This month's unusually wet weather has delayed work on the Keystone petroleum pipeline project, which will run just east of Dorchester. The Times has been told that work in the Dorchester area could now begin around the mid- to late-July time frame. (The accompanying photo shows water standing on a project site near Dorchester.)
According to the Sioux City Journal, work on the 130-mile section from the Platte River to the Kansas border, which began in late May, has reached the point where the welders from a crew of about 350 are connecting 80-foot sections in the David City-Schuyler area. But officials say it may be another week before crews resume lowering the pipe 4 feet into the ground -- "and it may be longer if the wet weather continues." Yesterday, workers west of Seward were trying to pump away standing water.
The $5.2 billion Keystone pipeline will connect the oil sands of Alberta, Canada, with Illinois refineries. As many as 900 construction workers will soon make their way to the Dorchester area, burying the sections of the 30-inch line that will make its way through the eastern portion of the state, including about 1.5 miles east of Dorchester. Dorchester also serves as a storage site for hundreds of section of pipe.
The pipeline will bring "hundreds of thousands of dollars" in property tax revenue to Saline County, according to one local energy expert we interviewed. "Ten times more revenue than any wind farm while doing a lot more to help the nation's energy crunch," the source added.
Looks like a Dorchester street after a typical rain.
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