Las Vegas Review-Journal

Deadly fumes threaten communitie­s of color

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processes and public hearings, the Bureau of Land Management Methane Waste Prevention rule went into effect. This rule protects taxpayers from waste by oil and gas companies that have failed to prioritize necessary and widely available technology upgrades for plugging methane leaks and capturing excess methane from their operations. It protects the resource of publicly owned natural gas, reduces air pollution and curbs dangerousl­y potent greenhouse emissions. It is a common-sense win for the common good.

Yet as part of a radical deregulato­ry agenda, this administra­tion is trying to suspend and weaken the Methane Waste Prevention Rule.

If this rollback is snuck past our communitie­s, an estimated 175,000 tons of methane and 250,000 more tons of toxic compounds and hazardous air pollutants will poison the air we breathe in the American West.

As a pastor, I think a lot about the meaning of life and death. We are called to choose the abundant life God bestows on us. Yet communitie­s of color bear disproport­ionate life-threatenin­g burdens of oil and gas industry operations on public lands.

The 2017, the NAACP report “Fumes Across the Fenceline” states that natural gas emissions and summer ozone season combined contribute to black children suffering an estimated 138,000 asthma attacks and 101,000 lost school days annually. In addition, over 1 million African-americans live in counties that face a cancer risk above the Environmen­tal Protection Agency’s level of concern from toxins emitted by natural gas facilities.

This is all so oil and gas companies can delay investment in technology upgrades that will ultimately make them, as well as American taxpayers, more revenue. Are you OK with that deal in the name of an anti-regulation ideology?

If you are not, we have little room to voice opposition officially. You see, a full 67 percent of the land in Nevada is managed by the BLM, and most oil and gas leases by the BLM occur in the West. Yet there has not been a single public hearing in Nevada or any other state regarding the rescission of the Methane Waste Prevention Rule. And the administra­tion seems poised to ignore the more than 400,000 public comments recently collected in opposition. Communitie­s of color, and states like Nevada, cannot afford to say nothing while our air is being poisoned. We refuse to be casualties of corrupt government decisions, as Flint, Mich., was.

We must demand that the Department of Interior lengthen the public comment period and host a series of public hearings in Nevada and in communitie­s of color.

And if these hearings do happen, people of color and Nevadans must show up, be ready and voice our concerns against this policy.

Because it is a matter of life and death.

If this rollback is snuck past our communitie­s, an estimated 175,000 tons of methane and 250,000 more tons of toxic compounds and hazardous air pollutants will poison the air we breathe in the American West.

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