There's a Connection to Clarence Thomas With Trump's Latest Picks
Here's Where Piers Morgan Couldn't Handle Taylor Lorenz's Antics
We Know Who Was Feeding Parts of the Matt Gaetz Ethics Report to...
Trump Should Consider Pulling His Surgeon General Nominee
Not Even Swimsuit Models Can Stop NFL Players' Homes From Being Robbed
Watch: Postmaster General Covers His Ears As GOP Congressman Blasts His Job Performance
The November CPI Report Is Here
Latest Tourism Numbers Shatter This Progressive Narrative About Florida
Border Czar Tom Homan Reveals Where Mass Deportation Operation Will Begin
As Lawmakers Demand Answers About NJ Drone Activity, GOP Rep Shares Unsettling Story
D'Souza: Barack Obama is the Real Culprit Behind Luigi Mangione
A California County Voted to Become a ‘Super’ Sanctuary for Illegals. Here’s How...
Guess What Police Found in the Home of 'Pro-Palestinian' Student Leaders?
Can We Fix Our Defective Universities?
Trump’s Pardons Can Extend to Elector Cases, Too
Tipsheet

It Took $1.1 Million And 835 Dumpsters, But The Dakota Access Pipeline Protest Camps Have Been Cleaned Out

Donald Trump won the presidency. He signed an executive order to get the Dakota Access and Keystone pipeline projects moving—and the environmental left has been defeated. They caused much grief when they descended into North Dakota to make a stand for mother Earth. Now that the project is back on track, they left, among other things, mountains of garbage as they vacated the area. Additionally, they left their pets as well. Local animal rescue groups have been combing the protest camps searching for abandoned dogs. They also set their camp on fire. In an ironic twist, the amount of waste left at these sites presented a danger that it could pollute waterways if the spring melt washes this garbage and debris into the Missouri River system; this is one of the main reasons why green protesters staged a weeks-long campaign against the pipeline project.

Advertisement

Well, it’s all done now at the cost of $1.1 million and 835 dumpsters worth of trash (via Washington Times):

The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers wrapped up its $1.1 million cleanup of the Dakota Access pipeline protest camps on federal land in North Dakota, hauling away 835 dumpsters of remaining trash and debris. The site, once occupied by thousands of environmental demonstrators, is now vacant.

The federal cleanup at the last of the three camps, Sacred Stone, was declared finished Thursday.

A Florida sanitation company completed work that began Feb. 23 to hasten the massive restoration project started in late January by the Standing Rock Sioux.

Meanwhile, a local animal shelter rescued four more dogs found at the North Dakota encampment, bringing the total number of dogs found after the last of the protesters evacuated to 12.

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement