The camp is near the rivers' confluence. It's been home since August to hundreds and sometimes thousands of pipeline opponents. Most have left, and they've left behind abandoned cars, tents and trash.
Tribal Chairman Dave Archambault says the cleanup could take weeks. The cost isn't known.
People who claim to care about the environment left enough evidence behind at a recent protest site to make others wonder about their sincerity.
Saskatchewan Premier Brad Wall tweeted aerial footage of the Dakota Access protest camp Standing Rock Reservation in North Dakota showing fields of trash left after the so-called “environmentalists” abandoned the site.
“It’s unfortunate,” one man said. “It goes against what they’re fighting against — leaving that stuff and abandoning it.”
One hundred people have been helping to clean up the mess. Locals think it will take “weeks” to get rid of all the waste. They’re being forced to chip away at snow and ice that has been buried by the protesters.
Keep reading…
Tribal Chairman Dave Archambault says the cleanup could take weeks. The cost isn't known.
People who claim to care about the environment left enough evidence behind at a recent protest site to make others wonder about their sincerity.
Saskatchewan Premier Brad Wall tweeted aerial footage of the Dakota Access protest camp Standing Rock Reservation in North Dakota showing fields of trash left after the so-called “environmentalists” abandoned the site.
“It’s unfortunate,” one man said. “It goes against what they’re fighting against — leaving that stuff and abandoning it.”
One hundred people have been helping to clean up the mess. Locals think it will take “weeks” to get rid of all the waste. They’re being forced to chip away at snow and ice that has been buried by the protesters.
Keep reading…