Official: Humane to protesters

Winter shelter plans in place for opponents of N.D. pipeline

Marine Corps veteran Allan Newman enters his tent Saturday at a camp in Cannon Ball, N.D., where people have gathered to protest the Dakota Access oil pipeline.
Marine Corps veteran Allan Newman enters his tent Saturday at a camp in Cannon Ball, N.D., where people have gathered to protest the Dakota Access oil pipeline.

FARGO, N.D. -- The head of North Dakota's emergency management services says the state is prepared to respond to Dakota Access pipeline protesters if they need help during a winter storm or some other crisis.

State Homeland Security Director Greg Wilz said it would be a "huge challenge," especially during a mass evacuation, but his office has winter shelter plans in place and various agencies are ready to respond.

"The bottom line here is, if we are in a situation of life and limb, we are going to be humane in anything and everything we do," Wilz said. "We aren't going to let somebody out there freeze. So if they start evacuating en masse looking for shelter -- which I highly suspect will happen -- we would take care of that."

The government has ordered hundreds of protesters to leave the Oceti Sakowin, or Seven Council Fires camp, on federal land in southern North Dakota by Monday, although demonstrators say they're prepared to stay until changes are made to the route of the four-state, $3.8 billion pipeline. The Standing Rock Sioux tribe and others say the pipeline north of the reservation could pollute drinking water and threatens sacred sites.

The North Dakota Department of Transportation and Morton County Highway Department will be key players in any evacuation plans, Wilz said, noting that those agencies worked to keep roads clear around the protest site during a recent storm that dumped more than a foot of snow.

U.S. Attorney General Loretta Lynch said in a statement Friday that the Department of Justice has offered community policing resources to local law enforcement agencies as "winter begins to take hold."

"Our first concern is the safety of everyone in the area -- law enforcement officers, residents and protesters alike," Lynch said.

Morton County Sheriff Kyle Kirchmeier said Lynch contacted him by phone Friday to discuss the situation.

"While I appreciate the Attorney General taking the time to reach out to me, neither assistance for law enforcement nor a timeline for resolution was offered," Kirchmeier said in a statement. "I hope the dialogue continues, but it's time for more actions from the federal government, not more words."

The North Dakota National Guard also is ready to help with any emergencies, said Jeff Zent, spokesman for Gov. Jack Dalrymple. The Republican governor issued a "mandatory evacuation" Monday for the main encampment, though he said no one would be forcibly removed.

Cass County Sheriff Paul Laney again encouraged protesters to heed both the governor's order and the federal government's request to leave the land. But, he said at a news conference Saturday, authorities won't be "moving on that camp" on Monday or "in the future."

Officers at the staging area and traffic control points have temporary warming houses, cold-weather gear and other measures, said Rob Keller, spokesman for the Morton County sheriff's office.

"All law enforcement personnel who report for duty to the Morton County sheriff's department are now from North Dakota agencies, and they are more than prepared for our North Dakota winters," Keller said.

Wilz said his office has received no response from emergency management officials at Standing Rock about whether they have any emergency plans or whether they need support from the state.

In Cannon Ball, Lee Plenty Wolf has no plans to leavethe protest site. He knows the government wants him to clear out of the snowbound tepee where he stokes the fire, sings traditional Oglala songs and sleeps alongside a pair of women from France and California who arrived to protest an oil pipeline in the stinging cold, but he and thousands of others contend the issues at hand matter more.

"I ain't going nowhere," Plenty Wolf said one night as he cradled a buffalo-hide drum and reflected on grievances that run deep among American Indians in the area. "We're getting tired of being pushed for 500 years. They've been taking, taking, taking, and enough is enough."

Information for this article was contributed by Jack Healy of The New York Times.

A Section on 12/04/2016

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