Victory for Barnett Shale Communities

Submitted by don on Wed, 12/23/2009 - 12:27pm.

TCEQ issues new emissions policy

Texas responds to DISH health survey with important new emission policy
After years of emission problems and inaction from regulators, the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality (TCEQ) issued an important change in emission policy for the Barnett Shale. TCEQ's new emission policies will require TCEQ to respond within 12 hours to citizen complaints, obtain citizen affidavits that allow for odor and health symptom documentation, use specific instrumentation requirements for toxics and if necessary document toxic emissions with an infrared camera.

Same-Day Emissions Response - it's good for people who breathe
Same-day emissions response is a critical victory for Texas landowners and residents living with Barnett Shale development. Be sure to read the TCEQ memo, report releases, odors and health symptoms and tell your neighbors (scroll down to access the docs). TCEQ's citizen affidavits that will be used for same-day response are a powerful way to document emission issues as they will become part of the permanent record, allow for the documentation of any health symptoms associated with the emissions issues, and will enable TCEQ to take enforcement actions.

Your Texas Oil & Gas Accountability Project membership is making a difference!
TCEQ's decision comes after pressure was brought to bear by the Town of DISH and Texas OGAP, and on the heels of the release of our community-based health study. Our DISH health survey put the spotlight on community health symptoms --which overlap with the known health effects of toxics already detected in DISH - and the frequency of odor events in the area. Residents of DISH are smelling odors associated with oil and gas infrastructure as often as twice per day.

Want to do more?
Please make a year-end donation to Texas OGAP and help us strengthen our efforts. While we are off to a powerful start, there is a long road ahead of us to reform irresponsible oil and gas in Texas. Broader action across multiple agencies is necessary to prevent pollution from shale gas development, and we need your help!

Thanks for your support and membership!

Happy holidays, the Texas OGAP team

For more information:
-On the Texas OGAP site, read the TCEQ documents associated with the new policy: the interoffice memo explaining the policy, the citizen affidavit, and the odor log
-Read the Texas OGAP press release on the survey (includes link to survey text)
-Read the Denton Record Chronicle's article on DISH health results
-Donate to the Texas Oil & Gas Accountability Project

Read the 12/23/09 Star-Telegram report by Jack Smith

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