Author Of Bill Killing Conventional Drilling Regs Wants To Rewrite Oil & Gas Act
Photo

On Wednesday, Sen. Scott Hutchinson (R-Venango), the author of the bill that turned into Act 52 killing DEP’s conventional drilling regulations, circulated a co-sponsor memo to his colleagues saying he plans to introduce legislation to re-write the 1984 Oil and Gas Act and Act 13 of 2012 to “make it reflective of today’s conventional oil and gas industry.”

Sen. Hutchinson added, “... Act 13 also placed an unbearable burden on the much smaller conventional producers and over time has brought the conventional industry to near collapse.”

“To help alleviate this,” Sen. Hutchinson said, “I am introducing a redraft of the Oil and Gas Act with new language designed to update or clarify old provisions where needed. This will help to provide a legislative framework for regulations specific to conventional oil and gas drillers in a way that protects the environment while preserving this valuable industry.”

Last June the General Assembly passed Sen. Hutchinson’s bill and Gov. Wolf signed into law Act 52 killing updated conventional drilling regulations DEP had worked on for several years, forcing DEP to start the process over this year.

A new PA Grade Crude Development Advisory Council also formed by Act 52 last June to help advise DEP on conventional regulations has not yet announced its first organizational meeting.

NewsClips:

Judge: PA State Senators Cannot Enter Delaware Watershed Drilling Lawsuit

Swift: PA’s Natural Gas Impact Fee Draws Scrutiny

Editorial: Municipalities Must Be More Accountable For Impact Fees

Fire Erupts At Marcellus Drilling Pad In Washington County

Homeowner Near Washington County Gas Well Fire: We’re Stuck

Pump Failure Caused Fire At Washington County Gas Well

DEP Revising Erosion Control Permits For Drilling Operations

DEP Review Reveals Flaws In Oil & Gas Erosion Permit Applications

Editorial: Not The Time To Hit Drilling Industry With New Tax

North Franklin Twp Amends Oil & Gas Drilling Ordinance

Elk County Community Drops Lawsuit, Repeals Drilling Bill Of Rights

Study: Economic Benefits Of  Living Near Shale Drilling Sites Outweighs Costs

UPI: Oil & Gas Lobby Calls On Washington To Release The Reins Of Regulation

Natural Gas Production To Make U.S. Net Energy Exporter

Related Stories:

Conventional Drillers Have 5 Times The Violations, 3.5 Times The Enforcement Actions

DEP Review Of Drilling Erosion Permits Finds 60% Of Applications Deficient


1/9/2017

Go To Preceding Article     Go To Next Article

Return to This PA Environment Digest's Main Page