March 2, 2013, 10:05 AM

The Real Sandhills...

Jane Kleeb

News, Sandhills, TransCanada pipeline

The US State Department issued an Environmental Study, one of the steps in the overall decision making process for President Obama.

We describe the State Department process and our reaction, click here.

The area of the Sandhills the State Department is using in their most recent study comes from a shrunken map formally submitted by the Nebraska DEQ through the MOU they have with the State Department. You see, its Nebraska's role to define the route, and they did...all to benefit TransCanada (who paid $5 million for the DEQ report and used a contractor HDR they are working with on other projects as well, yes this is a conflict).

We worked with various maps and experts to show the real Sandhills and vulnerable sandy soils and of course the major bodies of water this tarsands pipeline puts at risk--the Ogallala Aquifer, the Platte river, the Niobrara river and countless family wells.

This matters because the DEQ, State Department and just about every elected official have all acknowledged--after much pushing from citizens and landowners--that a tarsands pipeline of this size carrying this type of substance is not a viable option for the Sandhills.

This map shows the revised pipeline route still crosses the Sandhills, just not the "NDEQ-Identified Sand Hills Region" as outlines now in the US State Department review.

We are asking members of the media and the public to keep reminding elected officials of the real Sandhills and to use the map that even TransCanada when they first submitted their application acknowledged were the Sandhills.

Click here for a high res jpeg of map.

Comments

March 2nd 2013

Allen R. Schreiber - I Majored in Geology at UNL. I can go into the Geology Department Library and find dozens of maps from various authors and studies that show the Sandhills to be a contiguous region that stretches from northeast Colorado into south-central South Dakota. The "official" map used, despite the collaborating agencies involved with it, was cherry-picked to allow TransCanada the "magic gap" to basically keep the KXL on a straight line from Alberta to Steele City, NE. TOTALLY ignored is the fact that the Ogallala Aquifer is even MORE threatened on this new route due to the fact that even MORE of the Aquifer's recharge zone is traversed with the KXL buried IN or laying just on top of the Aquifer it self!

March 2nd 2013

Alex Keriakedes - Let's get organized and put a STOP to this evil. Bury D.C. & White House in letters and phone calls . ~AX~

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