FROM THE ARCHIVE
Funds tight in Haskell highway plan
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FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 2002 Funding for an $8.5 million wetlands mitigation program could be cut as the state of Kansas seeks to expand a highway near Haskell Indian Nations University, The Lawrence Journal-World reports. The state is going through a budget crisis and may not have enough money to do all it wants, an official said. Land needs to be bought for the project to move forward. Students and environmentalists are worried about the damage to wetlands near the school. The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers is supporting an expansion plan that would require walls be built facing Haskell and the wetlands in order to minimize noise and other impacts. Get the Story:
Budget crisis may delay completion of trafficway (The Lawrence Journal-World 11/22) Relevant Links:
Haskell Indian Nations University - http://www.haskell.edu Related Stories:
Wall to be built on highway facing Haskell (11/21)
Highway plan near Haskell endorsed (09/27)
Kan. county to move on Haskell highway (9/19)
Haskell students want delay on highway (9/17)
Highway plans near Haskell considered (9/12)
Public hearing set on Haskell highway (9/9)
State continuing search for graves (4/29)
State digs for bones in wetlands (4/24)
Haskell highway protested (4/22)
Haskell wetlands seeing protection (2/27)
Corps consulting on Haskell highway (2/8)
Haskell highway talks still fragile (10/31)
Haskell president seeks inclusion (10/3)
BIA opposing Haskell highway proposal (9/28)
Haskell highway talks continue (9/7)
Haskell students complain about highway (9/6)
Haskell involvement wanted on highway (8/31)
Consultation may hold up Haskell highway (8/29)
Haskell offered $3m to support highway (8/28)
Haskell says graves in proposed highway (8/23)
Haskell still talking about highway (8/10)
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You are enjoying stories from the Indianz.Com Archive, a collection dating back to 2000. Some outgoing links may no longer work due to age.
All stories are available for publishing via Creative Commons License: Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International (CC BY-NC-ND 4.0)