NDN-3-11-2016

Page 9

Local & State News

www.newtondailynews.com | Friday | March 11, 2016 | 9A

This map illustrates the preliminary route of the Dakota Access pipeline. The pipeline will pass through 18 Iowa Counties and stretch 343.43 miles across the state.

Pipeline Continued from Page 1A Dakota Access — subsidiary of Energy Transfer Partners — has been pushing the project for the last 1.5 years. The pipeline will stretch from the Bakken Oil Fields of North Dakota to a hub in Patoka, Ill. and carry up to 570,000 barrels of crude oil per day through Iowa. ETP plans to lay 343.43 miles of underground pipe in Iowa, with 33.73 miles in rural areas of Jasper County from Mingo through rural Reasnor. IUB Chairperson Geri Huser and members Libby Jacobs and Nick Wagner ruled that the pipeline meets requirements of public convenience and necessity outlined in Iowa Code 479B.9. In a press release distributed Thursday by IUB spokesperson Don Tormey, the board said it felt benefits of the project outweigh public and private costs. “For the benefit of those in the audience, as we all — individually and collectively — spent thoughtful deliberation time on this matter, I think the order that is before us indicates how we approached the issues,” Jacobs said. The board member said the issues of safety, economic benefit, environmental factors and landowners’ rights “merited the most significant weight” in their decision. Ultimately, the board deemed transporting the Bakken crude oil via pipeline is safer than its current primary mode of shipping — rail car.

Members also argued the 2,000 to 4,000 estimated jobs and other economic benefits associated with the pipeline’s construction and operation would generate at least $787 million for Iowa in the short term, and the project is estimated to generate $27.4 million in new property tax revenue for local governments while the pipeline is in use. The permit is conditional until Dakota Access meets all stipulations outlined in the IUB’s ruling. The board detailed expanded conditions in its order beyond base requirements dictated in Iowa Code. The board said Dakota Access must: • Obtain and maintain general liability insurance policy of $25 million. Iowa Code only mandates $250,000 in liability coverage. • File “unconditional and irrevocable guarantees” from parent companies — including ETP — for remediation of damages from a leak or spill. • Modify easement forms on properties utilizing eminent domain, removing language that would have allowed aboveground valves and given the company access to all portions of any condemned parcel. • Continue to offer to purchase voluntary easements — with the same terms, conditions and best prices — from landowners until county compensation commissions assess the damages on each taken property. • File a revised agricultural mitigation plan to include landowner notifications on construction timelines and separa-

tion of all topsoil. • File a winter construction plan. Dakota Access officials claimed during the 12-day November and December hearings in Boone the project did not need a winter construction plan as the company intends to finish excavation and construction before the winter months. • File quarterly status reports. • File a statement accepting the board’s terms and conditions in the permit. The 174-page order culminates a process which included 18 pubic information meetings since 2014, 12 days of public hearings, more than 3,500 pages of transcripts, 43 intervenors, nearly 70 witnesses’ testimony and five days of public deliberations. The IUB was the last of the four major public utility commissions to confirm the project. North Dakota, South Dakota and Illinois utility regulators approved segments of the project in late 2015 and in January. The pipeline company originally hoped to begin construction of the pipeline this spring and complete construction by the end of 2016. The Newton Daily News attempted to contact Dakota Access spokesperson Vicki Granado to ask if a new timeline is in development, but an email was not returned Thursday by presstime. Within hours of the IUB’s decision, the Iowa Department of Natural Resources also approved a separate construction permit for the DAPL, clearing the way for project contractors to lay piping beneath public

Baxter

Ira

Mingo

Santiago

Newton Colfax

Prairie City

Chichaqua Valley Trail Dakota Access Pipeline Monroe

Daily News Graphic This map illustrates the route the pipeline will take through Jasper County. The pipeline will cover 33.73 miles in the county.

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Dakota Access Pipeline Breakdown • Total Length: 1,168 miles from Bakken Oil Region North Dakota to Patoka, Ill. • Iowa Segment: 343.43 miles • Jasper County Segment: 33.73 miles • Capacity: 570,000 barrel transport per day • DA Average Transport Estimate: 450,000 per day

Financial • Total Estimated Project Cost: $3.78 billion • Iowa Segment Cost Estimate: $1.04 billion • Estimated Local Government Property Tax Revenue: $27.4 million • Estimated Sales and Income Tax During Construction: $49.9 million

Jobs • Estimated Jobs Created During Construction: 8,000 to 12,000 Overall; In Iowa, 2,000 to 4,000 • Estimated Permanent Jobs: 30 to 40 Overall, 12 to 15 In Iowa

Landowner Compensation • Estimated Land Impact: 1,274 government, private parcels in Iowa • Parcels Facing Eminent Domain: Approximately 263 • Parcels Facing Eminent Domain in Jasper County: 11 • Easements Filed in Jasper County: 115 • Crop Loss Reimbursement: Year One, 100 percent; Year Two, 80 percent; Year Three, 60 percent • Easement Payments: (Based on county average land value) Jasper County, $7,867 per acre; Statewide Average, $7,633 *Landowner easement payment might fluctuate based on land’s corn suitability rating. *Sources: Dakota Access, LLC; Iowa Utilities Board staff; ISU 2015 Land Value Survey; Jasper County Recorder Online Index Records

lands and waterways in Lyon, Boone and Lee counties. A public hearing was held in December to gather input from supporters and opponents of excavating in the Big Sioux River Complex Wildlife Management Area and boring under the Big Sioux, Des Moines and Mississippi Rivers. In a statement Thursday, IDNR Director Chuck Gipp said a $400,000 mitigation plan has been negotiated with Dakota Access to restore and enhance the type of habitat affected by the construction of the

pipeline. The pipeline company is financially obligated to implement the plan, and the permit is conditional awaiting authorization from the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service. Gipp said the IDNR’s does not see its ruling as unprecedented. “Iowa has thousands of miles of pipeline underground including many that are under public property. This request and the subsequent permit we would be issuing is not precedent setting,” Gipp said. Contact Mike Mendenhall at mmendenhall@newtondailynews.com


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