Breaking:
Los Angeles Passes Fracking Moratorium
28
February, 2014
Los
Angeles is the largest city in the U.S. to place a moratorium on
fracking.
City
council unanimously voted Friday afternoon to send a moratorium
motion to the city attorney’s office to be written as a zoning
ordinance. It will then return to council for a final vote.
A
tweet from city councilman Mike Bonin moments after the vote
expressed the gravity of the action:
Friday’s
motion places a moratorium on fracking and other “well stimulation”
practices at drilling sites until the city verifies that fracking
does not compromise residents’ personal safety or the drinkability
of their water. That could come in the form of state or federal
regulators providing protections or declaring fracking to be safe.
Who knows when, if ever, that will take place.
The
vote also makes Los Angeles first oil-producing city in
California to ban fracking technologies.
“We
congratulate the Los Angeles City Council for supporting the L.A.
fracking moratorium motion, a strong step toward protecting the
people of Los Angeles from severe health and environmental impacts,”
said Adam Scow, California’s director of Food
& Water Watch. “We urge the city attorney to stand by the
motion’s strong language and set a powerful and positive example
for other communities and Gov. [Jerry] Brown, who should immediately
enact a statewide moratorium to protect all Californians.”
Several
organizations that traveled to Los Angeles City Hall Friday to
witness the vote left feeling better about the city’s future and
air. For instance, the Esperanza Community Housing Corporation
and the People Not Pozos campaign bussed about 50 residents.
“While
state oil and gas regulators drag their feet on enforcing existing
rules and taking adequate precaution for the health of our
communities, rivers and ocean, L.A. residents suffer from what is
already occurring at the nation’s largest urban oil field and in
communities throughout the city,”said Liz Crosson, executive
director of Los
Angeles Waterkeeper. “We don’t know all of the chemicals oil
companies are exposing us to when they frack in our neighborhoods,
but we know enough to know we don’t want them in our air or in our
water.”
To
most in the state, the next step would be a ban throughout
California. Since the launch of Californians
Against Fracking in May 2013, more than 200,000 petitions
have been signed urging Gov. Brown to ban fracking in
California. Farmers,
environmental justice groups, students and celebrities are
among those advocating a statewide ban. However, some would like L.A.
County to step up, too.
According
to The
Los Angeles Times,
fracking, acidizing and gravel packing taken place in about 100
more wells in the county than the city. None of the city wells
reported any hydraulic fracturing during that period.
Gary
Gless, president of Citizens Coalition for a Safe Community, told the
newspaper that the Los Angeles moratorium means little to people who
live near Inglewood Oil Field.
“It
wouldn’t do much until the county steps up and does something,”
he said. “But I think it will put pressure on the county to do the
right thing.
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