about the Mississippi leak, Hill of Summit Carbon Solutions characterized the event as tragic but anomalous. Braun says she is afraid the Summit pipeline will disturb sacred land around Whitestone Hill. Both Braun and Locke say they are happy to be forging new ties with farmers and ranchers in opposition to the Summit project.
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