Daily Times (Primos, PA)

How ‘alignment’ worked against Delco residents in pipeline fight

- Tom Smith, Middletown

To the Times: There is a big elephant in Delaware County. The county tried to do something great by attempting to revitalize the defunct Sunoco refinery in Marcus Hook. They had an independen­t market study done to examine alternativ­e uses for the industrial complex. The market study came back with options. The intentions were good.

The decision to repurpose Marcus Hook as a storage and export facility for so called Natural Gas Liquids absolutely required debate. It required independen­t technical input. However, with every decision maker along the route “in alignment,” little due diligence was done to consider something as basic as public safety.

As a result, the project was put on a set of rails without due diligence. No independen­t hazards assessment, no public safety risk quantifica­tion, no emergency planning assessment. These very basic analyses were not done. Why? Good question.

Delco is home to many high tech companies with engineers and scientists. The hazards associated with liquefied energy gas infrastruc­ture are so off the charts that someone with the right background would need about five minutes. In fact, the Government Accountabi­lity Office has been warning not to have artificial­ly liquefied energy gas infrastruc­ture anywhere near densely populated areas since 1978.

But how severe are the consequenc­es? The county team (including the local government­s) will tell you they don’t know. No one has done a hazards assessment at any level of government. One can only speculate that they haven’t done such an assessment because they already signed off on the project and knew they wouldn’t like the answers. Instead, each government entity has chosen to ask Energy Transfer Partners if it’s safe. Guess what the company that stands to make billions has to say about all this: “It’s safe”

Pipeline industry regulator PHMSA’s guidelines for these materials clearly states a half-mile evacuation radius. In Delco, the number of people (according to 2010 municipal census data) within such an evacuation zone can range from 500 to well over 3,000 people. This doesn’t include school population­s that are within such an evacuation zone.

So the question is why? Why did the county choose not to have the hazards assessed? Why has every township along the route chosen not to have the hazards assessed? Why have all levels of government adopted the Sunoco marketing materials and public relations responses as fact without seeking unbiased input from an independen­t technical advocate? They wouldn’t go in and negotiate these contracts without a lawyer.

The answer goes back to the big elephant in the county. The Republican­s have owned Delco for decades just as the Democrats have owned Philly. Too much of anything is not good. We need public discussion. We need ideas to be challenged. That does not happen when a single party runs the show. That kind of “alignment” disrupts the natural order of checks and balances. Good debate that takes place between a diverse body of elected officials could have prevented bad ideas like Mariner East from getting started. Or at least led the idea in a different direction that considered the safety implicatio­ns.

No one knows a locality better than the locals. When the state throws its weight around in a way that threatens people’s safety, it is the responsibi­lity of the local government­s to stand up and challenge. They are the voice for their locality. However, when all of the townships in Delco have been “aligned,” no such challenge is made, or if it is, it is not very sincere.

Our local leaders have remained They claim their hands are tied. At every single level. How can that be? Especially given the fact that the pipeline route has not been assessed for public safety at any level. As a result, we have eminent domain granted by the state to be used to install a reckless hazard while leaving the people in harm’s way. We clearly have a violation of our constituti­onal right to public safety. Any other public infrastruc­ture, yes even utilities with eminent domain, must meet basic public safety requiremen­ts. Yet, municipali­ties that actually have zoning ordinances for pipeline setbacks are choosing not to enforce them. Instead private citizens are taking Energy Transfer Partners to court to enforce the township zoning themselves.

This isn’t about Democrats or Republican­s. Really I could not care less. At the local level, the national party ideals are irrelevant. But you simply cannot have single-party rule. When you do, local leaders do not stand up when we need them, even when given every single opportunit­y to do the right thing. Their hands are tied. Not by the system, but by their own “alignment.”

Single party leadership: It is not good in Philly. It is not good in Delco. It is not good anywhere. impotent.

 ?? KATHLEEN CAREY – DIGITAL FIRST MEDIA ?? The outline of the Marcus Hook Industrial Complex towers over the borough of Marcus Hook. The Mariner East 2 pipeline plan is rejuvenati­ng the old Sunoco refinery and the town, but at what cost?
KATHLEEN CAREY – DIGITAL FIRST MEDIA The outline of the Marcus Hook Industrial Complex towers over the borough of Marcus Hook. The Mariner East 2 pipeline plan is rejuvenati­ng the old Sunoco refinery and the town, but at what cost?

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