Current:Home > ContactDawn Goodwin and 300 Environmental Groups Consider the new Line 3 Pipeline a Danger to All Forms of Life -Ascend Finance Compass
Dawn Goodwin and 300 Environmental Groups Consider the new Line 3 Pipeline a Danger to All Forms of Life
View
Date:2025-04-16 00:38:17
Leeches love Northern Minnesota. The “Land of 10,000 Lakes” (technically, the state sports more than 11,000, plus bogs, creeks, marshes and the headwaters of the Mississippi River) in early summer is a freshwater paradise for the shiny, black species of the unnerving worm. And that’s exactly the kind local fisherman buy to bait walleye. People who trap and sell the shallow-water suckers are called “leechers.” It’s a way to make something of a living while staying in close relationship to this water-world. Towards the end of the summer, the bigger economic opportunity is wild rice, which is still traditionally harvested from canoes by “ricers.”
When Dawn Goodwin, an Anishinaabe woman who comes from many generations of ricers (and whose current partner is a leecher), was a young girl, her parents let her play in a canoe safely stationed in a puddle in the yard. She remembers watching her father and uncles spread wild rice out on a tarp and turn the kernels as they dried in the sun. She grew up intimate with the pine forests and waterways around Bagley, Minnesota, an area which was already intersected by a crude oil pipeline called “Line 3” that had been built a few years before she was born. Goodwin is 50 now, and that pipeline, currently owned and operated by the Canadian energy company Enbridge, is in disrepair.
Enbridge has spent years gathering the necessary permits to build a new Line 3 (they call it a “replacement project”) with a larger diameter that will transport a different type of oil—tar sands crude—from Edmonton, Aberta, through North Dakota, Minnesota and Wisconsin, terminating at the Western edge of Lake Superior where the thick, petroleum-laced sludge will be shipped for further refining. Despite lawsuits and pushback from Native people in Northern Minnesota and a variety of environmental groups, Enbridge secured permission to begin construction on Line 3 across 337 miles of Minnesota last December. The region is now crisscrossed with new access roads, excavated piles of dirt, and segments of pipe sitting on top of the land, waiting to be buried. Enbridge has mapped the new Line 3 to cross more than 200 bodies of water as it winds through Minnesota.
Goodwin wants the entire project stopped before a single wild rice habitat is crossed.
“Our elders tell us that every water is wild rice water,” Goodwin said on Saturday, as she filled up her water bottle from an artesian spring next to Lower Rice Lake. “Tar sands sticks to everything and is impossible to clean up. If there is a rupture or a spill, the rice isn’t going to live.”
Last week, more than 300 environmental groups from around the world sent a letter to President Biden saying they consider the new Line 3 project a danger to all forms of life, citing the planet-cooking fossil fuel emissions that would result from the pipeline’s increased capacity. At Goodwin and other Native leaders’ request, more than a thousand people have traveled to Northern Minnesota to participate in a direct action protest at Line 3 construction sites today. They’ve been joined by celebrities as well, including Jane Fonda. The event is named the Treaty People Gathering, a reference to the land treaties of the mid-1800s that ensured the Anishinaabe people would retain their rights to hunt, fish and gather wild rice in the region.
“I’m not asking people to get arrested,” Goodwin said, “Just to come and stand with us.”
veryGood! (363)
Related
- Intellectuals vs. The Internet
- 236 Mayors Urge EPA Not to Repeal U.S. Clean Power Plan
- ‘Trollbots’ Swarm Twitter with Attacks on Climate Science Ahead of UN Summit
- Supreme Court sides with Jack Daniels in trademark fight over poop-themed dog toy
- Toyota to invest $922 million to build a new paint facility at its Kentucky complex
- U.S. Pipeline Agency Pressed to Regulate Underground Gas Storage
- Shanghai Disney Resort will close indefinitely starting on Halloween due to COVID-19
- Bachelor Nation's Brandon Jones and Serene Russell Break Up
- Senate begins final push to expand Social Security benefits for millions of people
- Ray Liotta's Cause of Death Revealed
Ranking
- South Korean president's party divided over defiant martial law speech
- PHOTOS: If you had to leave home and could take only 1 keepsake, what would it be?
- Millions of Americans are losing access to maternal care. Here's what can be done
- Endangered baby pygmy hippo finds new home at Pittsburgh Zoo
- The FTC says 'gamified' online job scams by WhatsApp and text on the rise. What to know.
- How some doctors discriminate against patients with disabilities
- Schools are closed and games are postponed. Here's what's affected by the wildfire smoke – and when they may resume
- Tom Holland says he's taking a year off after filming The Crowded Room
Recommendation
Military service academies see drop in reported sexual assaults after alarming surge
Shonda Rhimes Teases the Future of Grey’s Anatomy
Flash Deal: Get 2 It Cosmetics Mascaras for Less Than the Price of 1
18 Slitty Dresses Under $60 That Are Worth Shaving Your Legs For
North Carolina justices rule for restaurants in COVID
'Where is humanity?' ask the helpless doctors of Ethiopia's embattled Tigray region
As drug deaths surge, one answer might be helping people get high more safely
Two-thirds of Americans now have a dim view of tipping, survey shows