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Some Landowners Mount Legal Bid to Deny Right-of-Way to Keystone Pipeline
News Articles | Solve Climate News | February 28, 2011
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WASHINGTON—As the youngest of eight siblings, Doris Lynn knows firsthand how diligently her family members labored on their 180-acre crop and livestock farm to fill their stomachs and their bank account.
So it’s little wonder the 61-year-old is now reluctant to give up even a square inch of her inheritance in far southeastern Oklahoma’s Bryan County, near the Texas border.
That pride in ownership — and a pursuit of fairness — have prompted two generations of her family to hire an attorney to counter a Canadian oil pipeline company’s attempt to deploy eminent domain to condemn about an acre at one corner of the family farm where three natural gas pipelines are already buried.
It’s within a half-mile from the house Lynn shares with her husband, Cecil, and that proximity makes both of them nervous when it comes to the possibility of a leak or other emergency.
Calgary-based TransCanada is seeking right-of-way from thousands of landowners in six states along a 1,375-mile U.S. route stretching from the Montana/Saskatchewan border all the way through Texas.
The proposed 36-inch-diameter pipeline, the controversial Keystone XL, is part of an infrastructure designed to pump up to 900,000 barrels per day of heavy crude oil from the tar sands mines in the province of Alberta to refineries along the Gulf Coast.
“They came out here with an offer and we said no,” Lynn told SolveClimate News in an interview about TransCanada’s quest for the legal right to cross part of her property, known as an easement. “This land was left to us kids. When somebody comes in and tells us they’re going to take our land, well they’re barking up the wrong tree.”
Oklahoma attorney Harlan Hentges filed the legal challenge on behalf of Lynn and the other children and grandchildren of the late A.L. and Dollie White at the state district court in Durant.
“The prospect of a foreign company using the U.S. law to take land from U.S. citizens, this is problematic,” he said in an interview.
“I think we have a strong case but the deck is stacked against the individual and in favor of the fossil fuels industry,” continued Hentges, a lawyer since 1992. “That industry has invested a lot into making sure things are in their favor since the beginning of statehood.”
Where Land Transactions Stand
About 90 percent of the 5,354 U.S. landowners along the route have completed negotiations on easements, according to mid-February figures released to SolveClimate News by TransCanada. That translates to 4,750 property owners with 6,744 tracts of land who seem resigned to the arrival of the $7 billion Keystone XL.
The remaining 604 are either in settlement negotiations on their 1,116 parcels or — like Doris Lynn’s family in Oklahoma and other holdouts in Montana, South Dakota, Kansas, Nebraska and Texas — are optimistic that their challenges could reverberate at the state or federal level.
Initially, some property owners were under the impression that if a presidential permit were issued by the U.S. State Department, that would give TransCanada carte blanche to proceed with construction. But outreach by advocacy organizations has helped them to understand that handfuls of Davids joining together might have a chance at stopping Goliath — or at least altering his initial plans.
Tagged with: keystone xl, transcanada, oklahoma