Activists are putting the finishing touches on an old school bus they purchased and renovated to serve as a shelter and medical facility for water protectors at the Standing Rock Reservation.They plan to deliver the bus – newly equipped with bunk beds, a heater, insulation and medical supplies – to the protest site next week. Dozens of volunteers worked long hours to remove the old bus seats and overhaul the inside, according to to Rick Rappaport, a member of the coalition.“It was quite an involved process — and I witnessed it — to watch a bus be transformed into basically a mobile medical shelter,” he said. “It’s insulated. It’s craftsman-like quality. It has walls. It has a floor. It is going to have a heater. It’s actually an amazing transformation. We hope it will be on the road soon.”Artists volunteered to cover the outside of the bus with vibrant Native American murals.Rappaport said the project has offered like-minded people a way to support the protectors trying to protect their water and cultural resources from a controversial oil pipeline. He said their protest is vital to the fight against climate change.“You know, a bus that has a place for 10 to 12 people to lay down is certainly not going to be the ‘be all end all’ in whether or not that’s a successful protest in North Dakota, but it’s a way for small people everywhere to show support,” he said. “It’s all these little actions we hope will continue to build momentum.”Last month, members of the Climate Action Coalition delivered wood stoves, clothing, food and other supplies to the Standing Rock protest site and realized they needed to do more, Rappaport said.“There was a brutal winter coming on, and there was not much there to protect the people who were out there, basically on a windswept prairie about 20 miles from any other kind of support,” he said.“Especially with what’s happening right now, we need to make as strong a local showing as possible,” Rappaport said. “Portland needs to lead the way.”