Los Angeles Times

County seeks safety valves on gas wells

Lawsuit would require the utility to install new equipment to prevent a leak like the one in Aliso Canyon.

- By Alice Walton

Southern California Gas Co. should be required to install subsurface safety shutoff valves on all of its natural gas wells in Los Angeles County to prevent a leak like the one that lasted for months at an Aliso Canyon storage facility, county officials argued in a lawsuit filed Monday.

The lawsuit, filed in Superior Court by attorneys for Los Angeles County, alleges public nuisance and abatement, unfair competitio­n, breach of franchise agreement and breach of lease. The lawsuit seeks new safety measures and unspecifie­d damages.

It took gas crews four months to stop a leak in the natural gas field above Porter Ranch after it was discovered in October. Attorneys for Los Angeles County say the leak could have been stopped much sooner had a subsurface valve been in place. The well, known as SS-25, did have a valve at one time, but it broke in 1979 and was never repaired or replaced, according to the lawsuit.

The leak in Aliso Canyon released 100,000 tons of methane gas into the atmosphere, making it the largest natural gas leak in U.S. history. Thousands of people voluntaril­y evacuated after odorants in the methane caused stomachach­es and nosebleeds.

“Given the aging infrastruc­ture and inadequate safety measures employed by SoCal Gas, the risk of another gas leak occurring is great and poses a monumental risk to the residents of Los Angeles County,” the court documents say.

Southern California Gas has not yet reviewed the lawsuit, spokesman Chris Gilbride said. But “the Aliso Canyon storage facility was in compliance with [state] regulation­s at the time of the leak, and SoCal Gas has and will continue to support reasonable, forward-looking, regulatory policies,” he said. “Such policies are set by our regulators and lawmakers at the state and federal levels of government.”

The gas company manages more than 200 wells at four locations in L.A. County — Aliso Canyon, Playa del Rey, Honor Rancho-Santa Clarita and Montebello.

An attorney for the county said it’s unknown how many of those wells have safety vales, but he estimated installati­on would cost $50,000 to $100,000 per well. The gas company could not immediatel­y confirm those figures.

“The gas company has demonstrat­ed time and time again that they’re unwilling to uphold their responsibi­lities,” said L.A.

County Supervisor Michael Antonovich. “Time has long passed for the gas company to grow a moral compass.”

After the leak, state Sen. Fran Pavley (D-Agoura Hills) introduced legislatio­n, SB 887, that would require subsurface valves for all urban wells, including those in Aliso Canyon, Playa del Rey and Santa Clarita. Under current state law, wells within 300 feet of a home or 100 feet of a roadway or recreation­al facility must have subsurface valves.

Officials with the state’s Division of Oil, Gas and Geothermal Resources will host a workshop on well safety Aug. 11 in Woodland Hills.

The county lawsuit is the latest chapter in the ongoing legal battle resulting from the Aliso Canyon leak. Thousands of plaintiffs represente­d by more than 80 attorneys have filed 131 legal actions against the gas company. Many seek reimbursem­ent for lodging, food, mileage, medical expenses and home cleanings.

The Internal Revenue Service announced last week that homeowners will not have to pay income tax on reimbursem­ents received from Southern California Gas.

The gas company filed its own legal papers two weeks ago asking the court to amend a directive from the L.A. County Department of Public Health that the utility clean all homes in Porter Ranch and all homes within a five-mile radius of the leaking gas well.

“There has been no data provided to support this unnecessar­y demand from a health and safety perspectiv­e,” a statement from the gas company said. “It will only cause additional disruption to a community that wants to get back to normal as soon as possible.”

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