Ben from Nebraska – Defending the Land I Love

Why I am coming to DC — admin August 5, 2011 at 4:33 pm

Ben Gotschall is a Nebraska rancher and organizer – he’s been fighting to defend his home state from the Keystone XL tar sands pipeline with the group Bold Nebraska, and will be continuing that fight by joining the tar sands action in Washington DC. To join Ben and other Bold Nebraskans at the demonstration, click here to sign up.

For me, the Keystone XL pipeline fight in Nebraska began over a year ago, in May 2010, when I attended a public hearing on the State Department’s Draft Environmental Impact Statement in York.  When I saw the map of the proposed pipeline route and realized that it would cut through the Sandhills of Holt County, the land I loved that birthed me and had been taken care of by my family for generations, there was no looking back.  I knew I would do anything I could to stop it.

Also at that hearing, I met Jane Kleeb, whose organization Bold Nebraska was just starting to pay attention to the pipeline issue but had yet to become involved.  After the hearing, I began tracking the issue in the media, posting links and articles on Facebook, trying to raise awareness and get people involved in the fight to protect Nebraska’s most important resources, and Jane was one of the people who responded most often.

Jane and I first worked together on the pipeline issue by putting together an ad in the Prairie Fire, a progressive newspaper of the Plains.  The ad featured an image of me that Bold Nebraska then used in their ad campaign, and I sort of became Bold Nebraska’s poster-boy for the pipeline issue.

Other environmental organizations soon picked up on the pipeline issue, as did the press.  Beginning in late May of 2010, I began to do numerous interviews and was featured in a couple of reports done by the National Wildlife Federation and the Sierra Club.  In July 2010, I traveled to Washington, D.C. with a group of individuals to attend meetings with the EPA, the Department of Transportation, and state elected officials.  The trip culminated in an NPR interview, in which I discussed threats to the Ogallala aquifer and explained that the pipeline was not a done deal because the State Department hadn’t approved the project proposal.

The next day I received a phone call from David Daniel, a carpenter in Texas who had been dealing with TransCanada and had signed an easement with them, mostly out of frustration and despair.  He asked me if it was really true–if we really could keep fighting the pipeline with a chance of stopping it–and I said Yes.  Since then, David has been on fire, and is truly an amazing advocate and activist who uses passion and intelligence to fight the pipeline that threatens his home and the land he loves.  David started a group named Stop Tarsands Oil Pipelines (STOP), which has done a lot in Texas to raise awareness and fight the pipeline.

Although I moved in May 2010 to Missouri to help manage a ranch in the Ozarks, I still remained active in the pipeline fight from a distance, and this is when Jane and Bold Nebraska really took the ball and began focusing their efforts and energy on an all-out campaign against the pipeline.  Jane and Bold have done an excellent job of holding rallies, raising awareness, and calling out Nebraska elected officials who have been reluctant to stand up to TransCanada or in some case like Rep. Terry (R-NE2), have all out embraced TransCanada’s risky pipeline.

In March 2011, I again travelled to D.C. with a large group of Nebraskans and a coalition of individuals and organizations from multiple states to talk to the State Department, the EPA, and state elected officials.  I met David Daniel for the first time, and also met Randy Thompson, a landowner from Nebraska who had recently become very vocal in his opposition to the pipeline.  Randy has refused to sign an easement with TransCanada.  He is truly an inspiration to me and many other Nebraskans, and Bold Nebraska’s Stand With Randy campaign has proven to be a hugely successful awareness-raising efforts, and one that I’m honored to be part of.

I moved back to Nebraska in April 2011, and since then I have joined the crew at Bold Nebraska as a contributor and director of pipeline outreach.  Together, with Randy, Mary Pipher,  and a host of other inspiring and energetic individuals and organizations such as the Nebraska Sierra Club, the Nebraska Wildlife Federation, and the Nebraska Farmers Union, we are continuing to build momentum in the state of Nebraska, which has gained a rockstar reputation in D.C. for our solidarity, inventiveness, passion and power.

Carrying this energy to DC in August for the TarSands Action will be an honor for me and fellow Nebraskans.  We are going to show that we, as citizens, can stop this unnecessary pipeline that puts everything we care about in our state–our land, our water, our wildlife, our legacies of family farms and ranches–at risk.  I won’t let that happen, and I’m not alone.

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  • Ann Prentice

    Thank you, Ben Gotschall and the Bold Nebraska group! I was born and raised in Nebraska in the 1940s and ’50s. Even though I’ve lived on the west and east coasts and am now in the southeast, I am a prairie person at my core. One of my great-great-grandmothers came to Nebraska by covered wagon and was a homesteader, living in a sod house. One of her sons was Superintendent of the Agricultural Farm at the University of Nebraska from the 1890s into the 1920s. They loved the land and took care of the land. The family lore runs like blood in our veins. To think of a huge metal “vein” running with tar sands oil down the Great Plains states is grotesque! There are other ways to generate energy–this one must be stopped! Thank you again for your work and witness.

  • Jep

    I agree with Ann Prentice and so many others, “There are other ways to generate energy…” We must stop the use of fossil fuels. Solar, geothermal seem to me to be the energy to use – now and in the future. People power MUST be heard. Thanks for what you are doing, Ben, Jane, David, Randy, Mary and all the others who are speaking up about our lives and our future. Thanks for getting the word out. Success in D.C.

  • Heather Martin

    I hope lots of Canadians join you in Washington. The tar sands are now infamously known as Canada’s very own “Mordor”–this blighted landscape will only grow if the pipeline is allowed to be built.

  • Junkmailx7

    Maybe we should go a step farther and shut off all our energy so people can’t heat their homes, turn on there lights, and can’t fuel their vehicles.  Let’s also increase the unemployment and send more jobs over seas that way you can join the rest of the communists looking for a job!   People should also have some intelligence and know the facts before they sign petitions!!

  • Tex Rogers

    Why don’t we get the economy going the next few years and then have a plan to get ride of the fossil fuels. You talk about the future, if we don’t get our economy going there is NO FUTURE! The dollar is losing value as we discuss this subject. I worked on the pipeline that went from Texas to New York and that is the only way that state now has gas for heating. The industry has also designed production procedures via technical advancement to limit the problems you speak of! It matters not if we can’t create Jobs in the very near future. American will not be what you have dreamed in this scholastic world you live in.

  • Anonymous

    This is unfair and mean spirited. Your tone and demeanor speak for themselves.

  • John

    If Trans Canada was truly concerned about the US economy then why are they importing most if not all of the pipe for this project. They have pictures on their own web site showing train car loads of imported pipe. I think our own government dropped the ball again on this issue.
    Also people are having their land that they work for being put at high risk for the benefit of a few, mostly the oil industries greedy rich. You who think this is ok, should try going without food and water for a week or two , maybe try to survive on a bottle of oil, because if we don’t protect our life sustaining resources our future is bleak. The route of this pipeline is irresponsible and ignorant. It crosses one of if not the biggest fresh water aquifer in the United States, the Ogallala Aquifer.
    Trans Canada has not even been responsible enough to have these areas declared a High Consequence Area. Why? Because it is a low population area that they are routing the pipe through. If you think I am lying to you, Read the SDEIS,( Supplemental Draft Environmental Impact Statement).

    Afected Land Owner

  • Johnharter11

    Sounds like you need to learn some facts also. We have 1 Tarsands pipeline running and our fuel prices are still high. These are being constructed for Greed more then need. If you think exporting fuel Chinna is in the US best intrest then move their. I do not have a problem with helping anyone , but it needs to be done in a safe and productive way.


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