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STEVE INSKEEP, HOST:
Protesters in North Dakota face a deadline today. They've been opposing an oil pipeline1. The Army Corps2 of Engineers told them to clear out by this afternoon. After a push from President Trump3, the Dakota Access pipeline could now be completed within a few weeks. Here's Amy Sisk of Prairie Public Broadcasting.
AMY SISK, BYLINE4: I'm walking through the main protest camp, where a massive cleanup effort is under way. Semitrucks are hauling debris5 out of camp, and people here are piling garbage into bags. They're also talking about moving their shelters to higher ground because this area is about to flood.
DOTTY AGARD: It looks like a trash pile, like - but it's getting picked up. And every spot is starting to look better and better as we work together.
SISK: Dotty Agard of the Standing6 Rock Sioux Tribe sorts through abandoned goods. The Army Corps wants protesters out so it can clean up its land before the river thaws7 and floods the camp. Some protesters are moving to higher ground nearby on the Standing Rock Reservation. But there is concern that after months of violent protests, it may take law enforcement to remove those who won't budge8.
Thirty miles to the north, I walk with Morton County Commission Chairman Cody Schulz through the sheriff's department.
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SISK: Thank you.
CODY SHULZ: You're welcome.
SISK: He's concerned about how protesters will respond to decisions made in Washington. At the urging of President Trump, the Army Corps this month granted a final permit to build the last stretch of the pipeline. Standing Rock is fighting that in court.
SHULZ: They had some hope and a cause. There's the fear, I think, from law enforcement that maybe some of that hope may be diminishing. And desperation sometimes can set in.
SISK: Dana Yellow Fat is helping9 clean up. He says there's a lot of anger toward Indians right now. He describes hateful Facebook comments and says tribal10 members are afraid to leave the reservation.
DANA YELLOW FAT: I might have a different skin color than you, but we still both bleed red. And my culture and my ways might differ from yours, but we can still be friends.
SISK: Once this pipeline saga11 eventually ends, the Standing Rock tribe and North Dakota will have to figure out how to live side by side all over again. For NPR News, I'm Amy Sisk in Bismarck.
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INSKEEP: That story come to us from Inside Energy, a public media collaboration12 focused on America's energy issues.
(SOUNDBITE OF CLOUDKICKER'S SONG, "THE WORD WATER")
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