Environment & Energy
Related: About this forumThe Flood You Didn't See: Pine Ridge "Humanitarian Disaster" As Floods Cut Roads, Cut Off Residents
The Oglala Sioux Tribe in South Dakota is facing what the New York Times has called a humanitarian disaster that seems unlikely to abate soon. In the aftermath of a blizzard that struck the state this month, severe flooding has inundated the Pine Ridge Indian Reservation and trapped some people in their homes. As of Monday, there have been at least four deaths reported on the reservation as a result of the extreme weather conditions.
Times journalist Mitch Smith wrote over the weekend that the crisis is a collision of nature, poverty and inadequate infrastructure.
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Tribal leaders at the Pine Ridge Indian Reservation, which has a population of about 20,000, declared a State of Emergency the day after the blizzard hit the area, displacing 500 on the reservation. Tribal leaders are working overtime to reach elders and those with urgent medical needs.
After a water main break, thousands of residents were left without running water. South Dakota Governor Kristi Noem said the state had responded to tribal requests by sending equipment and personnel, including about a dozen members of the National Guard to hand out drinking water. Some critics questioned why Governor Noem took so long to send in troops to the reservation and why she didnt deploy more national guard members compared to other communities. Were here, were showing up, said Noem, who visited the Pine Ridge reservation on Saturday. We cant come onto tribal land until the request is made. As soon as they did, we were here.
The governor and other state officials have clashed with tribes in the past over encroaching pipelines, including the Dakota Access Pipeline and Keystone XL. Noem is expected to sign into law soon two bills creating new punishments for pipeline demonstrators and their supporters, which The Great Plains Tribal Chairmans Association including the Oglala Sioux Chairman has opposed.
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https://grist.org/article/severe-flooding-at-pine-ridge-reservation-a-humanitarian-disaster/?utm_medium=email&utm_source=newsletter&utm_campaign=daily
2naSalit
(86,822 posts)regularly and the state does everything they can to make recovery harder every time, it
s always been that way in the Dakotas. Not much different in the other western states either, and then there's Wisconsin.
They've had water issues for a long time the flooding sets a lot of their infrastructure progress back several steps.