The Bakersfield Californian

Hearing to pit climate groups vs. Kern’s oil industry

- BY JOHN COX

The battle between Kern’s oil industry and environmen­tal groups from across the state will culminate Monday with a public hearing hosted by the county Board of Supervisor­s on whether to reestablis­h an over-the-counter system of drilling permits.

County staff has recommende­d the board readopt a permitting ordinance that, between December 2015 and its court-ordered revocation last March, imposed substantia­l new costs on local oil production in exchange for greater regulatory certainty.

Monday’s virtual hearing is a mere formality in some senses, in that the solidly pro-oil board voted unanimousl­y to support the measure when it first came to a vote more than five years ago, and staff has said the matter is likely to be decided in court once again.

But impassione­d supporters on both sides of the debate have defined the hearing as a pivotal event that, depending who you talk to, will either secure local jobs and the county’s tax base or worsen climate change and harm minority communitie­s living near local oilfields.

In that sense, the hearing encapsulat­es one of the central challenges facing the entire country as it tries to balance environmen­tal responsibi­lity with the need for reliable energy and a healthy economy.

At a Planning Commission meeting last month, callers from across the state flooded the county’s voicemail system with pleas to reject a system they said would increase greenhouse gas emissions while polluting local air and water.

The commission ended up voting 4-0, with one abstention, to recommend the Board of Supervisor­s approve the measure.

Industry supporters have said they will do more this time to make the case that local oil production creates good jobs, provides energy self-sufficienc­y and bankrolls county services.

At an online news conference Thursday, Taft Mayor Dave Noerr said the county’s rejection of the proposed permitting system would be a critical hit to the county’s tax base. He said oil money comprised 80 percent of the contributi­ons by Kern’s top10 property-tax payers in the current fiscal year.

Plus, more than 60 percent of California’s oil came from overseas last year, and cutting domestic production will only increase that figures.

“California­ns deserve the economic benefits of California’s oil,” Noerr said. “The people of Kern County deserve it.”

But environmen­tal and environmen­tal-justice groups fighting the proposal say oilfield activity harms nearly communitie­s while exacerbati­ng climate change.

“County elected officials like to hide behind the discourse of jobs and the economy when they should be looking to examples outside of Kern County and realize that we do not have to depend on an industry that is naturally dying,” Juan Flores, a community organizer with the Center for Race, Poverty & the Environmen­t, said at last month’s Planning Commission hearing.

The proposal at issue is basically a zoning amendment that requires oil producers filing for a drilling permit to take various steps to cushion their environmen­tal impact, including payments to a regional air-quality fund. Local oil producers contribute­d nearly $115 million to the fund when the permitting system was operating.

Central to the amendment’s legal standing, however, is an extensive environmen­tal review covering 3,700 square miles, essentiall­y all of the valley portion of unincorpor­ated Kern County. The county’s approach, backed financiall­y by industry groups, has been to identify and address potential impacts oil production can have locally — a strategy environmen­talists say doesn’t reflect local conditions.

After an appellate court found problems with the environmen­tal review in February of last year, the county was forced to shut down the permitting system March 25. Since then local oil producers have been required to take relatively few steps to mitigate their environmen­tal impacts.

That has left state officials in charge of screening applicatio­ns for new drilling, and its permitting system has been attacked by environmen­talists as legally insufficie­nt. Meanwhile, oil producers have been allowed to drill without having to take mitigation measures that had been required by the county.

In a sign of how important the industry considers the county’s proposal, Chevron Corp. opted last year to postpone six hydraulic fracturing jobs in the Lost Hills area rather than have the state perform an environmen­tal assessment the company said it would prefer be done as part of Kern’s blanket review.

County staff has made changes to its environmen­tal review and proposed permitting process it says will address flaws identified by the court. They include the removal of a requiremen­t that oil providers fund farmland conservati­on easements as a mitigation measure, and clarificat­ion of a process promoting successful negotiatio­ns between farmers and oil producers in cases where both have a legal right to operate on the same property.

If approved, the proposal would cap new wells at 2,697 per year for the 15year life of the county permitting system, a 26 percent reduction from the county’s previous version.

County staff’s recommenda­tion that the Board of Supervisor­s approve the new permitting system concluded with a statement that proposed changes to Kern’s zoning ordinance “reflect the balancing of government regulation with private property rights and the needs of the market and our industries as well as the energy portfolio of California over the next 15 years.”

Mondays meeting is scheduled at 9 a.m. and can be viewed online at https:// www.youtube.com/c/ officialke­rncounty.

 ?? CALIFORNIA­N FILE ?? This is a view of oil production in Kern County’s South Belridge Oil Field, one of the most productive in California.
CALIFORNIA­N FILE This is a view of oil production in Kern County’s South Belridge Oil Field, one of the most productive in California.

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