The homes of oil field workers near Watford City, ND.Photo by Andrew Cullen for The New York Times. |
By some accounts, the oil boom in the Bakken region of North Dakota is slowing. According to this article in The New York Times, "as oil prices have skidded to $30 a barrel, new drilling has dried up here, and the flood of wealth and workers is ebbing."
The article goes on to describe the ways that such a drastic change has impacted the area—from the debt North Dakota took on to build the infrastructure to support the influx of oil workers since 2008, to those same oil workers leaving the area for home or other jobs now that they've been laid off.
In a country—and world—so heavily reliant on oil and gas, communities like those in the Bakken are built up with little preparation or protections in place during boom times, only to be allowed to later fall with little preparation or protections when industry can no longer profit largely enough in those territories. As we have seen in many industry-impacted areas in North America, Indigenous women are often those most impacted during these booms. How will women fair as that boom wanes?
Read the entire NY Times article here.
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