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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsCA State Assembly passes flawed Fracking bill.Californians need to call their CA Senators to vote No
http://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2013/09/11/18743089.php"This vote to allow fracking in California and exempt it from California's benchmark environmental law shows that our Assembly has thoroughly failed at protecting Californians," said Zack Malitz, campaign manager for CREDO, referring to the California Environmental Quality Act (CEQA).
Flawed Fracking Bill Passes California Assembly
by Dan Bacher
Sacramento - Senate Bill 4, a controversial bill sponsored by Senator Fran Pavley that opponents say would clear a path to increase fracking, passed the California Assembly today and will likely head to Governor Jerry Browns desk after a concurrent vote in the Senate.
The Assembly passed the bill by 53 to 18. A Senate vote could take place at any time.
In a statement on Wednesday afternoon, Brown's office said the Governor will sign the bill if the legislation reaches his desk.
short version:
Zack Malitz urged you to call your Senator right now and urge a "No" vote on SB 4: http://act.credoaction.com/call/sb4_senate/?akid=8880.300166.JhdiX9&rd=1&t=1
long version:
"The administration has worked collaboratively with the Legislature to craft a bill that comprehensively addresses potential impacts from fracking, including water and air quality, seismic activity and other potential risks," claimed Brown spokesman Evan Westrup.
Calling the legislation "an important step forward," Westrup said Brown "looks forward to signing it once it reaches his desk."
Bill opponents disagree strongly with the Brown administrations' assessment of the bill as "an important step forward. The bill "undermines existing environmental law and leaves Californians unprotected from fracking and other dangerous and extreme fossil fuel extraction techniques," according to a statement from Californians Against Fracking, a statewide coalition of over 100 organizations now calling for a moratorium on fracking.
Farmers, environmental justice groups, public health advocates, local elected officials, students, Hollywood, and many others are calling on Governor Brown to and put a stop to fracking in California, 200,000 petitions have been signed urging Governor Brown to ban fracking in California.
Members of the Californians Against Fracking criticized the Assembly's passage of the already weak bill that was further weakened by amendments supported by the Western States Petroleum Association on Friday, September 6 - and urged Brown to ban or place an immediate moratorium on fracking in California.
"This vote to allow fracking in California and exempt it from California's benchmark environmental law shows that our Assembly has thoroughly failed at protecting Californians," said Zack Malitz, campaign manager for CREDO. "We're depending on Governor Brown to step in to prevent the wholesale fracking of our state."
"This legislation does nothing to stop fracking or protect communities across the state from its harmful effects and last minute changes to the bill made it even worse," said Adam Scow, California campaigns director at Food & Water Watch. "The threats to our state's water, air, and climate are real and pressing and we don't have time for half measures like SB 4. We need courageous leadership its time for Governor Brown to act now to ban fracking in California."
"There's only one prudent next step to protect California's water, air, and climate for Governor Brown to place an immediate moratorium on fracking, acidizing, and other unconventional methods of exploiting fossil fuels," said Victoria Kaplan, campaign director at MoveOn.org. "Legislators have failed to heed the wishes of a majority of Californians calling for a moratorium or a ban and MoveOn members will continue to organize across the state for an end to fracking."
The passage of SB 4 demonstrates the continuing stranglehold that Big Oil has on the political process in Sacramento. Attempts to find common ground with an industry hell-bent on exploiting every last drop of oil regardless of the impact on Californias water, valuable farmland and the climate are inevitably bound to fail. The passage of this mangled bill only confirms the need for a moratorium on these dangerous extraction techniques, said Ross Hammond, senior campaigner with Friends of the Earth.
SB 4 tragically green-lights an extremely dangerous practice with terrible public health impacts near the homes and schools of Californias communities already most overburdened by pollution, said Madeline Stano, Luke Cole Memorial Fellow at the Center on Race, Poverty & the Environment.
This bill will not protect Californians from the enormous threats of fracking pollution, said Kassie Siegel of the Center for Biological Diversitys Climate Law Institute. Fracking poses unacceptable risks to the air we breathe, the water we drink and our climate. Well keep working to end this inherently dangerous activity in our state.
In her comment on the Sacramento Bee website, activist Lauren Steiner emphasized, "This bill is just a permitting, monitoring, notification and disclosure bill with a study thrown in. Telling someone when you're going to frack, where you're going to frack and what chemicals you are going to use is like a murderer telling you, 'I'm going to shoot you on your front porch tomorrow at noon using an AK-47.' At the end of the day, you're still dead. And do we really need any more studies to show us the harms of fracking?"
To read her complete comment and the article it responds to, go to: http://blogs.sacbee.com/capitolalertlatest/2013/09/jerry-brown-urges-passage-of-fracking-bill.html#storylink=cpy
Zack Malitz urged you to call your Senator right now and urge a "No" vote on SB 4: http://act.credoaction.com/call/sb4_senate/?akid=8880.300166.JhdiX9&rd=1&t=1
Californians Against Fracking is a coalition of environmental, business, health, agriculture, labor, political, and environmental justice organizations working to win a statewide ban on fracking in California. For more information and to sign the petitions to ban fracking in California, visit: http://www.CaliforniansAgainstFracking.org
Background: Oil industry is top corporate lobby in California
Oil companies have fracked at least 12 times in California's ocean waters, according to information received from Freedom of Information Act documents obtained by truthout.org and the Associated Press. The California Coastal Commission has pledged to investigate the environmentally destructive oil extraction method, including what powers the agency has to regulate it.(http://www.mercurynews.com/central-coast/ci_23876202/californias-coastal-commission-investigate-offshore-fracking)
The complete failure of the state and federal governments to stop or even regulate the environmentally destructive practice of fracking in California's ocean waters is no surprise to those of us familar with the corrupt Marine Life Protection Act (MLPA) Initiative or anybody who has read my investigative news pieces on this topic.
Catherine Reheis-Boyd, the same lobbyist now leading the charge to expand fracking in California, apparently used her role as a state marine protection official to increase her network of influence in California politics.
Reheis-Boyd chaired the MLPA Blue Ribbon Task Force to create alleged marine protected areas in Southern California. She also served on the task forces for the Central Coast, North Central Coast and North Coast.
The oil industry, now the most powerful corporate lobby in Sacramento, exceeds corporate agribusiness, the computer and software industry, the film and television industry, the aerospace industry and other major corporate players in California politics in the power that it wields.
The association now has enormous influence over both state and federal regulators.Oil and gas companies spend more than $100 million a year to buy access to lawmakers in Washington and Sacramento, according to Stop Fooling California, an online and social media public education and awareness campaign that highlights oil companies efforts to mislead and confuse Californians. The Western States Petroleum Association (WSPA) alone has spent more than $16 million lobbying in Sacramento since 2009. (http://www.counterpunch.org/2013/08/07/the-ocean-frackers/)
The association spent the most of any organization in first six months of 2013, $2,308,789.95, to lobby legislators and other state officials, according to documents filed with the California Secretary of State.
When the oil industry wields this much power - and an oil industry lobbyist oversaw the process that was supposed to "protect" the ocean - it shouldn't be a surprise to anybody that California's ocean waters, as well as farmland, are now being "fracked." Both the state and federal regulators have completely failed in their duty to protect our ocean, bays, rivers and Delta.
For more information about the MLPA Initiative, go to: http://intercontinentalcry.org/the-five-inconvenient-truths-about-the-mlpa-initiative/
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CA State Assembly passes flawed Fracking bill.Californians need to call their CA Senators to vote No (Original Post)
annm4peace
Sep 2013
OP
tularetom
(23,664 posts)1. Pumping bazillions of gallons of water at high pressure into the ground in a seismically active area
What could possibly go wrong?