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Newly signed fracking law is one of several across the U.S. to curtail municipal governments’ power

brahmanknight

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Sep 5, 2007
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Now this is an interesting battle in the heart of oil country.

http://www.wsj.com/articles/texas-moves-to-prohibit-local-fracking-bans-1431967882

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AUSTIN, Texas—Last year, a city in North Texas banned fracking. State lawmakers want to make sure that never happens again.

On Monday, Republican Gov. Greg Abbott signed a law that prohibits bans of hydraulic fracturing altogether and makes it much harder for municipal and county governments to control where oil and gas wells can be drilled. Similar efforts are cropping up in states including New Mexico, Ohio, Colorado and Oklahoma, where both chambers of the legislature have passed a bill that limits local governments to “reasonable” restrictions on oil and gas activities.

This is all part of a broader legislative and judicial effort, backed by the oil industry, to limit local governments’ ability to regulate drilling. Backers say that both the Oklahoma and Texas bills were proposed in response to a voter-approved ban on fracking in Denton, Texas, in November.

The new law eliminates a “patchwork of local ordinances creating more and more regulation, some of which is intentionally onerous and intended to stop or limit oil and gas development,” said Ed Longanecker, president of the Texas Independent Producers and Royalty Owners Association.

The law has angered officials in Denton, about 50 miles northwest of Dallas, where residents approved the first ban in the state. Officials there said they supported it only after failed efforts to resolve quality-of-life problems including a well explosion and noisy drilling near homes and schools.

In the past decade, new technologies launched an energy boom in the U.S., sending oil and gas production soaring. But intense drilling and fracking activity triggered a backlash in some communities, which by zoning and ballot initiatives have tried to keep the drilling rigs either outside the city limits or far from housing.

Supporters of drilling say that local limits are driven by environmental ideology, not practical problems, and deprive landowners of their rights.

Across the country, the issue of the role of cities in deciding where drilling can occur “is still very much up in the air,” said Hannah Wiseman, a law professor at Florida State University. “There is plenty of work for legislators and lawyers.”
 
Tangentially, I'm currently reading a book about nuclear weapon safety over the past 80 years. One section described earthquakes triggered by injecting contaminated liquid wastes chemicals 11,000 feet underground at the Rocky Mountain Arsenal in the mid 60's. The program was ended in 1966 when quakes up to 5.0 on the Richter scale occurred.
 
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There is a belief that the fracking is what is causing all the recent earthquakes in the Dallas area.
.

Bogus. There have been earthquakes recorded in Dallas as early as 1847 with varying frequency. No one has been able to correlate it to the freaking fracking.
 
Bogus. There have been earthquakes recorded in Dallas as early as 1847 with varying frequency. No one has been able to correlate it to the freaking fracking.
Not saying it's my belief.
But they have had a lot of earthquakes since November....I dunno, maybe a dozen or so?
.
 
It fits the bleeding heart, liberal, environmentalist's/media's agenda. That's all you need to know.

Care to explain the following?
Tangentially, I'm currently reading a book about nuclear weapon safety over the past 80 years. One section described earthquakes triggered by injecting contaminated liquid wastes chemicals 11,000 feet underground at the Rocky Mountain Arsenal in the mid 60's. The program was ended in 1966 when quakes up to 5.0 on the Richter scale occurred.
 
Care to explain the following?

Nope. But here is a chronological history of earthquakes in Texas. From a quick perusal, the only notable delta in the increase in frequency of earthquakes in Texas from 2012 to now is the clusters of them occurring so quickly relative to each other. It also notes that some of the previous earthquakes appear to be caused by emptying oil and gas from pockets the ground - I'm guessing the equivalent of our sinkholes.

Texas Earthquakes
 
About two years later, PolitiFact in Washington, D.C., rated True a statement by MSNBC's Rachel Maddow that earthquakes led Dallas/Fort Worth International Airport to shut down a fracking well. Officials at the airport asked that a wastewater injection well be shut down, and after it was, the earthquakes of concern stopped. Seismologists linked the well to the earthquakes.
 
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