The Denver Post

WELD HAS DIFFERENT TAKE

- By John Aguilar

Officials declare parts of county as a “mineral resource area of state interest.”

GREELEY» Weld County is letting it be known that there’s more than one way to interpret Senate Bill 181 — Colorado’s sweeping oil and gas law giving local government­s appreciabl­y more power to regulate energy extraction.

The Weld commission­ers unanimousl­y passed a resolution Monday designatin­g the unincorpor­ated parts of the county as a “mineral resource area of state interest.”

Previous discussion of SB 181 has focused on municipali­ties that want to tighten restrictio­ns on the oil and gas industry, but commission­ers Monday expressed a clear interest in making sure the industry remains a formidable force in a county that relies heavily on mineral extraction for jobs and tax revenues.

“SB 181 changed a lot of things,” said Commission­er Barbara Kirkmeyer during Monday’s meeting. “We are going to use the additional authority … that was given to us so that we have a fighting chance — so that the men and women in this county have a fighting chance.”

Weld County is responsibl­e for nearly nine of every 10 barrels of oil produced in Colorado and also generates more than 30 percent of the state’s natural gas, as the county sits atop the mineral-rich Denver-Julesburg Basin.

The passage of SB 181 this spring reset the regulatory landscape for Colorado’s $30 billionplu­s industry, ending state preemption of local efforts to rein in oil and gas operators through increased setback requiremen­ts for wells or moratorium­s on new drilling.

Many opposed to drilling cite health concerns from spills, explosions and emissions from rapidly proliferat­ing well pads that they feel have been located too close to neighborho­ods along the fast-growing Front Range.

But for areas in Colorado where oil and gas plays an instrument­al role in the local economy, the thinking is that SB 181 threatens energy jobs.

Commission­er Sean Conway said other counties in Colorado whose economic fortunes also depend on a robust oil and gas sector will be looking to Weld County “for our leadership” and “guidance” on how to move ahead in a post-181 environmen­t.

Whether Weld County’s move means that it will attempt to create oil and gas regulation­s that are less restrictiv­e than what state law permits is not yet known. The county will spend the next several weeks making changes to its code dealing with

oil and gas extraction.

Matt Sura, an oil and gas attorney who represents several Front Range communitie­s, said while SB 181 eradicated state preemption of local government­s over oil and gas issues, the new law doesn’t do away with the state’s authority over the industry altogether.

“SB 181 specifical­ly gives local government­s the power to go beyond state control but it does not give them the power to be less restrictiv­e than the state,” Sura said.

The check on that comes in the form of dual permits needed from both the state and local government before a well can be drilled, he said.

If the Colorado Oil and Gas Conservati­on Commission, the state’s regulatory body, feels like Weld is violating state statute in approving well permits, it could refuse to issue its own permit, he said.

But Bruce Barker, attorney for Weld County, disagrees that the county can’t set rules that are less stringent than the state’s. Weld County commission­ers aim to keep their regulation­s where the state rules are today, he said, but will invoke the local control given to them by SB 181 if state regulators tighten regulation­s over the next year of rulemaking.

“When the governor said it’s all about local control, he was right,” Barker said.

Windsor Mayor Kristie Melendez was one of several local politician­s who spoke before the commission­ers, commending them for their resolution.

“I steadfastl­y stand with Weld County — that what is right for Boulder isn’t necessaril­y right for Weld County,” she said.

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