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Page 10 - கொஞ்சம் தொடரவேண்டும் வளைகுடா பட்டைகள் News Today : Breaking News, Live Updates & Top Stories | Vimarsana

Enbridge Line 3 divides Indigenous lands, people

The Fond du Lac Band chose to allow Enbridge to follow its existing route through the reservation. There is no perfect outcome here, tribal council Chairman Kevin Dupuis Sr. told Minnesota Public News at the time. All remaining options threaten the environment for all and livelihood of the Indigenous people of Minnesota. When the Fond du Lac leadership agreed to allow Enbridge to use the existing route, they also agreed not to publicly oppose the project. And that has left Martineau worried that her opposition to Line 3 effectively pits her against the tribe s Reservation Business Committee, the governing body of the Fond du Lac Band.

New eagle aviary and rehabilitation center will be built out of a collaboration between Wings of Wonder and the Little Traverse Bay Bands of the Odawa Indians

By Meghan King A tribal aviary located north of Harbor Springs will be the first of its kind east of the Mississippi River. A raptor rescue and release nonprofit organization in northern Michigan and the Little Traverse Bay Bands of the Odawa Indians recently announced plans for an eagle aviary and rehabilitation center. The Migizi Aviary is named for a Native American word for eagle. An associated rehabilitation center is named Wings of Wonder after an organization that has cared for raptors for 31 years. Both facilities will be located on land belonging to the Little Traverse Bay Bands of the Odawa Indians.

Enbridge taps new approach for pipelines - Indian Country Today

Enbridge taps new approach for pipelines An ongoing series: Growing use of ‘corporate social responsibility’ helps companies bypass tribal opposition Author: Apr 11, 2021 Water protectors rally against Enbridge s Line 3 pipeline in March 2021 and commemorate a pipeline spill that took place along the Prairie River near Grand Rapids, Minnesota in 1991. (Photo by Mary Annette Pember) An ongoing series: Growing use of ‘corporate social responsibility’ helps companies bypass tribal opposition Mary Annette Pember It’s the dead of winter in Minnesota, and the woman’s footsteps make a distinctive crunching sound as she walks down a snow-covered road. She and others are conducting an Ojibwe pipe ceremony along the Mississippi River, offering a ground blessing and prayers for the safety and health of people working on Enbridge’s Line 3 pipeline project.

We now have a seat at the table: Michigan tribes embrace new Interior secretary

We now have a seat at the table: Michigan tribes embrace new Interior secretary
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