California Legislators Call For Fracking Moratorium
By Dan Bacher | January 9, 2014 | Nine California Legislators on January 7 sent a letter to Governor Jerry Brown asking that he issu...
https://www.elkgrovenews.net/2014/01/california-legislators-call-for.html
By Dan Bacher | January 9, 2014 |
Nine
California Legislators on January 7 sent a letter to Governor Jerry
Brown asking that he issue an executive order to prohibit the Division
of Oil, Gas, and Geothermal Resources (DOGGR) within the Department of
Conservation from allowing fracking in the state until health and
environmental concerns are addressed.
Legislators
signing the letter include Marc Levine, Assemblymember, 10th Assembly
District; Das Williams, Assemblymember, 37th Assembly District; Adrin
Nazarian, Assemblymember, 46th Assembly District; Richard Bloom,
Assemblymember, 50th Assembly District; Loni Hancock, State Senator, 9th
Senate District; Bonnie Lowenthall, Assemblymember, 70th Assembly
District; Noreen Evans, State Senator, 2nd Senate District; Phil Ting,
Assemblymember, 19th Assembly District; and Lois Wolk, State Senator,
3rd Senate District;
A big crowd attended the hearing on proposed fracking regulations at the EPA building in Sacramento on Monday, January 6. |
"The
vast public health and safety implications of fracking, as well as the
tremendous public concern over this practice, require our collective and
urgent action," they wrote. "We believe it is time to join with
Californians who disapprove of the dangers fracking poses to their
communities."
The
legislators noted that they joined CREDO Action in calling for this
moratorium - and attached to their letter a petition on this issue
circulated by CREDO Action and signed by thousands of Californians.
"As
you know, California values protecting our environment and public
health and safety," they said. "Current studies show fracking threatens
California’s precious water supply, further disrupts our approach to
mitigate the dangerous impacts of climate change, exacerbates our air
pollution problems, and the disposal of wastewater associated with
fracking may increase seismic activity."
"Therefore,
we respectfully request that you impose a moratorium on fracking while
you fully investigate the science behind fracking for oil production,"
they concluded.
The letter is available at: http://asmdc.org/members/a10/.
The
60-day public comment period for the proposed regulations for "well
stimulation treatment" for oil and gas production authorized by Senator
Fran Pavley's Senate Bill 4 began on November 15 and will end on January
15. The California Department of Conservation (DOC) said there will
likely be an additional 45-day public comment period later in 2014.
Zack
Malitz, Campaign Manager of CREDO Action from Working Assets, said the
most important flaw in Governor Brown's fracking regulations is that
they allow fracking, as well as other dangerous oil-extraction
techniques like acidizing, in which huge quantities of acid are injected
underground. The regulations provide the green light to the expansion
of fracking and acidizing in California.
"There
are no regulations that can make fracking safe," emphasized Malitz.
"However it's regulated, fracking contaminates water, produces toxic air
pollution, creates dangerous wastewater, industrializes communities,
and accelerates climate change by allowing the fossil fuel industry to
burn and extract otherwise inaccessible oil and gas."
Click here to submit a public comment: http://act.credoaction.com/letter/doggr_comments/?akid=9712.300166.WWBznt&rd=1&t=2
On
Monday, so many people showed up to attend the public comment hearing
on draft fracking regulations in Sacramento that state officials had to
find a larger room in the EPA building to accomodate the crowd.
Over
80 percent of the people that attended, including representatives of
the Sierra Club, Food and Water Watch, Center for Biological Diversity
and other organizations, supported a moratorium or ban on the
controversial oil extraction process. Representatives of the Western
States Petroleum Association and other oil industry organizations
praised the regulations for being the "strongest" and "strictest"
fracking regulations in the nation
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