House Passes Utility, Natural Gas Pipeline Safety PA One Call Bill, Returns To Senate
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The House Wednesday gave final approval to Senate Bill 242 (Baker-R-Luzerne) adding unconventional and larger conventional natural gas gathering lines to the PA One Call utility safety program. 

There are now an estimated 100,000 miles of unmapped natural gas pipelines in Pennsylvania vulnerable to hits from construction and digging equipment.

Prime sponsor Sen. Lisa Baker (R-Luzerne) noted in a background memo on the bill there are more than 6,000 incidents of striking utility lines every year, with approximately half involving natural gas lines because facility owners do not join the PA One Call program or for other reasons.  Click Here for more.

The bill now returns to the Senate for a concurrence vote.  A House Fiscal Note and summary is available.

NewsClips:

State Oversight Of Gas Pipeline Construction Drilling Gets Bipartisan Criticism

Companies Tout Benefits Of Natural Gas Pipelines In Harrisburg

Lawmakers Seek To Halt Drilling After More Mariner East 2 Pipeline Spills

Cusick: Nearly 30 Arrested Protesting Atlantic Sunrise Pipeline In Lancaster

Crable: Protesters Arrested After Blocking Construction Of Atlantic Sunrise Pipeline

Protesters Arrested As Atlantic Sunrise Pipeline Begins Construction

Truck Carrying Atlantic Sunrise Pipeline Equipment Collides With Minivan

Crable: Protesters Try To Block Atlantic Sunrise Pipeline Construction In Lancaster

Crable: Photo Book Chronicles Places In Lancaster Before Atlantic Sunrise Pipeline Built

Op-Ed: Altering Laurel Pipeline Flow Would Bring Cheaper Fuel To PA

PennEast Pipeline Backers Tout Lower Energy Prices In Fighting Green Groups

FERC Chair Sets Pipelines, Grid Resilience As Priorities

[Posted: Oct. 18, 2017]


10/23/2017

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