

Many landowners were concerned that the location of the proposed sites would disrupt irrigation systems, take irreplaceable land, or interfere with agricultural operations. Prior to signing any agreements, however, association members wanted the government to address the disadvantages of having a silo constructed within their property. Most landowners understood that the national defense program required the installation of Minuteman missiles, and the technical reasons why the Air Force required use of their land. The Association disseminated information to area landowners, believing that working collectively would aid the defense effort while safeguarding their private interests. Above ground level, this 4,500 square-foot luxury house, located about 140 miles west of Dallas, has three bedrooms, four-and-a-half bathrooms, commercial-grade kitchen appliances, endless prairie and lake views, and even a private golf putting green. To ensure that the government took landowners’ rights into consideration during site selection and fairly compensated landowners, a group of farmers and ranchers formed the Minuteman Missile Area Landowners Association in the early 1960s. During the site-selection process, some landowners did not feel that the Air Force provided enough information to sign rights-of-entry to their property. Such large-scale construction was not without its inconveniences. Back then, Pittsburgh was definitely a target, said Barry Kukovich. abandoned their ambitions, our dangers have not diminished, our vigil. The site in North Park is a training center for county police officers and firefighters. The system would require the land acquisition for 150 silos, fifteen control centers, and approximately 1,732 miles of communications cables connecting the facilities. Pa- cific, Atlantic, and Indian Oceans and recent- ly they even sailed the. Prior to construction of the missile sites in South Dakota, right-of-entry, easements, and land purchase agreements needed to be made with hundreds of property owners. Minimally, the Air Force required these sites to be geographically separated by an area large enough to withstand a ten-megaton explosion at an adjacent facility. The Air Force positioned each missile flight (one control center and ten silos) in the same geographic area, but individual silos could not be directly adjacent to another silo or control center.
