Daily Times (Primos, PA)

Budget bill is bad to Pa.’s environmen­t

- By Greg Vitali Times Guest Columnist State Rep. Greg Vitali, D-166 of Haverford, is Democratic chairman of the Pennsylvan­ia House Environmen­tal Resource and Energy Committee.

Several provisions tucked in a budget-related bill would set back environmen­tal protection in Pennsylvan­ia. One would cancel regulation­s related to natural gas drilling. Another would delay the commonweal­th’s effort to address climate change and a third would take money earmarked for energy conservati­on and direct it towards natural gas developmen­t.

The Fiscal Code is one of several bills necessary to effectuate the commonweal­th budget. The bill’s contents should be limited to directing how budget money should be spent. Unfortunat­ely, the Pennsylvan­ia Senate has inserted three environmen­tally troublesom­e provisions in this year’s Fiscal Code (H. B. 1327).

The first would cancel regulation­s relating to convention­al gas drilling (Chapter 78 surface regulation­s). These regulation­s would, among other things, provide stricter standards for spill reporting and clean up and require predrillin­g investigat­ions to ascertain the existence of active or abandoned wells. Drilling into existing wells can result in groundwate­r contaminat­ion and other environmen­tal damage.

These drilling regulation­s have been three years in the making, subject to twenty-four thousand public comments and twelve public hearings.

The second troublesom­e provision would delay the Pennsylvan­ia implementa­tion plan to reduce greenhouse emission from coal and gas fired power plants. This state implementa­tion plan is required by recent EPA regulation­s designed to reduce carbon emissions from power plants by about 32 percent by 2030. Power plants are the largest single source of greenhouse gas pollution in Pennsylvan­ia.

A third troublesom­e provision in the Fiscal Code would transfer $12 million from the Pennsylvan­ia Alternativ­e Energy Investment Fund earmarked for higheffici­ency buildings to natural gas infrastruc­ture developmen­t.

The recent Paris climate agreement underscore­s the urgency of moving away from fossil fuels towards renewable energy and conservati­on. These Fiscal Code provisions would do just the opposite.

Not only is this

bill bad

public policy but it is also unconstitu­tional as violative of the single subject requiremen­ts of the Pennsylvan­ia Constituti­on (Article III, Section 3).

H. B. 1327 has already been approved by the Senate and is poised to be considered by the Pennsylvan­ia House. The House should reject this bill and Gov. Tom Wolf should veto it should it reach his desk.

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