ARTICLES - HOT OFF THE FAGGOT

Landowners Challenge TransCanada's Keystone Pipeline

TransCanada has invoked the power of eminent domain to do it anyway

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Landowners Challenge TransCanada's Keystone Pipeline

Keystone Pipeline Eminent Domain

Sue Kelso, born Sue White, is fiercely attached to a 180-acre slice of southern Oklahoma farmland. The property, about two hours north of Dallas, has been in the family since Kelso's parents, the late A.L. and Dollie White, purchased the first 80 acres in 1941. They added 100 more in 1950.

Now, the Calgary-based pipeline company TransCanada wants to run its proposed Keystone XL pipeline -- which would carry oil harvested from Alberta's tar sands through six states to the Texas Gulf Coast -- under the White family's land. Kelso, 69, and her aging siblings ultimately refused, so TransCanada has invoked the power of eminent domain to do it anyway.

The White clan is fighting the company's claim to right-of-way in court.

"My mom and dad had eight children, but one passed away when we were young, so seven of us grew up there," Kelso said in a telephone interview. "We farmed peanuts and at times we had vegetable crops that we sold -- cucumbers, peas and green beans. But we mostly farmed peanuts. We made money doing that, and we worked for other people hoeing and pulling cotton," she said.

"My dad was blind. He was legally blind when my mother married him. She was only 17. We scratched our living out of that dirt," Kelso added. "That farm meant the world to my mom and dad and they said they were going to leave it to us to care for, and that's what we intend to do."

They've got an uphill battle.

TransCanada's spokesman, Terry Cunha, emphasized that in neither this, nor in any other case, is the company seeking to seize property -- even though the legal process is known rather harrowingly as "condemnation." Rather, he said, the company only seeks to obtain easement rights to build and maintain its pipeline.

"Our commitment is to treat landowners with respect, to work with them and come to the best possible solution," Cunha said. "We do everything reasonable to avoid using eminent domain. We have always followed this process in negotiating rights of way from landowners along 35,500 miles of pipe."

But that's of little comfort to Kelso. "It's wrong," she said. "That is our land, and it's not fair that a foreign company can come in and condemn it."

Whatever the merits of the White family's case, public concern over pipeline safety -- and scrutiny of the actions of pipeline companies -- has been heightened by a recent rupture in a line belonging to Exxon-Mobil, which allowed some 42,000 gallons of oil to seep into the Yellowstone River in Montana earlier this month.

Indeed, environmental groups quickly linked the two pipelines, arguing that the Exxon-Mobil spill clearly demonstrates that the risks of TransCanada's venture are too high.

On Friday, seven Democratic senators, led by Sheldon Whitehouse of Rhode Island, sent a letter to Secretary of State Hillary Clinton echoing that sentiment. They called for a review of the permitting process.

"We write to express our continuing concerns regarding TransCanada's proposed Keystone XL pipeline," the letter began. "One need look no further than the ongoing impacts on the Yellowstone River in Montana from a leak in ExxonMobil's Silvertip pipeline to recognize that such risks are very real."

The White family is deeply worried about spills, too, and their story is one of several highlighted in a report published in April by the environmental group Friends of the Earth. In it they argue that TransCanada has been bullying property owners as it tries to secure the rights to run its 2,000 miles of pipeline through the American heartland.

"Eminent domain is supposed to be used for the public good," said Alex Moore, an activist with Friends of the Earth. "Yet TransCanada is suing and threatening American farmers and ranchers with eminent domain so it can build a pipeline that will serve no one but TransCanada and Big Oil."

The tales gathered in the group's April report include people like David Daniel, a carpenter from Winsboro, Texas, who said he first learned his property was included in TransCanada's pipeline plans when he discovered that the company had hammered survey stakes into his land. "No one from the company had asked his permission -- or even notified him after the fact," the report stated. "When he denied the company further access to his land, their Houston law firm threatened to take his property through eminent domain."

Letters sent over the last year to landowners in various states by TransCanada, or by its agents, suggest that it regards eminent domain as a path of last resort -- though one the company is certainly willing to take.

But Cunha, TransCanada's spokesman, said any suggestion that the company was bullying landowners was false, and that the company has diligently followed federal and state guidelines for pursuing legal easement deals with property owners in all states the proposed pipeline would traverse. He also disputed stories of wanton trespass.

"We don't just show up and start trespassing and laying stakes down without permission," Cunha said.

Meanwhile, the White family's challenge, which questions TransCanada's right to invoke eminent domain in the first place, is unusual. By many measures, it would seem a losing proposition.

"The majority of time property owners do lose," said Catherine Tedone Newman, the executive director of the Owners' Counsel of America, an organization dedicated to protecting the rights of property owners in eminent domain cases. "But they lose for the good of the public. What you're really trying to do is advocate for individual rights," Newman said. "That's what our founding fathers based our country on."

Eminent domain is a fickle business and the details vary from state to state. What's certain, though, is that the law tends to favor local governments and developers who can legitimately claim that a greater public purpose is being served by whatever infrastructure project or economic enhancement is being undertaken -- from utility wires and freeways, to schools, pipelines, railroad tracks and ports.

Directly challenging a claim to eminent domain, therefore, is far less common than refusing to accept the financial terms proposed by a company to compensate property owners for the use of their land.

Kelso said land agents representing TransCanada originally offered her family $1,300 for a 50-foot easement for the pipeline itself, which would cut across the southwest corner of the property, along with a 25-foot temporary easement on either side for equipment. According to court filings, that number was eventually increased to $2,123 for use of the land.

The family still grazes cattle there, and another of the White's daughters, Doris Lynn, still lives with her husband on the land. Kelso and her husband, Waylan, who now live just over the border in Texas, have built a retirement home on the property.

"My brother and sister-in-law have cows on the place," Kelso said. "It takes forever for that grass to come back, and TransCanada told us they wouldn't pay for pasture damage if we didn't take the deal."

So they thought about it. After all, the Whites weren't strangers to pipelines. Four oil or natural gas lines -- artifacts of deals made by their now-deceased parents -- already slip underfoot at the property. Even Cunha said the company was close to a deal with the family.

But after reading up on the Keystone XL pipeline and its proposed cargo -- a thick, tarry form of oil called bitumen, which is diluted with other petroleum byproducts and pumped at higher pressures and temperatures than conventional crude -- Kelso said she and her family became nervous and backed away.

A spill on their property, she said, would be too much to bear.

Last August, TransCanada filed a condemnation suit on the property. In January, the Whites fought back, arguing in a filing with Oklahoma's Bryan County District Court that TransCanada's claim ought to be dismissed because, among other things, the pipeline would serve no public good, no legislature had ever granted eminent domain for the right to move bitumen, and as a foreign corporation it has no right to eminent domain.

From the filing:

The Landowners' property cannot be legally taken by TransCandada Keystone Pipeline, LP because the property would be taken: (1) by a privately-owned, foreign corporate entity; (2) by an entity owned and controlled by a privately-owned, foreign corporate entity; (3) for the benefit of a privately-owned foreign entity; (4) for the benefit of a foreign government; and (5) other reasons outside the scope of any public use for which property of citizens of Oklahoma and the United States may legally be taken under the Oklahoma statutes, the Oklahoma Constitution, or the United States Constitution.

The White family's attorney, Harlan Hentges, put it more simply: "It's not that it's an oil pipeline, it's that the public gets no use from the pipeline. That's the problem," Hentges said. "The pendulum is swinging against eminent domain," he added. "We're not tilting at windmills, here. This is a good fight to fight."

TransCanada fired back in February, arguing in essence that the White's challenge had no real merit, and that TransCanada's claim to eminent domain was as legitimate as any other -- not least because its Keystone operation is not a "foreign corporation," but a limited liability partnership legally registered in Delaware. The oil from Alberta, it also argued, meets state standards, and the pipeline itself would serve the public good by creating jobs and delivering roughly $1.25 billion in economic benefits to Oklahoma alone -- at least according to one study.

Critics have disputed those numbers. They've also questioned the company's pursuit of easements when the the U.S. State Department has not yet granted the company permission to build.

Cunha argued that it only made business sense to pursue easement deals while waiting for the State Department to deliberate, so that the company is poised to begin building as soon as one is issued.

In the event the permit is denied, he said, landowners get to keep the money.

To date, TransCanada has secured 90 percent of its needed easement deals, Cunha said. In the remaining 10 percent of the cases, he added, negotiations over what constitutes fair market value for the use of various properties are ongoing, and the company expects that it will reach agreements with most cases.

Whether that will prove overly optimistic remains to be seen. In Oklahoma alone, TransCanada has filed at least 59 suits seeking condemnation of properties, though Cunha said the White family's case was the only one to his knowledge in which a landowner was not challenging the price offered, but the company's right to eminent domain on its face.

Sue Kelso, meanwhile, said she's now convinced that no price is high enough. But she also said that she isn't holding her breath that her family's efforts -- or those anywhere else -- will stop the Keystone XL pipeline from ultimately being built.

"They'll get it though there anyway," she said. "Let's face it, all they've got to do is dangle a dollar in front to these politicians and they'll think it's the most wonderful thing in the world."

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Complaints against York councilwoman Toni Smith sent to D.A.

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Complaints against York councilwoman sent to D.A.

York County Solicitor Mike Flannelly said he reviewed the complaints of violations of the election law.
By EMILY OPILO
Daily Record/Sunday News


Several ethics complaints filed against York City Councilwoman Toni Smith have been referred to the county district attorney's office, York County Solicitor Mike Flannelly said Wednesday.


The complaints, filed by city resident and former York City Council and mayoral candidate, Gerry L. Turner, suggested that Smith violated several sections of campaign finance rules when she contributed to a political action committee that printed materials condemning her primary opponent Michael Helfrich.


All ethics complaints filed with the York County Department of Elections and Voter Registration are forwarded to the county solicitor for review, director Nikki Suchanic said. The solicitor can choose whether to pass the complaint to the district attorney.


Flannelly would not disclose why he forwarded the complaint, but said he reviews all such cases to determine if a violation of election law has taken place and issues an opinion. If there is a factual issue with the case, the district attorney can make a further determination, he said.


York County District Attorney Tom Kearney said it was his office's policy to neither confirm nor deny whether an investigation is pending. He would not comment further.


At issue in the complaints were some fliers distributed by a group, known as the Committee for York's Future, shortly before the primary. The mailers addressed Helfrich's criminal record, featuring a pair of dice and asking voters if they wanted to gamble on him. Helfrich pleaded guilty to two felony drug charges in 1991.


Campaign finance records filed with York County show Smith and her re-election committee contributed all of the money used by the Committee for York's Future. She later defeated Helfrich by fewer than 100 votes.


In the four complaints filed against Smith, Turner alleges that she violated campaign finance law by exceeding established contribution limits, negating rules that required the committee's treasurer to make financial transactions, failing to conspicuously state the name of the person that financed the mailers and not listing outstanding debts on campaign finance documents.


Included with the complaints was a notarized statement from committee chairwoman of the Committee for York's Future, Jerri Zimmerman. She states she was led to believe by Smith that the committee would promote anti-bullying efforts when she decided to sign on as chairwoman.


Smith said previously that she would be willing to talk to Flannelly and Kearney about the complaints. She could not be reached for comment Wednesday.

Read more at www.ydr.com
 

Police catch man who ran from Springettsbury traffic stop

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Police catch man who ran from Springettsbury traffic stop

By TED CZECH
Daily Record/Sunday News
Workers file back into the Springettsbury Township plant around 10:35 a.m. Wednesday. (Daily Record/Sunday News - Eileen Joyce)
A man who ran from police after they pulled him over on Route 30 Wednesday morning fled into the Caterpillar building but was later arrested as he tried to masquerade as an employee.


Springettsbury Township Police Sgt. Daniel Stump said the man was spotted on the property of the parts and manufacturing center carrying some cones, "trying to blend in as an employee."


But one of the employees recognized the man - whose name police did not release - and alerted police. An officer began chasing him, and a United Parcel Service worker, who saw the chase, tripped the man, allowing police to arrest him, Stump said.


Police pulled over an SUV about 7:20 a.m. between North Hills Road and Memory Lane, when they noticed it had an expired registration plate that belonged to another vehicle.


During the stop, the man got out of the gold 1994 Chevy Suburban and ran toward the industrial complex, at 600 Memory Lane. He scaled a barbed-wire fence to get onto the property, Stump said.


Stump said later the man might have gained entry to the buildings through one of many garage bays that are often open.


Officers - along with the plant's security and management team - began combing the plant and, gathering reinforcements, set up a perimeter around the complex.


"Employees in the building were evacuated as a precautionary measure," according to Caterpillar.


Police spotted the man twice inside the plant but were unable to catch him, Stump said.


Searching the man's vehicle, police found two gun holsters, which led them to believe he might have been armed, Stump said.


A York Area Regional Police K-9 unit spent about an hour searching the building.


About 11:35 a.m., after employees had been allowed to return to work, an employee recognized the man, and a nearby officer was alerted.


Springettsbury Township Police said they also received help from officers from Spring Garden and Hellam townships.


Staff photographer Chris Dunn contributed to this report.

Caterpillar's statement


After the man's arrest, Caterpillar issued a statement, saying in part that it "has cooperated fully with authorities in this matter and is grateful to local law enforcement for their quick and professional support in resolving this matter."


Workers are evacuated from the York Business Park in Springettsbury Township on Wednesday. (Daily Record/Sunday News - Chris Dunn)
Read more at www.ydr.com
 

Man, 19, dead after shooting in York

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Man, 19, dead after shooting in York

Neighbors gather near the scene of a shooting at the 300 block of East Princess Street in York Wednesday July, 20, 2011 as police, left, cover the victim's body. A 19-year-old male was killed in the shooting, which has been declared a homicide. (DAILY RECORD/SUNDAY NEWS -- EILEEN JOYCE)
A police officer carries his gun and covers himself with a shield as he enters a building on the 300 block of East Philadelphia Street in York Wednesday July 20, 2011. Police later arrested a man in the residence who is believed to have been involved in the shooting. (DAILY RECORD/SUNDAY NEWS -- EILEEN JOYCE)
A police officer photographs the scene of a shooting at the 300 block of East Princess Street in York Wednesday July, 20, 2011. (DAILY RECORD/SUNDAY NEWS -- EILEEN JOYCE)

Update 2:50 p.m.


The coroner has been called to the scene. A body is on the ground, under a tarp. Police and bystanders are on the street.



Reported earlier


York, PA -
Police and rescue crews are responding to a shooting in York, reported to 911 this afternoon.


The shooting occurred in the 300 block of East Princess Street. York County 911 was alerted to the shooting by ShotSpotter, as well as calls from nearby residents at about 2:30 p.m.


Minutes later, another rescue unit was sent out for a second victim, according to York County 911.


Check back here later for more details.




Update 3:20 p.m.


Coroner Barry Bloss said it was a 19-year-old male who was shot, and it is a homicide. He does not yet know how many shots. He will release more information and the identity once the family is notified.

Update, 5 p.m.


York City Police Chief Wes Kahley said one man has been arrested in connection to the shooting.


Kahley and many other officers, some with shields and an armored vehicle, are at the scene of the arrest on East Philadelphia Street.


Police surrounded the home in the 300 block of East Philadelphia Street shortly after the shooting took place. A man was later arrested and taken out in handcuffs.


The street is closed from North Pine to North Broad streets as police continue to search the home, Kahley said.


There's no indication another person is involved, but Kahley said officers are taking every precaution as they check the home and make sure no one else is there.

Read more at www.ydr.com
 

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Free Audiobook: Steps to Christ

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Want to know Jesus better? Download this free Steps to Christ audiobook to learn how!

In just thirteen short chapters, you’ll discover the steps to finding a forever friendship with Jesus. You’ll read about His love for you, repentance, faith and acceptance, growing like Him, the privilege of prayer, what to do with doubt, and how to spend your days rejoicing in your best Friend, Jesus.

You may share this audio book offline, but you may not alter or sell it. If you wish to share it online, please do so by linking to this site or the iTunes podcast.

This recording was read by Becky Wilson Alignay and produced by John Beckett.

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The Prophecy Club: THIS WEEK IN RADIO







THIS WEEK IN RADIO





Prophecy In The Stars w/Bob Wadsworth 1



Stan Johnson - 7/11/2011 - mp3 download



Prophecy In The Stars w/Bob Wadsworth 2



Stan Johnson - 7/12/2011 - mp3 download



Emergency The Gulf Stream Has Stopped - John Moore



Stan Johnson - 7/13/2011 - mp3 download



Proof Of The Mystery Planet - John Moore



Stan Johnson - 7/14/2011 - mp3 download



Underground Government Survival Bases - John Moore



Stan Johnson - 7/15/2011 - mp3 download





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Woman Accused of Groping TSA Agent Hailed as Hero

Video: http://denver.cbslocal.com/top-video?autoStart=true&topVideoCatNo=default&clipId=6061127

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LONGMONT, Colo. (CBS4) – The Department of Homeland Security is taking the case of a Longmont woman who allegedly grabbing the breast of a TSA agent very seriously.



Yukari Mihamae, 61, was taken into custody at the screening area of the Phoenix Sky Harbor Airport last Thursday. Police say she refused to go through screening and was argumentative.



Officials say she admitted to grabbing a TSA agent’s breast with both hands and squeezing and twisting, but has not given a reason why.



Mihamae, who had to spend a night in jail, is now charged with felony sexual abuse.



A CBS4 reporter briefly spoke to Mihamae on Sunday at her Longmont home but she said she had no comment about the case on the advice of her attorney.



Some Facebook users who are obviously frustrated with the strict procedures of the Transportation Safety Administration have set up a Facebook page expressing their support for Mihamae. The “Acquit Yukari Mihamae” page had more than 500 supporters on Monday.



News of its creation the brought some different reactions from travelers on Sunday at Denver International Airport.



“Calling it a felony is pretty silly and the TSA abuses people daily,” Drew Westphal, a resident of New York City, told CBS4.



“We have to play along for our security and the safety of the United States,” one traveler told CBS4.



“I don’t think you should be able to put your hands on anybody, especially somebody who is trying to perform security,” Mike Garcia, of Brighton, said.



Mihamae told the New York Post in a phone interview that she is a frequent air traveler and that she runs into a problem with the TSA on a weekly basis.

Christian Targeted for Homosexual Indoctrination

Public Advocate Banner

Jennifer Keeton was a student at Augusta State University (ASU) in Georgia with an excellent academic record.



So why was she expelled from school?



Because she is a Christian who expressed beliefs that did not line-up with the school's extreme pro-homosexual views.



You may recall last year I sent you an email entitled “Sign the petition for Keeton” urging you to take action on behalf of this victim of the Homosexual Lobby.



At that time, Miss Keeton was pursuing a Master’s degree in elementary school counseling.



But because she expressed her moral view of human sexuality, she was labeled by ASU as "homophobic."



They threatened to expel her unless she submitted to a program of Homosexual Re-Education designed to "remediate" her traditional views.



It seems impossible to believe, but they even ordered her to celebrate the homosexual lifestyle by attending a gay pride parade.



You know the type, where men in women's clothes, some only in bikinis, dance through the streets committing all kinds of obscene acts.



Ultimately, Miss Keeton was expelled from ASU for refusing their brainwashing.



And you took action.



Thousands of Public Advocate supporters responded by signing our petition to the Georgia Governor’s office demanding he defund ASU for violating Miss Keene’s First Amendment rights.



Unfortunetly that Governor has come and gone and nothing was done.



And now, Miss Keeton has been stripped of her freedom of speech and her freedom of religion.



A U.S. District Judge, Randall Hall, just upheld ASU’s decision ruling that colleges are allowed to dictate the personal beliefs of its students in order to uphold the college’s curriculum.



After more than eleven months, Miss Keeton is still waiting for her court appeal to be heard, but the Homosexual Lobby is working to keep it from ever seeing the light of day.



That’s why I’m asking you to send a message to the new Georgia governor Nathan Deal demanding he intervene to expedite Miss Keene’s court appeal.



You see, this fight is far from over.



In fact, things have gotten worse.



Because the fight is not just in Georgia -- it’s all across America.



In California, Tennessee, Mississippi and Michigan the Homosexual Lobby is using the same tactics to silence students from speaking the truth about sexuality.



This fight is not just about one student, it’s about countless students across the country who are also being silenced for their moral views.



Of course, the pro-homosexual media is ignoring this story, or even worse reporting that no one cares about it -- but I do, and I know you do too.




I am truly indebted to your steadfast support.



For the Family,



Eugene Delgaudio

President, Public Advocate of the United States



P.S. Please click here to send a message to Georgia Governor Deal demanding he intervene to expedite Miss Keene’s court appeal. No student should be forced to undergo Homosexual Indoctrination.


In The Image Of God