Tuesday,  December 04, 2012 • Vol. 13--No. 139 • 23 of 36 •  Other Editions

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cold," Mark Lenz, Shyann's father, told the Deseret News. "We don't have to worry about them being cold and we don't have to worry about them being out there anymore. They're on their way home."
• Meyer grew up in Piedmont, S.D., and went to high school in Sturgis. Her mother, Myra Fees, said she was in church Sunday when she got an urgent message to call her family.
• "At church, I prayed that God's will be done, that we just wanted to know one way or the other," Fees told the Rapid City Journal. "When I got the message, I knew. But, I was very thankful to not have to go on and wondering."

DM&E mothballing Powder River Basin extension
AMBER HUNT,Associated Press

• SIOUX FALLS, S.D. (AP) -- Weakening demand for coal has prompted Canadian Pacific Railway Co. to mothball plans to extend its Dakota, Minnesota & Eastern Railroad network into the Powder River Basin to ship Wyoming coal to power plants in other states, the company announced Monday.
• The "indefinite deferral" is an apparent death knell for long-standing plans for a third railway to compete in the coal-rich basin, which CP officials had once called an exciting prospect for an "efficient and competitive additional link to Midwestern and eastern utilities."
• "CP took a careful look into the long-term prospects of the (Powder River Basin) for our railroad and, when considering the outlook of domestic thermal coal, we made what we feel is the prudent business decision" by axing the plans, CP spokesman Ed Greenberg told The Associated Press.
• CP bought the South Dakota-based DM&E and its subsidiaries in 2007 for $1.5 billion. Included in the sale were DM&E's equipment, 2,500 miles of track and the option to expand into the basin.
• DM&E had plans to add 260 miles of track around the southern end of the Black Hills to the Wyoming coal fields. The goal was to haul low-sulfur coal east to power plants, a multibillion-dollar project. The line would have competed with Union Pacific and BNSF Railway, which in 2006 had carried about 450 million tons of coal from the basin.
• But coal prospects have changed over the years, Greenberg said. Railroads have been dealing with weaker coal demand because of low natural gas prices and last year's mild winter. There also is speculation that any new regulations to limit greenhouse gases would make coal even less attractive to utilities.

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