Thursday,  September 6, 2012 • Vol. 13--No. 051 • 16 of 33 •  Other Editions

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• Rapid City Police Chief Steve Allender said he believes a law banning all use of hand-held devices while driving will inevitably pass.
• "A perfect-world scenario would be if we're going to tackle the problem on a statewide level that we could tackle the whole problem and not just a little segmented part of the problem," Allender said.

Canadian firm proposes new Neb. oil pipeline route
JOSH FUNK,Associated Press

• OMAHA, Neb. (AP) -- The company that wants to build a pipeline to transport crude oil from Canada to Gulf Coast refineries said Wednesday it has revised its proposed new route through Nebraska to avoid environmentally sensitive areas.
• The latest proposed Keystone XL pipeline route is TransCanada's second attempt to satisfy state environmental regulators. The Nebraska Department of Environmental Quality said in July that the initial revised route crossed land that could erode easily and passed near unconfined aquifers that supply drinking water to residents and livestock.
• The new TransCanada proposal tweaks that April plan, making the route veer east shortly after entering the state to avoid more of the sensitive areas in Keya Paha County, east again around the town of Clarks and west around the town of Western to avoid drinking water well fields.
• "TransCanada shares the goal of protecting key water and natural resources with Nebraskans," TransCanada CEO Russ Girling said. The proposal also upgrades planned safety measures, adding more remote control shut-off valves and inspections, the company said.
• Nebraska regulators said they would review the new proposal and hold a public hearing on it before submitting a recommendation to the governor, possibly by the end of the year. The governor will decide whether to approve the new route for the pipeline.
• "An initial scan of the report indicates that it responds to some of the comments raised by the NDEQ and the public, but a full evaluation will now begin," said Mike Linder, director of the state agency.
• Environmental groups have long opposed the pipeline project because of concerns that it could contaminate underground and surface water supplies, increase air pollution around refineries and harm wildlife.
• Bold Nebraska's Jane Kleeb said the latest new route doesn't go far enough to

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