(C) Daily Kos This story was originally published by Daily Kos and is unaltered. . . . . . . . . . . CA bill introduced to hold oil drillers presumptively liable for harm in drilling safety zones [1] ['This Content Is Not Subject To Review Daily Kos Staff Prior To Publication.', 'Backgroundurl Avatar_Large', 'Nickname', 'Joined', 'Created_At', 'Story Count', 'N_Stories', 'Comment Count', 'N_Comments', 'Popular Tags'] Date: 2023-04-18 On January 26, environmental justice advocates demanded an end to the revolving door between Big Oil and state regulators in Sacramento. The protesters gathered at FDR Park and then marched to march to the CalGEM offices on 715 P St. Photo by Dan Bacher. Sacramento, CA – At this moment, California still has no minimal health and safety setbacks around oil and gas wells like other fossil fuel producing states, including Colorado, North Dakota, Texas and Pennsyvlvania, have now. That’s because oil drillers qualified a referendum that put SB 1137, a bill signed by Governor Newsom in 2022 to mandate 3200 foot setbacks between oil wells and homes, schools, hospitals and other sensitive facilities, on hold until voters vote on it in November 2024. Meanwhile, since the beginning of this year, CalGEM, the state’s oil and gas regulator, has approved 556 oil drilling permits, 62% of all the permits approved this year, in the setback zone created by SB 1137. To address this problem, new legislation, SB 556, gives people who have developed cancer, respiratory illnesses and birth defects the right to hold oil drillers liable for their illnesses if they live, work, or go to school within 3200 feet of oil drilling and if the company did not use the best technologies to mitigate risk, according to a press statement from Consumer Watchdog. If SB 556 becomes law, it would further protect communities by making drillers liable for the harms they cause starting January 2024. SB 556 will be heard in the Senate Judiciary Committee in its April 25th morning hearing. ”In such cases, the oil drillers and their boards of directors would have the presumption of liability for damages with minimum penalties of $250,000 and maximum penalties of $1 million. The presumption could be rebutted if the companies proved the illnesses were caused another way,” the group stated. SB 556, authored by California State Senator Lena Gonzalez, builds on scientific evidence proving a direct link between drilling and these maladies, the same evidence that was used to enact SB 1137 (Gonzalez), which banned drilling in the 3200 foot “set-back” zone, according to bill advocates. A coalition of more than 130 environmental, community, consumer and public interest groups that recently backed Governor Newsom’s price gouging penalty law (SBx1-2) are now supporting SB 556 in order to protect community health. Read their letter. “Oil drillers who have disregarded the detrimental impacts to communities they drill in, need to be accountable for the harms they cause that are scientifically linked to their drilling,” said Senator Lena Gonzalez (D – Long Beach). “If oil drillers want to continue their operations without using the best available technology that can help protect the health and wellbeing of our communities they should face legal accountability to the families harmed by their actions.” “Living near oil wells and gas production facilities increases one’s risk of asthma, respiratory problems, pre-term births, high-risk pregnancies, and cancer,” the more than 130 groups wrote in their letter of support for SB 556. “If oil and gas companies are going to continue to endanger the health of California residents, it is only fair they pay the costs when those residents get sick.” The groups include the Central California Environmental Justice Network, California Environmental Justice Alliance, Center for Biological Diversity, Center for Race Poverty & the Environment, Communities for A Better Environment, CALPIRG, Environment California, Consumer Watchdog, Food and Water Watch, and Sierra Club. “Over 2.1 million Californians live within half a mile of oil and gas wells, and that number will continue to increase with the addition of new wells,” the letter states. “Moreover, environmental impacts disproportionally affect communities that are low-income and largely of color. One third of the Californians who live near wells are additionally burdened by environmental pollution and over 90% are people of color.” SB 556 is co-sponsored by Consumer Watchdog and the Center for Race, Poverty and the Environment. “The Center on Race, Poverty & the Environment is excited to co-sponsor SB 556 (Gonzalez), which empowers communities to hold oil companies accountable for the health harms they cause by lifting the weight of the burden of proof from impacted people’s shoulders,” said Kayla Karimi, staff attorney for the Center on Race, Poverty & the Environment. “This bill is a crucial innovation in the fight to protect the health of our communities, and we are excited to work with Consumer Watchdog and Senator Gonzalez to pass it into law.” “If drillers want to drill in unsafe ways, they should be presumed to be liable for the harm they cause,” said Jamie Court, president of Consumer Watchdog. “Like the gun industry that is liable for unsafe conduct in the manufacture and distribution of weapons in California, oil drillers that ignore safety standards should be presumptively liable for the illnesses linked to their negligence. SB 556 reverses the burden from the individual to the driller when drillers ignore safety standards.” Other members of the Last Chance Alliance commented on the legislation. “For frontline communities, and for every single Californian who’s more and more affected by the hazardous consequences of a changing climate, this bill is about justice,” said Kobi Naseck, Coalition Coordinator, Voices in Solidarity Against Oil in Neighborhoods (VISIÓN). “It’s about holding polluters, who have known for years about the horrible health consequences of drilling in so-called ‘sacrifice zones,’ accountable for their years of damage. It’s time for polluters to pay up. How much longer are tax payers and working families supposed to foot the bill for their sins?” “Our Elected Officials to Protect America California network of over 460 elected officials from 49 counties, representing more than half of Californians, have fought for science-based public health setbacks to protect our communities from oil and gas industry pollution,” commented Meghan Sahli-Wells, California Director, Elected Officials to Protect America - Code Blue, Former Culver City Mayor. “Our communities have suffered for far too long, forced to breathe toxic air and live on contaminated soil from oil and gas facilities in our neighborhoods. As the industry callously attempts to roll back setback laws enacted to safeguard our health, the Newsom Administration must use the authority it has now to deny permits next to homes, schools, hospitals, and places of worship, and stop the oil and gas industry from poisoning California’s most vulnerable residents." “For decades, Californians have been paying the ultimate price to the oil and gas industry- their health,” stated Martha Dina Argüello, Executive Director, Physicians for Social Responsibility- Los Angeles. “Failure to prioritize health and safety has left many communities across the state plagued by respiratory illness, birth defects, and cancer from daily exposure to oil extraction operations. We've known the industry's stance on public health- made even more explicit by its ruthless efforts to roll back health protective setback laws. Declaring the presumption of liability acknowledges what communities have known for years: oil drilling is an inherently dangerous practice that has no place near where we live, work, learn, play and pray. We urge the Legislature and the Governor to finally hold Big Oil accountable for so many years of damage.” This bill is a game changer. It takes something all of our frontline community members know to be true - that living near oil and gas wells makes you and your family sick - and entrenches that truth into law,” noted Raquel Mason, Policy Manager, California Environmental Justice Alliance. “It is critical for the health and safety of Californians everywhere that the Legislature and the Governor pass this bill. People need the legal power to stand up to big corporations. “SB 556 is a much-needed, common sense piece of legislation that we urge the California legislature to pass,” argued Brandon Dawson, Director, Sierra Club California. “For too long, the oil and gas industry has gotten away with endangering the health and environment of black and brown communities. This bill will help ameliorate those impacts and set California on a path to climate leadership by protecting our most vulnerable.” “For too long, the fossil fuel industry has profited from polluting our communities,” said Chirag Bhakta, California Director, Food & Water Watch. “Every day, the two million Californians who live within a mile of an active oil well pay the price with their health as they face the increased risk of cancer, respiratory diseases, and pregnancy complications. “SB 556 would begin to hold the oil and gas industry accountable for the health impacts of their production. Our Legislature and our Governor must act to hold the fossil fuel industry accountable for the damage done to generations of Californians. Our communities and our climate are not something to be sacrificed for Big Oil’s bottomline,” added Bhakta. “If someone crashes into you on the highway, they are generally responsible for paying for the damages to you and your car,” noted Greenpeace USA Senior Climate Campaigner Amy Moas, Ph.D. “Senate Bill 556 follows the exact same logic. If you live near an oil and gas company’s drilling project and are diagnosed with asthma or cancer, they should be held responsible for those impacts. This is common sense.” “Scientists have told us for years that oil wells leak toxic compounds that are harmful to human health, and last year, California successfully established a 3,200-foot buffer zone in response to that hazard. But Big Oil shelled out millions to put this on pause. If oil and gas companies want to drill dangerously close to where people live, work, and play – and they’ve shown they’re willing to spend millions to do so – then they should be held financially responsible for the public health crisis they are creating,” Moas said. “This bill connects the dots between toxic oil and gas pollution and the health harms it causes,” concluded Hollin Kretzmann, an attorney at the Center for Biological Diversity’s Climate Law Institute. “For far too long, Big Oil has escaped accountability despite mountains of evidence that their pollution makes people sick. It’s high time the onus was put on oil companies to prove their dirty activities aren’t the cause of rampant health harms. The California legislature needs to pass these overdue community protection and accountability measures, and it needs to redouble its efforts to stop oil and gas drilling so people don’t get sick in the first place. Total number of oil drilling permits soars to 14,623 since Jan. 2019 Despite the constantly repeated mantra by California politicians and media talking heads that the state is the nation’s “green leader,” the actual reality on the ground is much different as California regulators continue to approve thousands of oil well drilling permits every year. The total number of oil drilling permits approved since Governor Gavin Newsom took office in Jan. 2019 soared to 14,623 in the first quarter of 2023, the FracTracker Alliance and Consumer Watchdog revealed in an analysis released today. The two groups track and map new well approvals at the site www.NewsomWellWatch.com. 7.4 million Californians—nearly one in five—currently live within a mile of an active well, according to Consumer Watchdog and Fracktracker Alliance. Risk of harm from chronic exposure to toxic emissions from wells has been documented among residents who live up to 6.2 miles from a well. During the first quarter of 2023, Ferrar said CalGEM approved a total of 897 permits throughout the state, a 40% uptick over the first quarter of 2022. All but one for new drilling were for work on existing wells, including fixing, deepening, and redrilling them. Permits for work on existing wells rose 76% over the same period last year. “In the first quarter, 62% of all the permits approved in the setback zone—totaling 556—were primarily to repair or redirect drilling in existing wells to more productive geologic formations,” he added. “An independent scientific advisory panel had advised CalGEM that a 3,200-foot setback—or one kilometer--between homes, schools, daycares, hospitals, and other sensitive receptors was the minimum distance to protect public health,” revealed Ferrar. Nevertheless, he said Californian women living within 6.2 miles of at least one oil or gas well during pregnancy have an increased risk of low-birthweight babies. Proximity to active oil operations increases the risk of premature birth by 40% and the chances of a high-risk pregnancy by 30%. Set to go into effect in January 2023, the California Independent Petroleum Association (CIPA) sponsored the referendum that has delayed the implementation of the setbacks law for two years. Filings with the California Secretary of State reveal that oil companies funneled over $20 million to the committee Stop the Energy Shutdown, a “Coalition Of Small Business Owners, Concerned Taxpayers, Local Energy Producers And The California Independent Petroleum Association. California advocacy groups are now demanding that the state regulate how petitlion signature collection is conducted, since the signatures were obtained on false and misleading pretenses. Background: Big Oil spent $34.2 on lobbying in the 2021-22 session In addition to $20 million the oil industry paid to challenge SB 1137, the oil and gas industry spent over $34.2 million on lobbying the Legislature and other state officials in the 2021-22 Legislative Session. While a long and hard-fought campaign by environmental justice groups, with the help of Governor Gavin Newsom, was able to finally get SB 1137 approved by the Legislature, other important bills were stopped by oil industry-backed legislators. Those measures include a bill to ban offshore drilling off the California coast and another bill to divest State of California pension funds from investments in the fossil fuel industry. In addition to stopping key climate justice bills, the gusher of Big Oil and Big Gas lobbying money also resulted in CalGEM’s approval of 3,382 permits in 2022, including 551 new well permits and 2,831 oil well rework permits. The Western States Petroleum Association, the largest and most powerful corporate lobbying group in Sacramento, spent $11,720,912 in the 2021-22 session: cal-access.sos.ca.gov/… Chevron Corporation, the San-Ramon based oil giant that is infamous for environmental devastation and degradation from the Ecuadorian Amazon to Richmond, California, spent a total of $8,631,118 lobbying California officials in the 2021-22 session. WSPA and Big Oil wield their power in 8 major ways: through (1) lobbying; (2) campaign spending; (3) serving on and putting shills on regulatory panels; (4) creating Astroturf groups; (5) working in collaboration with media; (6) sponsoring awards ceremonies, including those for legislators and journalists; (7) contributing to non profit organizations; and (8) creating alliances with labor unions. To read my story on how the Western States Petroleum Association has embarked on a campaign to sponsor dinners and awards for the media and journalists, go here: https://www.dailykos.com/stories/2023/4/7/2162744/-Big-Oil-funds-dinners-and-awards-for-California-journalists [END] --- [1] Url: https://www.dailykos.com/stories/2023/4/18/2164564/-CA-bill-introduced-to-hold-oil-drillers-presumptively-liable-for-harm-in-drilling-safety-zones Published and (C) by Daily Kos Content appears here under this condition or license: Site content may be used for any purpose without permission unless otherwise specified. via Magical.Fish Gopher News Feeds: gopher://magical.fish/1/feeds/news/dailykos/