Biden's Keystone XL pipeline cancellation is gut punch to small businesses

Small Nebraska communities already seeing 'less money coming in,' with crews out of work

While opponents of the long-controversial Keystone XL Pipeline cheered its cancellation by President Biden's administration, others like Nebraska truck driver Chris Olson shook their heads in dismay.

"Any of these people that work on the pipeline, all the sudden they're not making money so they're not spending money," Olson told Fox News. "So the community they live in is going to have less money coming in."

On his first day in office, Biden signed an executive order revoking federal permits for the project, which would bring heavy Canadian crude from the Alberta tar sands through Montana and South Dakota to link up with existing pipelines at Steele City, Neb.

The executive order reads, in part, "Leaving the Keystone XL pipeline permit in place would not be consistent with my Administration's economic and climate imperatives."

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Biden's decision reversed a 2017 executive order by former President Donald Trump, which itself reversed an Obama administration decision blocking the project begun in 2008.

A tanker truck trailer in a field along the Keystone XL pipeline route near Oyen, Alberta, Canada, on Wednesday, Jan. 27, 2021. President Joe Biden revoked the permit for TC Energy Corp.'s Keystone XL energy pipeline via executive order hours after his inauguration. (Jason Franson/Bloomberg via Getty Images Biden Courtesy: Getty Images)

Olson is a truck driver from Crete, Neb. With nearly 7,000 people, the town southwest of Lincoln is home to nearly half the population of Saline County through which the pipeline route ran. Olson says people in the area are used to having their needs overlooked by Washington, D.C.

"It's flyover country, that's what they call us," he said. "It's like we don't even exist."

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TC Energy Corp., the Canadian company pushing the project, said the abrupt cancellation after more than a decade of negotiations will "directly lead to the layoff of thousands of union workers and negatively impact ground-breaking industry commitments to use new renewable energy as well as historic equity partnerships with Indigenous communities."

In tiny Dorchester, Neb., population 600, the effects are already being felt.

Lisa Veprovsky runs the East Side Bar and Grill, which she and her husband, Kevin, bought three years ago.

"We were just starting to get our feet underneath us, and then COVID hit and the restrictions," Veprovsky said.

She said business from the crews building the pipeline outside of town helped her business stay afloat last year. But now those crews are gone.

"It's not just our town. It's going to affect Milford, it's going to affect Friend, it's going to affect Crete not having those crews around here," Veprovsky said.

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"We empathize with that," said Larry Wright, chairman of the Ponca Tribe, which is part of a coalition of Native Americans, landowners and environmental groups that have fought the pipeline for years.

"We know what it's like to lose land," Wright told Fox News. "We know what it's like to have land taken away from us. But also that if and when a pipeline should leak, the devastation that that causes is always glossed over. And the impact can be felt for years, generations."

"It would have provided about $12 million in property tax relief for our counties," lamented Nebraska Gov. Pete Ricketts, a Republican.

"There's 20,000 miles of pipeline already in Nebraska," Ricketts told Fox News. "It's the safest way to move oil. ... And if you truly are worried about the environment, you want to see oil move this way versus another way." 

The Biden administration promises the jobs and revenue can be made up with new jobs in the booming renewables market, according to John Kerry, the newly appointed special presidential envoy for climate.

"What President Biden wants to do is to make sure those folks have better choices, that they have alternatives, that they can be the people who go to work to make the solar panels," Kerry said.

That messaging doesn't sit well with many in the affected regions.

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"How's that guy that has 30, 40 years of welding experience putting pipelines in, how does he transfer that to solar?" Olson asked. "You going to reeducate everybody that was on the pipeline? That's not going to happen."

Several senators from the states involved say they will fight the administration's decision, but Ricketts said it's really up to TC Energy now. He is hoping they continue the long fight and he encourages them to do so.

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