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A bill limiting county control in their fight against pipeline regulations and eminent domain passes the Senate Commerce and Energy Committee.
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A bill aiming to limit a company’s ability to use eminent domain to construct a carbon dioxide pipeline in the state fails.
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Landowners and advocates met recently in Watertown to voice their concerns about underground pipeline projects and ask questions in the push for eminent domain reform.
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A South Dakota House committee has approved two bills they say equalize the carbon-pipeline playing field. The bills come after two carbon sequestration pipelines were denied permits by the Public Utilities Commission last year.
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Summit Carbon Solutions is gearing up for its next application hearing with the Public Utilizes Commission. This time, however, Summit is bringing biofuel producer POET into the mix.
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The House Commerce and Energy committee rejected a bill that would require property owner permission for a company to enter to conduct surveying.
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Landowners opposed to eminent domain and carbon pipelines braved the weather ahead of the legislative session to gather at the state Capitol in Pierre.
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More than 200 landowners turned out to hear options in their effort to oppose a new men’s prison in Lincoln County. The state announced the location earlier this year despite neighbor concerns and a pending lawsuit.
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A Lincoln County-rooted organization is joining a larger campaign calling for greater local control across the state.
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A coalition of groups opposing eminent domain met in Sioux Falls to launch a group named “South Dakotans First.”