Update on the TransCanada settlements: AP's Chet Brokaw reports that the settlements reached Friday cover just the first batch of landowners who were scheduled to go to court yesterday, not the whole South Dakota group. Keystone pipeline project rep Jeff Rauh says talks are still ongoing with some landowners.
Alas, those other landowners and the rest of us interested in learning whether TransCanada is finally playing fair with everyone won't get to find out what the settlements reached so far consist of: "Rauh said both sides in the trials agreed that the terms of the agreement would be confidential" [Chet Brokaw, "Settlement Reached in Pipeline's First Eminent Domain Trials," AP via Aberdeen American News, 2008.06.09].
Whether it's settlements like this or contracts or what have you, the moneyed interests in our state impose far too many restrictions on information in our society. The landowners have already been pushed into sacrificing their property rights; why take a bite out of their free-speech rights as well? Other folks along the Keystone route and in the way of future pipelines and other industrial projects (like Doug and his West River neighbors) deserve to know what TransCanada's final offer is.
There are plenty of matters that are none of our business. But the terms under which a foreign corporation lays claim in practical perpetuity to South Dakota land and puts our land and water at permanent risk should be a matter of public record.
The Predictability of the Sioux Falls City Council is painful to watch
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Former City Councilor Big T wrote an excellent letter to the editor about
how the citizens need to vote on the new parks’ expenditures. I would
agree, $77 ...
1 day ago
CAH:
ReplyDeleteThis isn't that big of a deal. Settlements between private parties are almost always confidential. I think you're reading too much into this, and I say this as someone who thinks the use of imminent domain for this project is bad and governmental openness is good.
Todd D. Epp, Esq.
SD Watch http://www.southdakotawatch.net
It still cuts my cheese -- I'd like to know just how much the landowners got, how much they gave up, how much this foreign corporation was able to force out of them. Grrr... how's the free market supposed to work if we don't know how much those land rights sell for?
ReplyDelete