Supporters Come Out to Say “Yes” to Dakota Access

Yesterday over a hundred supporters gathered in Boone to voice their approval of the Dakota Access Pipeline during a public comment period in front of the Iowa Utilities Board (IUB). Representatives from businesses, trade associations, labor groups and the agriculture community delivered a unified message of support for the $3.9 billion project that will deliver a flood of short and long-term economic benefits. “This project is an economic must for the consumers of America,” said Tom McCune, business manager for Plumbers & Pipefitters Local Union 25. McCune went on to emphasize that, “We build things to the highest standards and by the safest means possible.”

Ross Walsh, a veteran and current apprentice with the International Union of Operating Engineers Local 234 encouraged the IUB to grant the construction permit for the project saying, “The Dakota Access project offers the chance for not just myself, but for thousands of highly skilled workers to build their careers in the construction trade.”

“A reliable domestic energy source is a better alternative than importing products form regions in the world filled with conflict and hostile intentions toward the U.S.,” Walsh said. “The Dakota Access project benefits the local and state economy. When I am working on a project I spend my money at local restaurants, convenience stores, sometimes staying at local hotels. And I also pay Iowa taxes. That revenue supports other jobs and local economies.”

The valuable dialogue at the hearing further affirmed that the Dakota Access Pipeline is an opportunity that Iowa can’t afford to forgo. We strongly encourage the IUB to take note of this overwhelming support and grant the necessary permits.


“Temporary” Jobs Make Lifelong Careers

As we listened to the speakers at the IUB public hearing yesterday, we noted that some members of the opposition pointed out that the jobs created by the Dakota Access Pipeline project were not permanent, and therefore, Iowa workers would not benefit from these jobs. Many of the very people who specialize in, and have made a career out of these so-called temporary projects, have pushed back on that notion and offered their perspective.

George Koetters, a member of the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers, pointed out in his recently published letter to The Des Moines Register, that he has worked over 40 years on various projects, and has made a good living by doing so, as have thousands of Iowans and Midwesterners.  Thanks to the efforts and hard work of men and women like Mr. Koetters, we have the infrastructure we need to keep our country moving in the right direction.

Many members of the trades industry voiced the same opinion at the hearing yesterday, including Ross Walsh, a resident of Winterset, who said:

I’m a veteran and I’m also an apprentice with the operating engineers out of Local 234. I support the Dakota Access project for a variety of reasons and encourage the utility board to grant a construction permit for the project. The Dakota Access project offers the chance for not just myself, but for thousands of highly skilled workers to build their careers in the construction trade.

The IUB hearings made it clear that the construction jobs generated by investments such as the Dakota Access Pipeline are seen as an incredible opportunity by the craftsmen and women of the region. As the Governor Terry Branstad has pointed out, Iowa needs more opportunity in the skilled trades. We believe that the project will stand on its merits and we encourage the IUB to approve the project in a timely decision.


MAIN Coalition Gathers in Boone to Support the Dakota Access Pipeline

Rally Shows Support for the Dakota Access Pipeline During the Iowa Utilities Board Public Hearing

BOONE, IOWA – Members of the Midwest Alliance for Infrastructure Now (MAIN) coalition gathered today in Boone, Iowa to show support for the Dakota Access Pipeline during the public commenting day in front of the Iowa Utilities Board (IUB). This day marks the beginning of formal hearings organized by the IUB to consider Dakota Access’s application for approval to construct the planned crude oil pipeline from the Bakken region of North Dakota to Illinois. The MAIN coalition stressed that the $3.9 billion project will bring tremendous economic benefits to the state in both the short and long terms.

The proposed pipeline represents a more than $1 billion capital investment into Iowa during construction and through operation, with an estimated $27 million in property taxes during the first year of operation in 2017. The pipeline also supports our nation’s growing energy infrastructure, creating jobs all across the country and reducing our country’s dependence on foreign sources of energy.

“Our nation’s energy infrastructure is in need of an investment like the proposed Dakota Access Pipeline,” said Ed Wiederstein, chairman of the MAIN coalition and former president of the Iowa Farm Bureau. “Pipelines are needed to support our country’s growing energy independence, this pipeline will benefit local communities, our state, and our country.”

Members of Iowa’s Building and Construction Trades Council also gathered to show how the project will benefit local communities and the thousands of construction workers and their families. “This project is about more than simply jobs,” said Dan Prymek of the Laborers’ International Union of North America. “Our families and communities will see the direct economic benefit created by this project. With more than 2,000 construction workers supporting local communities, we urge the Iowa Utilities Board to support this project.”

“These types of projects need to be carefully considered by the Iowa Utilities Board,” urged Mike Ralston, president of the Iowa Association of Business and Industry. “We need a healthy, respectful, and fact-based discussion of this project. I am confident the IUB will recognize the benefit Iowans will see from the construction and operation of this pipeline. Our state relies on a growing business community to drive our economy. This project will be another great addition to our state.”

About MAIN: The Midwest Alliance for Infrastructure Now (MAIN) is a partnership of entities from agriculture, business, and labor sectors aimed at supporting the economic development and energy security benefits associated with infrastructure projects in the Midwest. MAIN is a project of the Iowa State Building and Construction Trades Council and boasts nearly 50 members across four states. Visit us online at www.MWAllianceNow.org and follow us on Facebook and Twitter.

 


MAIN Coalition Members Rally for the Dakota Access Pipeline

On the first day of the Iowa Utilities Board public hearing to review the application of the Dakota Access Pipeline, members of the MAIN Coalition gathered in the Boone County Fairgrounds to demonstrate their support for the project and the emphasize the benefits that the $3.9 billion investment will bring for the state of Iowa.

“Our nation’s energy infrastructure is in need of an investment like the proposed Dakota Access Pipeline,” said Ed Wiederstein, chairman of the MAIN coalition and former president of the Iowa Farm Bureau.

“Pipelines are needed to support our country’s growing energy independence, this pipeline will benefit local communities, our state, and our country.”

Members of the business, agriculture, and labor communities have united together to support of the project, citing the 2,000- 4,000 jobs the project would create for the duration of construction, the economic stimulus that the project would provide for Midwestern equipment manufacturing companies, and the reduction in oil shipped by rail.

“These types of projects need to be carefully considered by the Iowa Utilities Board,” urged Mike Ralston, president of the Iowa Association of Business and Industry.

“We need a healthy, respectful, and fact-based discussion of this project. I am confident the IUB will recognize the benefit Iowans will see from the construction and operation of this pipeline. Our state relies on a growing business community to drive our economy. This project will be another great addition to our state.”

The IUB hearing is slated to start today and end on December 4th

Click here for a copy of the press release.


Pipeline is as beneficial as interstates once were

David M. Gradwohl’s Nov. 8 letter stating the “deleterious” effects of the Bakken Pipeline is humorous at best [Pipeline project has no substantial public good]. If he is old enough to remember when President Dwight D. Eisenhower proposed the national interstate system, I am sure all the deleterious effects he mentions would have applied 100 percent. The same substantial good of the pipeline for America’s citizens applies.

With his emeritus status he probably has access to the university’s libraries and should pay a visit when he gets a chance.


Engineer will oversee pipeline work

I+S Group engineers will be overseeing the Bakken oil pipeline construction in 12 of the 18 counties affected, and will likely do the same in Webster County.

But before it signs any official agreement, the Webster County Board of Supervisors had a few details to straighten out, including questions about inspections of road crossings.

Evan Del Val, engineer with the I+S Group, presented to the board Tuesday. The group will provide inspection of the installation process to some counties along the proposed route of the pipeline to be built by Dakota Access LLC, which would run diagonally through Iowa from South Dakota to Illinois.

The pipeline has not yet been approved by the Iowa Utilities Board. A hearing on the approval will begin Thursday at the Boone County Fairgrounds in Boone.

If it is built, ISG will not inspect the pipeline itself, he said; only the drainage tiles, farm field and other county and privately owned assets.

“To be clear we’re not inspecting the pipeline itself,” he said. “We’re not looking at the welds, pressure testing. Those are federal inspectors doing those tests.”

“We’re out there making sure the topsoil is being stockpiled appropriately, that it’s been stripped appropriately, that all the private tiles that they’ll cross will be protected. … We’ll oversee that, and then we’ll oversee backfill and the restoration of the land back to the way it was prior to the project.”

There is no cost to the county for this.

“Iowa code requires the pipeline to notify the inspector 24 hours before they’re going to be there,” he said. “If the inspector is not there, the pipeline doesn’t have to hold up and wait for them to come.”

Since most counties don’t have the manpower to have inspectors there constantly, Iowa law requires the pipeline company to pay for private consulting engineers like ISG to oversee the project.

Dakota Access will pay the county, and then the county will pay ISG.

“We are working for the county. We are there to ensure county lands and county ag infrastructure is maintained throughout this process,” Del Val said. “It’s a system that the Iowa Legislature put in place through the Iowa Utility Board to ensure Iowa’s No. 1 economic motor is protected.”

ISG is headquartered in Mankato, Minnesota, but has three offices in Iowa, including Storm Lake and Des Moines, Del Val said.

Under Iowa code, the engineers will have authority to halt construction and require changes if something is being done not according to the agreed plan, Supervisor Mark Campbell said.

ISG needs to get things in place now so it can be ready for the rapid pipeline development schedule, Del Val said.

Campbell said it’s likely there will be multiple crews working in five different places at once, and Dakota Access wants to be finished with work in Webster County in as little as 10 days.

ISG is “ramping up” so it will have enough staff to keep up with that sort of schedule, Del Val said.

“This is a unique construction project in that, the way they’re viewing it is they have a contract on the back end that they need to be pumping crude oil in November of next year,” Del Val said.

In order to meet that schedule, they’re going to be working long hours six or seven days a week.

“The agreed-upon rates are going to be commensurate with that type of work environment, different than a typical construction project where people are out at their usual engineering rates.”

But the law doesn’t require the engineering company to oversee road crossings.

Del Val said since the engineers will already be on-site doing inspections, they will also inspect those crossings. But the supervisors said before any formal letter of intent is signed, it should say that specifically.

Del Val said the fee for engineering services is different from the crossing fee the company will pay to cross tiles and roads. The supervisors said they want to make sure this is clear also.

“I think we had that discussion of them thinking we were going to pay you out of that fee,” Leffler said.

The county has already hired MHF Engineering to do some predesign work on its drainage tiles, Supervisor Keith Dencklau said.

Some of the tiles were put in more than 100 years ago by hand, Dencklau said. In future improvements it might be necessary to put them in deeper.

MHF will determine the deepest future drainage districts might go, and request Dakota Access builds its pipeline 2 feet below that, he said. The company has asked the county for this information, and doing it this way is supported by the utility board’s rules.

“This way it should never be in the way,” Dencklau said.


Boone County Residents: Dakota Access Pipeline a Benefit to County and State

Jason Copple and Dan Prymek, two residents of Boone County, recently wrote a letter to The Des Moines Register explaining the benefits of the Dakota Access Pipeline for the state and for county. With regards to employment opportunities, they wrote:

As proud members of labor unions, we can state with certainty that this project will provide employment for thousands of hardworking Iowans. Many of these are people who previously held a different job, but were let go and they took advantage of opportunities to retrain in order to earn an honest living. Many of these folks are your neighbors and friends.

Copple and Prymek also highlighted the revenue that the project would generate:

Our work on this project will provide an approximate $50 million in revenue for the state, as well an estimated $27 million in property taxes in the first year alone. This revenue will benefit us all as Iowans. Through the construction of the Dakota Access Pipeline, transport of regionally produced oil will be made safer and our freight network will be more efficient while still being allowed to grow.

Read the entire letter here.


Boone County board should reconsider pipeline

We attended the most recent meeting of the Boone County Board of Supervisors and are writing to convey our dismay at the decision to adopt a resolution opposing the construction of the Dakota Access Pipeline. In their resolution, the board stated that the project would have “no benefits” for the people of Boone County. That is simply not the case.

As proud members of labor unions, we can state with certainty that this project will provide employment for thousands of hardworking Iowans. Many of these are people who previously held a different job, but were let go and they took advantage of opportunities to retrain in order to earn an honest living. Many of these folks are your neighbors and friends.

Our work on this project will provide an approximate $50 million in revenue for the state, as well an estimated $27 million in property taxes in the first year alone. This revenue will benefit us all as Iowans. Through the construction of the Dakota Access Pipeline, transport of regionally produced oil will be made safer and our freight network will be more efficient while still being allowed to grow.

We urge the Boone County Board to reconsider and hear the other side of the story on this issue.


Coalition Sends Support Letter for Pipeline

The Midwest Alliance for Infrastructure Now group has sent a letter of support for the Dakota Access Pipeline to regulatory agencies in four states. MAIN Chairman and Iowa farmer Ed Wiederstein says the pipeline that would ship oil from the Bakken fields of North Dakota across the Dakotas and Iowa into Illinois has several economic benefits.

He says while opponents argue the jobs created by Energy Transfer’s pipeline are not permanent, the infusion of economic activity would still benefit pipeline states.

Wiederstein says there are other major long term benefits to the Dakota Access pipeline as well.

Regulatory agencies in Iowa, South and North Dakota and Illinois are currently reviewing the project and will make a determination on a permit for it before the end of the year.


MAIN Coalition Submits its Letters of Support to Regulatory Agencies Overseeing Dakota Access Approval

Letter Highlights Economic and Safety Benefits of the Dakota Access Pipeline for the Upper Midwest

DES MOINES– As the regulatory agencies of North Dakota, South Dakota, Iowa, and Illinois proceed with their reviews of the Dakota Access Pipeline, the MAIN Coalition has submitted a letter on behalf of its members outlining the numerous benefits the project would bring to the respective states and the region.

In a letter addressed to the four regulatory agencies responsible with conducting the exhaustive review process, Chairman Ed Wiederstein urged commissioners to look at the existing body of evidence with regards to pipelines and consider the economic benefits of the project:

This project will provide our local economies a much needed positive boost. The construction alone will create thousands of jobs for American workers who will spend money and support local services during construction. Counties along the route will also receive ongoing property tax revenue for schools, services, and infrastructure creating a vibrant local economy. (…) Everyone from the local banker all the way down to the smallest mom-and-pop shop is impacted when real money is injected into the economy.

Wiederstein also touched upon the benefits the project would bring to the region’s farmers by easing the demand for crude-by-rail (CBR) shipments:

American agriculture is highly dependent on petroleum development. The simple fact is that the less oil we process domestically, the more we will have to import from foreign countries. That drives up energy prices for farmers who need gasoline and diesel for the majority of their farm equipment. Those costs, which impact a farmer’s bottom line, are then passed along to the consumer and cause higher food prices both here in the Midwest and in cities throughout the country. The Midwest Alliance for Infrastructure Now believes that pipelines are an answer to climbing energy prices, as well as the transport issues that plague the agricultural sector as a result of oil trains.

According to a recent American Farm Bureau Federation study, the region’s farmers suffered more than half a billion dollars in losses in 2014 as a result of congestion of the region’s railway network.

“The MAIN Coalition brings together a wide spectrum of industries and stakeholders who believe that this project will benefit not only our members and employees, but the entire Midwest,” commented Ed Wiederstein, MAIN Chairman and past president of the Iowa Farm Bureau.  “We support a vigorous review process of the facts and are confident that the commissioners reviewing the applications will eschew hollow rhetoric, and allow the process to arrive at the decision that helps support the region’s economy and nation’s energy security.”

Click here to read the letter.

About MAIN: The Midwest Alliance for Infrastructure Now (MAIN) is a partnership of entities from agriculture, business, and labor sectors aimed at supporting the economic development and energy security benefits associated with infrastructure projects in the Midwest. MAIN is a project of the Iowa State Building and Construction Trades Council and boasts nearly 50 members across four states. Visit us online at www.MWAllianceNow.org or follow us on Facebook and Twitter.