This Little Pipeline Protest

Cotton

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Well you have a lot to look forward to. By the time you retire you might get a sidewalk to parallel the road to the university from downtown. :wave:wave
There will be a sidewalk constructed with this complete streets project all the way to downtown. :thumbsup
 

Cotton

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Thats cool. Props

Saw a couple articles with your quotes and even your ugly mug. ~40k students, 10k off-campus and ~5k off-campus use active transportation.

What kinds of trends are you seeing - more students living off-campus vs on-campus, increasing bus/bike/walking to campus, survey results of student satisfaction regarding campus access, etc?

whats a bigger concern - access to campus or intracampus travel?
What articles did you read?

The bike system is what is taking the biggest growth hit right now. We jumped from approx. 6k bikes on campus daily to over 8k in the last 3-4 years. On-campus population is definitely growing faster than off. Overall, we have a pretty good customer satisfaction rating. We have implemented some things with our busing system over the last 2 years that have really made the system easier to understand and navigate. Keep in mind I didn't have full operational control of the busing system until about 3 years ago. That operation and it's $3.7 million budget was handled by a student. No, I'm not kidding. We had input, but half the time it was ignored.

Access to campus is the biggest concern. Tech is fully self-contained, so I have total control over that. The crossing the city streets to get onto campus is probably the biggest hazard for bikes, at least. We have direct control of our off-campus buses, so no real issues there.
 

Cotton

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skidadl

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Some dude tried to school me on the pipeline and give me a lesson on being a hippie from waaay back (he's 23 years old). He said that those Indians have their rights, dammit. He also said that America doesn't own any land and there shouldn't be boarders anywhere in the world. I didnt even say anything because he was too entertaining to shut up. Dammit, it was a riot.
 

townsend

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http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/nova/next/earth/massive-oil-spill-yellowstone-river-contaminates-drinking-water/

Massive Oil Spill in Yellowstone River Contaminates Drinking Water
A ruptured oil pipeline leaked up to 40,000 gallons of crude into the Yellowstone River in Montana last Saturday, contaminating the drinking water for the nearby town of Glendive.

Saturday’s spill adds to a history of pipeline malfunctions—in 2011, the Exxon Silvertip Pipeline spilled 63,000 gallons of oil into the Yellowstone River two and a half hours outside of Yellowstone National Park. This newest disaster comes less than two weeks after the Senate voted 63–32 to advance the bill that would approve the Keystone XL pipeline, which would cross over 1,700 bodies of water in addition to the now oil-slicked Yellowstone River.

CROP bridger-pipeline-river-overview-1-19-2015
Crude oil poured from a ruptured pipeline into the icy Yellowstone River in Montana.
Here’s Zahra Hirji, reporting for InsideClimate News:

While state and local officials won’t say how long they expect the cleanup to last, Glendive Mayor Jerry Jimison predicts it will be a while.

Jimison said the river’s ice can linger until as late as mid-March. Until all the ice is gone, he said, “I don’t think [the response team] is going to have much success in cleaning up.”

The town of Glendive began detecting the contaminant benzene in its drinking water on Monday, two days after the spill. According to Elizabeth Douglass, also reporting for Inside Climate News, the pipeline has had a history of trouble, including weak welds made in the 1950s. The segment under the river had been replaced in the 1960s or 1970s, Douglass reports, but Bridger Pipeline, which owns the pipeline, doesn’t know how or with what type of pipe it was replaced.

Montana’s government website urges residents “not to use the water for culinary purposes.” The EPA has confirmed Jimison’s assessment of the cleanup process, stating that identifying and collecting the oil “has been challenging due to extensive ice cover in the river at and below the spill location.”

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Nothing to worry about, I'm sure.
 

jsmith6919

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jsmith6919

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Cotton

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I like your governor, too, [MENTION=14]NoDak[/MENTION].
 

NoDak

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I like your governor, too, @<a href="http://www.dallascowboyscentral.com/member.php?u=14" target="_blank">NoDak</a>.
This whole protest is a God damned joke. The perfect example of how the national media only reports what they want the people to see, and the gullible masses eat it right up. Water protectors my ass. They don't give a fuck about the water or the environment.


This was from a little while back. The past couple weeks, we've had abnormally warm temps and everything is melting fast. Right now, the run off from the camp is draining into the Missouri river and Lake Oahe. Contaminated with thousands of tons of garbage. Contaminated with human feces. The local news is reporting on it, but you don't hear a fucking peep from the national media or those useless fucking celebrities that loved getting their face on camera while supporting the "peace loving water protectors." There are over 200 junked out, abandoned vehicles left behind. The entire valley has been stripped. They chopped down every tree there was for miles around. The Standing Rock tribe has screamed for the last year about protecting the water and their sacred lands. Then they leave this behind. They haven't lifted a finger to help in the cleanup.

Does this sound like people that are concerned about the environment?
 

Cotton

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250 dump trucks worth of garbage. Jesus Christ. Good to see them getting their asses evicted.
 

L.T. Fan

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This whole protest is a God damned joke. The perfect example of how the national media only reports what they want the people to see, and the gullible masses eat it right up. Water protectors my ass. They don't give a fuck about the water or the environment.


This was from a little while back. The past couple weeks, we've had abnormally warm temps and everything is melting fast. Right now, the run off from the camp is draining into the Missouri river and Lake Oahe. Contaminated with thousands of tons of garbage. Contaminated with human feces. The local news is reporting on it, but you don't hear a fucking peep from the national media or those useless fucking celebrities that loved getting their face on camera while supporting the "peace loving water protectors." There are over 200 junked out, abandoned vehicles left behind. The entire valley has been stripped. They chopped down every tree there was for miles around. The Standing Rock tribe has screamed for the last year about protecting the water and their sacred lands. Then they leave this behind. They haven't lifted a finger to help in the cleanup.

Does this sound like people that are concerned about the environment?
The media has gone very strange. Now they want to shape the news you hear for their agendas. The truth is getting difficult to identify.
 

NoDak

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Earlier today about 100 or so protesters exited the camps, mostly peacefully, doing a ceremonial march before boarding buses to Bismarck. We're told there are around 100 “hard cores” left in the camp, but it’s just too muddy for the police to get in there this evening.

Temperatures are expected to drop below freezing tonight, which will harden that mud and make operations easier in the morning. Officials are already expecting things to be tense. They didn’t want to add to the danger by making law enforcement officers work in the mud and slop.

Meanwhile a press release from the North Dakota Joint Information Center indicates that there were 10 arrests today. Protesters also apparently set 20 fires, burning cars and piles of tires, injuring two of their own who were taken to Bismarck by ambulance for medical care.

One was a 7-year-old boy, the other a 17-year-old girl.

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Yep. We can clearly see how these people are protesting for the protection of the environment.
 

skidadl

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Earlier today about 100 or so protesters exited the camps, mostly peacefully, doing a ceremonial march before boarding buses to Bismarck. We're told there are around 100 “hard cores” left in the camp, but it’s just too muddy for the police to get in there this evening.

Temperatures are expected to drop below freezing tonight, which will harden that mud and make operations easier in the morning. Officials are already expecting things to be tense. They didn’t want to add to the danger by making law enforcement officers work in the mud and slop.

Meanwhile a press release from the North Dakota Joint Information Center indicates that there were 10 arrests today. Protesters also apparently set 20 fires, burning cars and piles of tires, injuring two of their own who were taken to Bismarck by ambulance for medical care.

One was a 7-year-old boy, the other a 17-year-old girl.

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Yep. We can clearly see how these people are protesting for the protection of the environment.
This is the type of apparent double standard that we see from the freaks of society on a daily basis. It is almost mind. Numbing how fast things shift as well. Republicans are doing what denigrates we're doing 20 years ago and the left still protests. I don't have the energy to keep up with the constant crap.
 

NoDak

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Standing Rock Faces An Environmental Crisis — From The Environmentalists
Posted at 10:00 am on February 23, 2017 by Brad Slager

Protesters arrived to save the Standing Rock region — and they end up threatening the region with their own environmental disaster.

For the protesters opposing the Dakota Access Pipeline (DAPL) at Standing Rock, ND Feb. 22 was the crucial date. That was the deadline issued by North Dakota Governor Doug Burgum to vacate the land. He issued an executive order stipulating the protest, at least at this location, would end.

This was not an arbitrary deadline but one that was set for a specific reason. Harsh realities meant that the activists who had been protesting the construction of the pipeline for six months needed to leave due to environmental concerns. The very people who claim to be fighting on behalf of keeping the reservation naturally pristine have instead created an environmental crisis.

As they vacated the area protesters set fires in various areas. These were not leaves and compost being combusted, but noxious smoke was created as tents, and various temporary structures and housing were being set ablaze. It was a crude coda to a lengthy assault on the land by the people claiming they were there to save the same property.

You may have heard of a large amount of trash being left behind by the self-proclaimed do-gooders, but the numbers are staggering. For weeks already earth movers and hundreds of large capacity haulers have been taking thousands of loads of trash from the camp by the tons. At least one thousand tons, it has been estimated, so far.

“Standing Rock Environmental Protection Agency and Dakota Sanitation are working together to try and avert an environmental tragedy,” says Tom Doering, Morton County Emergency Manager

Human waste is another concern, as thousands have occupied the land, for half a year, with no sewage. The entire reason for the governor’s deadline is due to natural concerns. They need cleanup crews to work around the clock to clear the area before the upcoming spring melt. The camps were built in a flood plain, so the filth and waste will need to cleared prior to the arrival of the water, carrying toxins down river.



There is one other challenge for both cleanup crews and the environment — abandoned cars and trucks. Estimates are 200 such vehicles are at the site, and conventional tow trucks are ineffective in the snow and ice. This creates the darkest of ironies.

Each year the Cannonball river — named for currents that are strong enough to grind stones round — floods this area with force. If unable to be moved these vehicles can be carried into the Missouri River, where the gas, oil and other caustic fluids will be sure to cause problems. This is the body of water protesters claim they are worried would be tainted by the pipeline. Now their motor vehicles may end up poisoning their very object of purported concern.
 

Cotton

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This situation and the Berkeley situation have one glaring thing in common. The protesters end up doing exactly what they were protesting against. Coincidence? I think not.
 

Cotton

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