Search Results for: RGGI

Corrupt Pennsylvania history holds lessons for fracking

Abandoned Pennsylvania coal mine

The excerpt below is taken from Fracking: Corruption a Part of Pennsylvania’s Heritage,
an article written by Walter Brasch in Dissident Voice, a liberal, pro-labor blog.

While Mr. Brasch brings a distinct “point of view” to his discussion of natural gas drilling in Pennsylvania, he raises questions about industry and politics that merit attention and discussion. Tell us what you think in the comment box at the bottom of the page.  If one is not visible, activate it by clicking on the tiny ‘comments’ link.

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“Mixed into Pennsylvania’s energy production is not only a symbiotic
relationship of business and government, but a history of corruption and
influence-peddling. Between 1859, when an economical method to drill
for oil was developed near Titusville, Pa., and 1933, the beginning of Franklin D. Roosevelt’s “New Deal,” Pennsylvania, under almost continual Republican administration, was among the nation’s most corrupt states.
The robber barons of the timber, oil, coal, steel, and transportation
industries essentially bought their right to be unregulated. In addition
to widespread bribery, the energy industries, especially coal, assured
the election of preferred candidates by giving pre-marked ballots to
workers, many of whom didn’t read English.

“In a letter to the editor of The New York Times in March 2011, John Wilmer, a former attorney for the Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Protection
(DEP), explained that “Pennsylvania’s shameful legacy of corruption and
mismanagement caused 2,500 miles of streams to be totally dead from
acid mine drainage; left many miles of scarred landscape; enriched the
coal barons; and impoverished the local citizens.” His words serve as a
warning about what is happening in the natural gas fields.

“Pennsylvania’s new law that regulates and gives favorable treatment
to the natural gas industry was initiated and passed by the
Republican-controlled General Assembly and signed by Republican Gov. Tom Corbett. The House voted 101–90 for passage; the Senate voted, 31–19. Both votes were mostly along party lines.

“In addition to forbidding physicians and health care professionals
from disclosing what the industry believes are “trade secrets” in what
it uses in fracking that may cause air and water pollution, there are
other industry-favorable provisions.

“The new law guts local governments’ rights of zoning and long-term
planning, doesn’t allow for local health and environmental regulation,
forbids municipalities to appeal state decisions about well permits, and
provides subsidies to the natural gas industry and payments for
out-of-state workers to get housing but provides for no incentives or
tax credits to companies to hire Pennsylvania workers.

“It also requires companies to provide fresh water, which can be
bottled water, to areas in which they contaminate the water supply, but
doesn’t require the companies to clean up the pollution or even to track
transportation and deposit of contaminated wastewater. The law allows
companies to place wells 300 feet from houses, streams and wetlands. The
law also allows compressor stations to be placed 750 feet from houses,
and gives natural gas companies authority to operate these stations
continuously at up to 60 decibels,
the equivalent of continuous conversation in restaurants. The noise
level and constant artificial lighting has adverse effects upon
wildlife.

“As a result of all the concessions, the natural gas industry is given
special considerations not given any other business or industry in
Pennsylvania.

“Each well is expected to generate about $16 million
during its lifetime, which can be as few as ten years, according to the
Pennsylvania Budget and Policy Center (PBPC). The effective tax and
impact fee is about 2 percent. Corbett had originally wanted no tax or impact fees
placed upon natural gas drilling; as public discontent increased, he
suggested a 1 percent tax, which was in the original House bill. In
contrast, other states that allow natural gas fracking have tax rates
as high as 7.5 percent of market value (Texas) and 25–50 percent of net
income (Alaska). The Pennsylvania rate can vary, based upon the price
of natural gas and inflation, but will still be among the five lowest of
the 32 states that allow natural gas drilling. Over the lifetime of a
well, Pennsylvania will collect about $190,000–$350,000, while West
Virginia will collect about $993,700, Texas will collect about $878,500,
and Arkansas will collect about $555,700, according to PBPC data and analyses.

“State Sen. Daylin Leach, a Democrat from suburban Philadelphia, says
he opposed the bill because, “At a time when we are closing our schools
and eliminating vital human services, to leave billions on the table as a
gift to industry that is already going to be making billions is
obscene.” 

Read the entire article at: Fracking: Corruption a Part of Pennsylvania’s Heritage

Our most recent posts:
PADEP hosting webinars on Marcellus Shale drilling law

NOAA study to guide NY offshore wind energy projects

Corrupt Pennsylvania history holds lessons for fracking Read More »

PADEP hosting webinars on Marcellus Shale drilling law

Four online sessions to explain Act 13–the state’s new law regulating natural gas drilling in the Marcellus Shale–are being offered by the Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Protection.

The law, which takes effect April 16, includes
increased setbacks from buildings and waterways; limited development in
floodplains; and increased time and distance provisions in which gas
drillers are presumed liable for water contamination until evidence
proves otherwise, among other things, according to the
DEP.

It also requires gas drilling companies to register their
hydraulic fracturing fluid ingredients with FracFocus.org, a website
created by the Ground Water Protection Council and Interstate Oil and
Gas Compact Commission to make such information accessible to the
public.

PADEP Act 13 webinar schedule

March 27 – General
overview of Act
April 3 – Permitting and notifications
April 10 – Environmental protection and enhancement
April 17- Inspections and enforcement

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The sessions, which will begin at 1 p.m., will be presented live
through Cisco WebEx software. There is a maximum of 500 attendees to
each session due to technological limitations. DEP will post recordings
of the presentations on its website.

For more information and to register for the sessions, visit www.dep.state.pa.us and click the “Act 13” button on the homepage.

PADEP hosting webinars on Marcellus Shale drilling law Read More »

NOAA study to guide NY offshore wind energy projects

A new study released by the National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) that maps out  habitats in and around the waters off New York will guide investors and regulators in the future development of
offshore wind energy projects off the state’s coast.

Green, a New York Times blog that covers energy and environmental matters, reports today that the study is the  product of a two-year joint effort by New York’s Department of State and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
to identify critical bird and fish habitats to ensure that they are not
harmed by future wind farms. Environmental groups say the pre-screening
will help save time and red tape and could attract developers and
investors to wind projects by removing uncertainties about the
environmental impacts at a given site.

Like New Jersey and other states along the Atlantic Coast, New York
is seeking to take advantage of its geography to introduce offshore wind
farms and significantly increase the amount of renewable power in its
energy mix. New York officials have been working on identifying the most
viable locations for the wind farms by surveying large swaths of the
ocean with an eye toward protecting commercial shipping and fishing as
well as ecological niches.

The ultimate goal, state officials
said, is to protect places that are important to New York’s existing
ocean industries while harnessing offshore renewable energy resources.

NOAA
officials said the study would serve as a model for future studies on
the Mid-Atlantic region. The agency said that researchers looked at
biodiversity, habitats, resources and the ecology of seabirds and
deep-sea corals, among others, to create maps to guide decisions on the
locations of wind farms.

Solar and wind power coming to Fresh Kills Landfill on Staten Island

Green also reports the announcement by New York City
officials that they were seeking proposals to build solar and
wind power installations on 75 acres of land at the former Fresh Kills
landfill on Staten Island.

Officials said the site could accommodate
large-scale installations to generate up to 20 megawatts of renewable
energy, or enough to power about 6,000 homes. The project would more
than double the city’s current renewable energy capacity, they said.


Related:

National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration study
Trying to blow some offshore wind into NJ’s energy sails
Dominion interested in Va offshore wind generation
Engineers Enlist Weather Model to Optimize Offshore Wind Plan

NOAA study to guide NY offshore wind energy projects Read More »

Mortgage hurdles possible for some with fracking leases

Potential risks associated with hydraulic fracturing (fracking), the drilling technique that has revolutionized natural gas drilling in Pennsylvania and elsewhere in the country, has the federal Department of Agriculture considering requiring environmental reviews before issuing mortgages to people who have leased their land for oil and  gas drilling.

The New York Times reports today that more than 140,000 families, many of them with low incomes and
living in rural areas, received roughly $18 billion in loans or loan
guarantees last year from the department under the Rural Housing Service program.
Much of the money went to residents in states that have seen the
biggest growth in drilling in recent years, including Pennsylvania,
Texas and Louisiana.

The program is popular because it generally requires no down payment. As
its financing has grown and credit markets have tightened in recent
years, the program’s loans have roughly quadrupled since 2004.

The decision, agriculture officials say, would also affect the department’s Rural Business and Cooperative program, which issued more than $1 billion in loans and grants last year to about 15,000 rural businesses.

The story says that the environmental reviews being proposed by the Agriculture Department
are viewed by some as a way to give the public a fuller accounting of the potential environmental
risks of drilling and also to help
protect the agency from litigation from environmental groups — a cost
that would ultimately be borne by taxpayers.

You can read the entire story here.

What do you
think about the Department of Agriculture’s proposal?  Let us know in the comment box
below. If one is not visible, activate it by clicking on the tiny
‘comments’ line.  

Our most recent posts:
NJ Highlands Council Fires Exec Swan; Deputy Resigns

Mortgage hurdles possible for some with fracking leases Read More »

NJ Highlands Council Fires Exec Swan; Deputy Resigns

Over the angry objections of some of its members and numerous environmentalists, the New Jersey Highlands Council voted 8-6 last night to removed executive director Eileen Swan. Following the vote, her deputy director resigned, leaving the regional planning body leaderless.

Demonstrators show support for Eileen Swan–Daily Record photo:Abbott Koloff

The Star-Ledger reported today:

The vote on Swan , 52, followed a lengthy debate in which dozens of environmentalists and residents lavished praise on her for her abilities and dedication, and scathingly criticized the council it believes caved in to political pressure from Gov. Chris Christie.

Council member Kurt Alstede, a Chester Township farmer who voted to remove Swan, said the 2004 Highlands Act — adopted by a Democratic Legislature under Democratic Gov. James E. McGreevey — has turned northwestern Jersey into “a colony of northeast Jersey.”

“Water resources have been taken from the Highlands. We’ve been promised and promised compensation,” but little has been done for landowners hurt by the act’s restrictions, said Alstede, accusing Swan of not doing enough to help property owners.

The Bergen Record noted that “shortly after Swan was fired, Deputy Director Tom Borden resigned, surprising almost everyone on the council and leaving the 25-person staff leaderless.

Environmentalists say the pro-Christie members of the
council plan to hire Morris County  Freeholder Gene Feyl, a food industry consultant who has little environmental experience.

Councilman Michael Dressler, the Bergen County
surrogate, tore into his colleagues, saying the firing “was the most gutless move in 37 years of politics” and called it the “death knell” of the Highlands Act.

Other members of the council agreed. “It’s all about
stopping the Highlands Act,” said Tracy Carluccio, who called Swan’s firing “a travesty.”

Dressler said he wanted the state attorney general or the
U.S. attorney to investigate whether the Open Public Meetings Act was violated since he was convinced council members had decided their vote among each other.

According to the Daily Record:

The Highlands Coalition and Swan supporters charged that Gov. Chris Christie pressured council members to remove her, as part of a move to weaken enforcement of a law designed to protect the region’s water supply, a charge the administration has dismissed.

But council Chairman Jim Rilee, deputy mayor of Roxbury, responded by saying it was “insane” to believe environmentalists’ allegations that the removal was part of an attempt to gut the Highlands Act.

“I think you shortchanged this council,” Rilee said to a crowd of more than 60 people who attended Thursday’s meeting, many of them there to support Swan. “I’ve never seen an effort to circumvent the act.”

The Council’s job is to interpret the complex 2004 Highlands Act and its subsequent 400-page master plan that placed protections on 860,000 acres over seven counties including parts of Bergen and Passaic counties. It supplies about 379 million gallons of water each day to more than 5 million residents.

The executive director is key to the decision making, making case-by-case recommendations to the council, made up of 15 part-time volunteers.

During Swan’s time as executive director, the council achieved two of its key missions. It adopted the Highland Regional Master Plan in 2008 and began approving municipal plans conforming to the Highlands master plan in 2010.  By this month, 39 of the 88 towns in the Highlands region had had their plans approved, and Swan and her staff were reviewing plans submitted by 20 more communities.

Swan, who had expected to be let go at the meeting, said,“During my term in office, we have felt an ethic of responsible
government, open and transparent. I hope that continues into the
future.”

Related:
Editorial: N.J. Gov. Chris Christie moves to fire a Highlands Council director he can’t control

Opinion: The Thursday Night Massacre

What do you think about the Highlands Council’s removal of its executive director?  And the future of the Highlands region?  Let us know in the comment box below. If one is not visible, activate it by clicking on the tiny ‘comments’ line.  

Our most recent posts:
NJDEP wants to help. Really, they do. Stop snickering.

NJ Highlands Council Fires Exec Swan; Deputy Resigns Read More »

NJDEP wants to help. Really, they do. Stop snickering.

Do you have a business or facility in New Jersey that is subject to state air quality regulations?

Are you required to make electronic filings to the NJ Department of Environmental Protection?

Would you like to know more about how to get ready for a DEP inspection? Common enforcement findings? How about Supplemental Environmental Projects (SEPs) policy and SEP examples that directly benefit communities and the environment?

Well, you’re in luck. The New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection is offering a
Free seminar on Thursday, May 10
that is designed to help you with all of the above.

If your facility utilizes Continuous Emission Monitoring Systems (CEMS), Continuous Opacity Monitoring Systems (COMS) and/or is subject to Stack Testing requirements, you also can benefit from an overview provided by the Bureau of Technical Services.

In addition, updates on new and proposed New Jersey Air Pollution Regulations will be provided by staffers from the DEP’s Bureau of Air Quality Permitting.

Not enough?  OK. Just for you, the seminar will include training on navigating the NJDEP Online web portal and also will  provide a review of electronic submissions of Annual Compliance Certifications, Six Month Deviation Reports and Excess Emission & Monitoring Performance Reports.

And, after all of the above, DEP experts will hang in for a question and answer session. 

Did we mention that all this is FREE?

Oh, so now you’re interested and want to know where it will take place.

Glad you asked.  It all goes down at the:  

HAMILTON TECHNOLOGY CENTER
1200 Negron Drive
Hamilton, NJ 08691  Directions

Need more information?  Check out this web site, or contact your enforcement inspector.

For prospective participants who do not have an assigned inspector, please call:
(973) 656-4444 for Bergen, Essex, Hudson, Hunterdon, Morris, Passaic, Somerset, Sussex,
Union and Warren counties
(609) 292-3187 for Burlington, Mercer, Middlesex, Monmouth and Ocean counties, or
(856) 614-3601 for Atlantic, Camden, Cape May, Cumberland, Gloucester, and Salem counties

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NJ energy & environment bills up for vote – Mar 12 2012

Nine pieces of energy and environmental legislation are up for discussion and votes today
in three
Assembly committees meeting in Trenton. 
 
Among them are proposals to provide tax credits for electric vehicle charging stations, extend certain development permits for an additional two years, tighten industrial pollution cleanup requirements, take a new look at the state’s Pollution Prevention Act, and expand the definition of “renewable energy.” 
Here’s the lineup: 

ASSEMBLY APPROPRIATIONS
03/12/12 10:00 AM
Committee Room 11, 4th Floor, State House Annex, Trenton, NJ


A-566
  Wagner, C. (D-38); Coughlin, C.J. (D-19);
Fuentes, A. (D-5)
Provides corporation business tax credit and gross
income tax credits
for purchase and installation of certain electric vehicle
charging stations. 
    
A-638  Rumpf, B.E. (R-9); Conaway, H. (D-7); Gove,
D.C. (R-9)
Establishes Hooked on Fishing-Not on Drugs Program in
DEP and appropriates
$200,000 therefor from Drug Enforcement and Demand
Reduction Fund.
Related Bill: S-176
   
A-1338  Greenwald, L.D. (D-6); DeCroce, A. (R-26);
Green, J. (D-22)
Extends expiration date of certain development permits until December 31, 2014,
rather than December 31, 2012, as
provided in current law.
Related Bill: S-743
   

A-2294  Greenwald, L.D. (D-6); Burzichelli, J.J.
(D-3); Riley, C.M. (D-3)
Requires deposit of property tax refunds for certain
industrial sites under federal
or State orders for remediation with
Commissioner of Environmental Protection
to help ensure compliance.
Related Bill: S-1460
——————————————————————————–   
ASSEMBLY REGULATORY OVERSIGHT AND GAMING
03/12/12 12:00 Noon
Committee Room 14, 4th Floor, State House Annex, Trenton, NJ
A-1527  Burzichelli, J.J. (D-3); Quijano, A. (D-20)
Concerns Watershed Property Review Board in DEP.
Related Bill: S-525
     
A-1534  Burzichelli, J.J. (D-3); Quijano, A. (D-20)
Requires DEP to conduct analysis of “Pollution
Prevention Act.”
     
A-2584  Ramos Jr., R.J. (D-33); Caputo, R.R. (D-28);
Amodeo, J.F. (R-2)
Requires DEP to allow for correction of technical and
administrative permit
application violations.
   
———————————————————————————-

ASSEMBLY TELECOMMUNICATIONS AND UTILITIES
03/12/12 12:00 Noon
Committee Room 9, 3rd Floor, State House Annex, Trenton, NJ

A-1383  Chivukula, U.J. (D-17)
Expands
the definition of Class I renewable energy to include in-State biomass
and
other  “alternative sustainable technologies” approved by the
state DEP.
    
A-2314  Chivukula, U.J. (D-17); Benson, D.R. (D-14)
Requires State to use energy-efficient outdoor lighting
fixtures. The fixtures would
need to comply with design requirements intended to minimize light pollution by
directing the light where needed in facilities like parking lots. 
Related Bill: S-1422

      

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Trying to blow some offshore wind into NJ’s energy sails
Offshore wind blowing into NJ Legislature-March 5 2012

NJ energy & environment bills up for vote – Mar 12 2012 Read More »

Drilling industry paying Penn State to train regulators

Chesapeake Energy drilling site above  Susquehanna River – Patriot News

The natural gas industry has valuable technological knowledge
to share, but should it be entrusted with training Pennsylvania
environmental regulators who oversee drilling operations?

Between 2000 and 2010, industry participants donated more than $3.4 million to influence elected Pennsylvania officials. Now it is paying to train policy makers and regulators who oversee industry operations in the state’s Marcellus Shale region.

The (Harrisburg) Patriot-News
reports that
ExxonMobil and GE will be investing $1 million each to establish new
training programs at Penn State and two other universities–
the University of Texas at Austin and the Colorado School of Mines

A Penn State press release says that the new training programs will “ensure that regulators and policymakers have access to the latest
technological and operational expertise to assist in their oversight of
shale development.” 

Penn State’s Marcellus Center for Outreach and Research
will offer a new “Shale Gas Regulators Training Program” to provide
“best-practices training” to people who oversee the drilling industry.

Is this good news for the environment?

The center’s co-director, Tom Murphy, said in a press release the
program will “offer new regulators the chance to learn the latest
science-based concepts related to geology, petroleum technology and
environmental quality.” 

While acknowledging that the program was sponsored with industry cash,
Murphy insists that the Marcellus Center “is definitely not funded by
industry.” 

What do you think? Use the comment box below.  If one is not visible, activate it by clicking on the tiny ‘comments’ link.

Drilling industry paying Penn State to train regulators Read More »

Enviros say Christie’s giving Highlands exec the shove

Eileen Swan

An environmental group that monitors New Jersey’s Highlands Council claims that Gov. Chris Christie is is trying to push the council’s executive director Eileen Swan out the door in favor of a Morris County freeholder.

Julia Somers, executive director of the Highlands Coalition, says the plan is to put Gene Feyl, a Morris County
freeholder, into Swan’s position.  

Morris County Freeholder Gene Feyl

A press release from the coalition said Feyl “needs one more year to
qualify for a full state pension,” noting the $120,000 per year job with
the council would create “a significant increase in his pension in
addition to the other benefits derived from completing 20 years in the
pension system.”

Asked to respond, Governor Christie’s press secretary Michael Drewniak said “I don’t have any
comment, except to note that the Highlands Coalition’s press release was
hysterical and overwrought.”

The New Jersey Herald has the details in Highlands Coalition says Christie is trying to push out director

Trying to blow some offshore wind into NJ’s energy sails
Offshore wind blowing into NJ Legislature-March 5 2012

RGGI revival legislation clears NJ Senate committee


Enviros say Christie’s giving Highlands exec the shove Read More »

NJ energy & environment bills up for vote – Mar 8 2012

Ten pieces of energy and environmental legislation are
up for discussion and votes today in five Senate and 
Assembly committees meeting in Trenton.
 
Here’s the lineup: 

SENATE ENVIRONMENT AND ENERGY

03/08/12 10:00 AM
Committee Room 10, 3rd Floor State House Annex, Trenton, NJ
S-1085  Smith, B. (D-17); Norcross, D. (D-5)
Establishes forest harvest program on State-owned land.
—————————————————————————————————————–
     
SENATE TRANSPORTATION
03/08/12 10:30 AM
Committee Room 7, 2nd Floor, State House Annex, Trenton, NJ


SJR-15
  Pennacchio, J. (R-26); Doherty, M.J. (R-23)
Creates “Passenger Rail System Study
Commission.”
    
—————————————————————————————————————–
SENATE BUDGET AND APPROPRIATIONS
03/08/12 01:00 PM
Committee Room 4, 1st Floor, State House Annex, Trenton, NJ
S-743  Sarlo, P.A. (D-36); Oroho, S.V. (R-24)
Extends expiration date of certain permits pursuant to
the “Permit Extension Act of 2008.”
Related Bill: A-1338
    
S-822  Smith, B. (D-17); Bateman, C. (R-16)
Revises “Electronic Waste Management Act.”
Related Bill: A-1459
      
S-1566  Lesniak, R.J. (D-20); Buono, B. (D-18)
Establishes the “New Jersey Residential
Foreclosure Transformation Act”;
provides expedited process for
foreclosing abandoned residential properties.
Related Bill: A-2168
—————————————————————————————————————–
ASSEMBLY ENVIRONMENT AND SOLID WASTE
03/08/12 02:00 PM
Committee Room 9, 3rd Floor, State House Annex, Trenton, NJ

The committee will hear testimony from the Department of Environmental
Protection
and other stakeholders regarding State park services.
A-1151  Lampitt, P.R. (D-6); Vainieri Huttle, V.
(D-37); Chivukula, U.J. (D-17)
Authorizes State and local governments to enter into
group purchasing agreement
for alternative fueled vehicles.
Related Bill: S-371
      
A-1459  Gusciora, R. (D-15); McKeon, J.F. (D-27);
Barnes III, P.J. (D-18)
Revises “Electronic Waste Management Act.”
Related Bill: S-822
     
A-2294  Greenwald, L.D. (D-6); Burzichelli, J.J.
(D-3); Riley, C.M. (D-3)
Requires deposit of property tax refunds for certain
industrial sites under federal
or State orders for remediation with
commissioner of environmental protection
to help ensure compliance.
Related Bill: S-1460
     
A-2395  Coughlin, C.J. (D-19); Coutinho, A. (D-29)
Authorizes zero-interest loans to local governments for
certain brownfield remediations;
changes priorities for financial assistance
from Hazardous Discharge Site Remediation Fund.
Related Bill: S-1246
     
A-2641  Spencer, L.G. (D-29)
Authorizes creation of stormwater utilities for certain
local government entities.
Related Bill: S-1557
     
—————————————————————————————————————–

ASSEMBLY HOMELAND SECURITY AND STATE PREPAREDNESS
03/08/12 02:00 PM
Committee Room 12, 4th Floor, State House Annex, Trenton, NJ
A-266  Schroeder, R. (R-39)
Requires identifying emblems on certain structures to
notify firefighters of solar panels;
requires exterior disconnection for solar
panels.
Related Bill: S-507
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thorough coverage of environmental news, issues, legislation and
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in New Jersey and Pennsylvania, try a free, 30-day subscription to our daily
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