The Denver Post

Activists trying to reinstate Longmont’s fracking ban

- By Dan Elliott

Environmen­tal activists asked a Colorado court Wednesday to reinstate the city of Longmont’s ban on hydraulic fracturing, arguing that the ban is legal under a new state law giving local government­s more authority over the oil and gas industry.

Longmont voters approved the ban in 2012, but the state Supreme Court overturned it four years later, saying only the state could regulate the industry under laws in force at the time.

Groups called Colorado Rising and Our Longmont said Wednesday that changed when the legislatur­e passed a law this year reversing the state’s priority from encouragin­g oil and gas production to protecting public health and the environmen­t.

The law — known as Senate Bill 181 — also lets local government­s impose some health and environmen­tal rules as well as limit the location of new wells.

“There’s nothing in Senate Bill 181 that says it prohibits local government­s from banning oil and gas activity within their borders,” said Joe Salazar, the director of Colorado Rising, who spoke at a news conference to announce the action.

Hydraulic fracturing is standard practice in oil and gas drilling in areas around Longmont, so banning the technique would effectivel­y ban most drilling in the city.

Colorado Rising and Our Longmont filed a motion in District Court seeking to reopen the case that led the courts to overturn Longmont’s ban.

The Colorado Oil and Gas Associatio­n released a written statement saying the ban was still illegal, citing comments by Democratic Gov. Jared Polis and some lawmakers who insisted that the new law did not allow local government­s to block oil and gas drilling.

Dan Haley, the associatio­n’s

president, said the effort to revive Longmont’s ban was “political theater.”

Salazar acknowledg­ed the courts could ultimately rule that an outright ban was illegal, but he voiced doubt that would happen.

“It is clearly and expressly stated by Senate Bill 181 that local government­s can adopt stricter and more protective regulation­s over the oil and gas industry” than the state’s rules, he said.

“I’d like to see them try to get around that expressed language,” Salazar said, referring to the industry.

Democratic state Rep. Jonathan Singer of Longmont, who appeared at Wednesday’s news conference, said the legislatur­e’s intent with the new law was to “flip the script” on oil and gas regulation.

“The state does not take precedent over what local government­s want to do when it comes to protecting our health and safety,” he said.

Longmont city officials had no immediate comment.

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