Fargo Forum Plagiarizes Anti-Oil Chain Email For An Editorial

Not all that long ago, this anti-oil chain email ended up in my email inbox. As with most email forwards, the original author of the information wasn’t disclosed nor were any of the claims backed up sources. Here’s the text of the email I received.

I ignored the email because it seemed to me to be little more than sensationalized, unsubstantiated gossip not pertinent to any serious discussion about oil patch issues. But I dug up the email again because today’s editorial in the Fargo Forum plagiarized entire chunks of it for an anti-oil editorial calling for the oil industry to slow its own growth or have state regulators do it for them.

Here’s the Forum editorial. The chain email, as I (and I’m sure many of you readers too) received it, is below.

A meeting was held of the ND Sheriff’s & Deputies Association in Bismarck, as part of this meeting we had an opportunity to sit down with Law Enforcement from western ND to discuss what they are going through with oil impact. Here is a summary of points made:

1. Currently there are a total of 84 companies involved in the oil industry in western ND.

2. It takes between 2000 and 2200 semi loads of water per well. Currently there are 258 wells in progress with so many scheduled it is hard to determine the exact amount.

3. Traffic accidents, especially fatal traffic accidents are of very high concern. At one location on Highway 85 south of Williston, a traffic count was conducted in October of 2011. In one 24 hour period of time there where 29,000 vehicle through the intersection looked at with 60% of the traffic being semi’s.

4. Traffic is typically backed up for ½ to ¾ of a mile. One of the guys stated that one day last week he sat at an intersection on Highway 85 for about 30 minutes to get a big enough opening to cross over.

5. They have closed the weigh scale house because it was causing such a traffic jamb that it was closing the roadway.

6. Rent in Williston currently is: $2000 for a one bedroom to $3400 for a three bedroom.

7. They have no more hook ups for campers any where in the area.

8. Williams County allows three campers per farmstead, the farmers almost all have three campers on their property and are charging $ 800 per camper per month for rent.

9. Wal Mart in Williston no longer stocks shelves, they bring out pallets of merchandise at night, and set it in the isles, people then take off the pallets what they want.

10. On 1-1-12, the Williston Wal Mart had 148 campers overnight in their parking lot.

11. Willams County wrecked a pickup and ended up bringing it to Bismarck for repairs because there no available body shops to do the work. Williams County has purchased a trailer and has started to bring vehicles to the Bismarck area for repairs. Willaims County took a pickup in for ball joints and front brakes, the shop charged them $2800 for the repairs.

12. Williston and Williams County now produces more taxable sales than any other area in ND.

13. The Williams County jail has increased booking by 150%. With a 100% increase in inmate population. Bonds of $ 5k to $ 10 K are typically paid with cash out of pocket. The Williams County Sheriff stated that a couple of week ago he received a $ 63,000 bond in cash carried into the jail in a plastic Wal Mart bag.

14. Williams County Sheriff’s Department has more than doubled in staff over the last two years, they are now buying trailer houses that come up for sale to rent to newly hired deputies.

15. Williams County new starting salary with the academy is $ 46,000 plus 100% of all benefits paid.

16. They are in a continuous hiring cycle, they have no set budget at this time, the Sheriff has been told to manage his office to the best of his abilities and keep the Commission updated, but do not worry about the budget.

17. The Williston McDonalds just announced that they will pay $ 15 an hour, a $ 500 immediate sign on bonus and a single medical plan paid for.

18. The restaurants are full and with limited staff to work in them they usually just have the drive through open. The restaurants that have inside seating are now an hour wait at all times.

19. Law Enforcement in the Williams County area cannot provide training to staff due to time constraints and no location to hold training.

20. The local Motel 6 in Williston now rents rooms fro $ 129.95 per night.

21. Law Enforcement no longer does any proactive work (school programs, community services, house checks) they do very little traffic related issues as well, they just to from call to call. Bars fights are one of the biggest issues.

22. Other law enforcement issues include the strip clubs. The local clubs have now started what is called “babe buses”. These buses go out to areas and pick up people and bus them back and forth to the strip clubs, the buses have poles on them as well as live entertainment.

23. Drug problems are immense, and they are seeing narcotics that they have never seen in the area before, like black tar heroin.

24. The civil process section of the Sheriff’s Department use to average 1800 paper a year, they are now doing 4500 processes a year.

25. Law Enforcement said that they make as many Driving under the influence arrest at 10 Am as they do at midnight.

26. Illegal aliens have become a huge problem, especially getting the proper authorities do remove them from the Country.

27. The current thought from the oil companies is that the area will continue to grow as it has over the past two years for the next five years and stay for ten years. At the end of the ten years they feel the communities will drop in population somewhat.

28. The current thought is that the oil companies will be drilling wells on every 1280 acres of leased land, this way they have tied up the land and do not have to release the property.

29. The Williston General Motors dealership has now become the number 1 seller of Corvettes in the upper Midwest.

30. The bigger oil companies are doing very well in hiring good people. They run checks and make sure the people they hire are drug free; it is the smaller companies that are having trouble-hiring people that will look the other way on hiring issues.

31. They said they do not know anybody anymore. The Sheriff of Williams County he use to be able to go to Wal Mart and not be walk very far without knowing somebody, now he does not know any of the people in there.

32. Many of the local citizens are taking retirement and moving out of the area.

33. They have an extreme amount of alcohol abuse going on. They have more calls than ever of drunk people trying to get into houses, to find out they are at the wrong place.

34. Minot population has grown by a projected 9000 people since the completion of the census. Minot is expecting to reach a population of 75,000 in the nest five years.

Trinity Hospital in Minot has just hired 115 nurses from the Philippians to work at the hospital, as they cannot get enough local nurses to apply.

There are a lot of problems with the list. Some of the data – like the traffic accidents and the incidents of crime – need to be put into context with rising levels of traffic and population. If you put more people an in area, if you put more traffic on the roads, you’re going to get more crime and more traffic accidents. I’ve actually ran some of the numbers on the rates of traffic accidents, and despite increased incidents of accidents and fatality, the rates are actually down in the context of traffic growth.

Some of the gripes, like the stuff about the strippers, really isn’t pertinent to public policy. Stripper clubs are legal. Some may find them objectionable or immoral, but they’re not breaking any laws and their presence in communities where large numbers of young, unattached males are moving to work is unsurprising. Men are pigs. No amount of legislation is going to change that.

And some of the gripes are downright absurd. Like the Sheriff who is upset because he sees people in Walmart he doesn’t know? C’mon. Should we hamstring an entire industry so that western North Dakota communities can remain so small that nobody ever sees a stranger?

I understand that the Forum Communications reporters and editorial boards have it out for oil development in North Dakota. The state’s energy boom is inconvenient for their leftist notions about how society is supposed to work (i.e. the government grows the economy, not private sector investment). But at the very least you’d think these idiots – particularly opinion editor Jack Zaleski who fancies himself a journalist’s journalist – could write their own editorials instead of stealing content from an email forward of all places.

This from a media company that is now launching a bureau to cover oil patch issues edited in…Grand Forks.

Update: Here’s one of the claims from the email and the Forum editorial which reads that all of the claims are “anecdotal and confirmed.”

Trinity Hospital in Minot has hired 115 nurses from the Philippines to handle the increase in demand for health care services.

But the Minot Daily investigated the claim and found it was “untrue.”

I wonder when we can expect a correction from the Fargo Forum?

Tags: , , , , ,


«
»
  • Cinnamin

    Don’t know about the rest of your ‘list’ but a neighbor who is a farmer/rancher/diesel mechanic/truck driver was asked by several other truckers if he could service their trucks because shops in Williston were charging $800 for an oil change…..

    • Anonymous

      Trucks are large and require more oil, labor, equiment, etc.  I don’t really blaming them if they are charging higher prices to keep more supply open.

      • Cinnamin

        When I change oil in my 145 HP Massey it takes 1 spin on filter, about 4 gal oil, a crescent wrench and about 10 minutes of my time. My neighbors truck takes a similarly sized filter and 10 gallons of oil. The waste oil can be a problem but I have another neighbor/mechanic that uses waste oil to heat his shop …..

    • Anonymous

      Even if the shops were charging pre-boom prices, your neighbor would still be asked to service their trucks because they don’t want to wait more than 6 months to get in.

    • http://sayanythingblog.com Rob

      Sounds like a golden opportunity to set up an oil change shop and undercut the competition.

  • http://randysroundtable.blogspot.com/ Randy G

    115 nurses from the Philippians? What chapter?

    • http://sayanythingblog.com Rob

      The Minot Daily News debunked that particular claim today.

      • JustRuss

        His point was we are quoting bible verses now :)  

        Philippines vs Philippians

  • http://nofreelunch.areavoices.com/ Kevin Flanagan

    Jr., his Latin lover and Jack-the-hack are just lazy and spending Jr.’s grandmother’s money while playing “newspaper.”

  • Jimmypop

    is much of this even factual?

    • LRJ

      Probably not. As of 1/25/12 there were 203 oil rigs not 258.

    • Fighting Czech

      Crime is a big problem.  I have a female relative that works up there,  from what she tells me,  theres more truth in this letter the Rob would wish for.   She says there are a lot of Men married, or not, living away from home and family, Living in less then stellar conditions, with no connections to the community they reside in,  and which in return, the locals, have no desire to have them around..they put in their shift,  and then go to the bar with pockets full of money. Repeat this on a daily basis,  and things have a tendency to deteriorate from there.  She says she is nervous living up there and cant wait to get transferred out of the area.  She’s getting her CCP right now, 
      To be fair,  perhaps the Forum Should send a reporter to the area for a week or two, Do a bunch of interviews across the whole spectrum of people up there  and Just publish what they all say.  I dont need their opinion,  just their information.
      Perhaps its not all devastation, as the Newspapers report,  or MAYBE  the roads arent filled with just oil trucks, and limo’s… As Rob suggests…  

      • http://sayanythingblog.com Rob

        I live up here, and while there are challenges, there’s also a lot of hysteria.

        I hear claims that people are getting attacked and raped in the Walmart parking lot.  Well, I go to Walmart all the time.  It’s news to me.

        • Fighting Czech

          Again,  thats why I suggested someone send a journalist up to the oil fields for a few weejs  for  in dept interviews with the people directly affected by this boom.  from Law enforcement to the hospitals, to all the small businesses.  and interview both the leaders in the community, as well as the actual workers   the whole spectrum…                                .  As I said,  I have a close relative who  lives in the oil fields,  and works directly with certain law enforcement types,  the stories they tell her arent much different then the ones ive read about.  It sounds like they have more then “challenges” to deal with….  
          Some where between the doomsayers  and the cheerleaders for the oil Boom  is the actual truth.   Id like to see what that is…..

          • http://sayanythingblog.com Rob

            I’m honestly not sure why people are surprised.

            You put more people in an area, you get more crime.  You dramatically increase population, and housing prices go up.

            None of this is surprising.  I’m a little tired of the innuendo and fear-mongering, usually by people with ulterior motives.

        • Curious

          It’s funny, I have been to the Williston Walmart several times in the past 2 months and have never yet been attacked.  Has crime increased some, of course, you have a lot more people, so statistically it will increase. But, my good friends brothers sister in laws cousin’s uncle told me all of what was in the letter was true.  It gets really old blaming the oil companies the oil workers, etc, etc.  If it is really so bad all the land owners need to do is stop leasing the mineral rights out and the area can go back to the way it was 5 years ago, barely surviving. 

          • http://sayanythingblog.com Rob

            I think some would be just happy to western North Dakota going back to being little more than dying communities barely hanging on.

            In fact, I’d say there’s a bit of jealousy inherent in the coverage of the oil boom from the eastern part of the state which is used to patting itself on the back for being the only part of ND that matters.

          • Fighting Czech

            I live on the east coast of ND.  you sure dont speak for me…  I dont believe a penny of that oil money should leave the Bakken. not to the East end of the state, not to Bismarck,  Not to Minot,  and really not even Williston.  I think it should all be kept, and spent in the  counties that deal with the oil wells on a daily basis. Those are the people who should decide how its spent. If they get everything fixed as they want it,  they can decide who they want to give money away to,  Not Bismarck.

          • Joeb

            Actually, Williston is in the thick of the development. We have lots of ‘night lights’ outside of town, and are surrounded by wells, our roads are deteriorating from heavy truck traffic, and Williston is the town many of the companies are locating or expanding their industrial shops and offices. Minot, too has been similarly hit, as has virtually every small town in between..Williston is the County Seat of Williams County. which has led the state in taxable sales in three of the last four quarters, beating the sales tax revenue from Fargo.
            Similarly, heading south through McKenzie County, the impact continues down the Hwy 85 corridor, and extends to Dickinson as well. The cities are impacted too, they are not isolated islands free of the effects of the boom, if anything, the effects are magnified there.

          • Fighting Czech

            ok    I have no idea how much Williston is involved with the actual oil industry.  having people drive into town to spend money,  or setting up a shop to fix things for the oil industry,is a problem lots of towns would like to have…leading the state in taxable sales is an indication that Williston doesnt really need the money oil money.  But  you know, if the citizen’s in the oil fields were in charge of all the taxes collected for the State,  Im guessing Williston would be a lot better off. when they decide its time to share the wealth…  Minot?  they are already  receiving a lot of business/ income/jobs,  with little investments on their behalf.   Im not sure they need the money either.  But you know,  it wouldnt be up to me,  it would be up to the people in the Bakken, to decide where their money should go,  if they want to give it.  My main point is this.  The people who have to live the pain should see the gain.  Let the Counties in the oil fields decide if and who they should give money to….

  • garsl
    • http://sayanythingblog.com Rob

      Thanks.

  • Ndconservative2011

    This same information was emailed to me last week from a relative.  It appeared to me that the information was exaggerated in many ways.
    The last item intrigued me so I contacted Trinity Hospital in Minot and simply asked the hospital if they had hired the 115 nurses from overseas.
    The spokesperson stated “NO” they have not hired the 115 nurses as the article claims, but in the future they may explore hiring nurses from overseas if the need would arise.
    Very typical of the Forgo Forum to have lazy so called journalists taking shortcuts just to fill their pages.  If an article would reflect oil production in a negative manner, all the better.

  • http://sayanythingblog.com Rob

    I just updated the post with a link to the Minot Daily News indicating that the claim about the nurses if false:

    http://www.minotdailynews.com/page/content.detail/id/562449/Trinity–Rumor-of-115-Filipino-nurses-untrue.html?nav=5010

  • Kate B

    Can we give the Fargo Forum a “Leafy Splurge” award for their efforts on this one? :)

    • http://sayanythingblog.com Rob

      I’m sure they’ll carry on, not bothering to make a correction.

  • Joeb

    Well, I for one, find it touching that our ‘neighbors’ in Fargo are so concerned about the growing pains that accompany an oil boom out in the western part of the state. I wish I could recall similar ‘concern’ back in 1982 when the towns out here were losing significant portions of their populations when the last oil boom died, in no small part due to high extraction taxes imposed by the legislature.
        What we are experiencing now is ‘normal’ for an oil boom, and we’ve been through it before. With prosperity come the downsides of having to wait in line (imagine that!), traffic (but no one-mile back-ups, unless an accident is blocking the road), and young men far from where they grew up with few ties and little to do. I’m not sure that demographic is entirely correct, as I have met a lot of family men here who are working to move their families in from less prosperous areas of the country, and some who are working to pay the mortgage at ‘home’, while they live and work here.

    And yes, some people, long-term residents, are selling out, and getting far more for their homes than they would have before the oil boom. Rents are high, but Motel 6 better build one before they start charging $129 a night, otherwise some cold and tired people are going to get really ticked off. (There is none in Williston I know of, unless it was completed in the last couple of weeks).

    Maybe this has something to do with the big three cities being first in line at the trough when budgets are carved out of our taxes. After all, there is the nearly annual call from the East side for flood assistance, (we’d have just quit putting houses where the water normally goes and built flood control infrastructure to handle forseeable events. What happened in Minot this past year overwhelmed a flood infrastructure which had prevented most problems since the late 60s, and was due in part to all time record snowfall.)

    So, when the time comes to divvy up the revenues due to the current oil boom maybe the Western region will be able to claim a little precedence when it comes to highway funding to rebuild inadequate or damaged roads, and for other infrastructure as well. Slowing down the rate of that revenue coming in won’t delay the need, and it sure won’t stop the big three from pushing to the head of the budget line.

    While I miss the quieter nature of Williston prior to the boom, things change. In the meantime, I am thankful to be at one of the few hubs of economic prosperity in a nation with dire economic prospects overall. Anyone who doesn’t believe that should note the license plates from every state in town, looking for work.

    In the meantime, the voices I hear calling most loudly to slow activity down are from elsewhere. Those of us who live here know that will happen eventually, and when that happens the folks in the East will find other things to worry about besides any accompanying economic or other woes here.

Create a SAB Readerblog


Recent Comments

Powered by Disqus

Blog Advice and Support
Installs and Upgrades
Theme Modifications
Custom Plugins
Theme Design
Conversions and Relocations
Hacked Site Recovery
Mobile Apps Development