How Weakened Fossil Fuel Regulation Hurts Small Towns
From the start, President Donald Trump’s administration has made , especially for the , a top priority.
And though his , Trump’s team has many .
Environmental Protection Agency Administrator , Interior Secretary and Trump have teamed up with the Republican-led Congress to on the case, by and .
As an who has spent hundreds of hours researching communities directly affected by oil and gas production, I find that many people living in these places feel that fossil fuel industries already had the upper hand before Trump took office.
Even among people who support drilling, many believe these industries need to be more regulated. The residents I have interviewed . They tell researchers like me they consider themselves powerless to control their surroundings or to protect the environment, their health, or their property. Reducing regulations even more will only intensify these problems.
The fracking boom
Thanks to an and that began a decade ago, U.S. . The nation now ranks as the world’s . American .
, commonly called “fracking,” powered this surge. So did deregulation. Companies using these methods enjoyed from federal environmental regulations that date back to George W. Bush’s presidency and remained on the books .
There’s a mounting debate regarding state and local control over oil and gas development.
After the enactment of the , the law that codified many of these exemptions, states became responsible for creating their own policies, procedures, budgets and enforcement plans—most of which weren’t in place before the boom got underway. The government exempted fracking from federal environmental regulations like the Safe Drinking Water Act and the Clean Water Act.
States could decide rules like setbacks from homes, zoning, water acquisition and disposal, and most other aspects of drilling. This made it easier and quicker to permit hydraulic fracturing, but the states had to scramble to determine how to regulate it.
As fracking spread into more densely populated areas, wells ended up within a few hundred feet of in states like Colorado, Texas, Pennsylvania and North Dakota. That made a big impact on people’s quality of life.
But in places like , and a booming region that stretches along the Rocky Mountains and includes cities like Fort Collins and Pueblo—the people who live in places most affected by these types of changes have no seat at the table. They live alongside oil fields and gas patches but have little power to affect what happens around them.
Health hazards and other problems
As a result, there’s a mounting debate regarding state and local control over oil and gas development. Having spoken to people affected by fracking’s spread, I believe it’s clear why people are demanding a bigger say.
A growing pool of scientific evidence indicates that living near oil and gas production can endanger . , , certain and are higher, for one thing.
There’s also more , including methane emissions and smog, which have been linked to . And communities near fracking operations are loud noises, bright lights, vibrations and , as well as and .
Drilling and daily life
Colorado’s experience shows how oil and gas production can disrupt people’s daily lives, especially when the public is excluded from decisions about it. The state’s make Colorado . Its oil extraction has more than tripled since 2010, when the fracking boom began, and its since 2001.
Like other states where oil and gas production has soared, Colorado the desires of drillers with local needs. In many communities, people living fracking sites say they are at risk. But Colorado’s state has ruled that only the state government can control where and when fracking may occur.
, which has small towns, subdivisions, and rural areas where farmers raise cattle and plant grains and sugar beets, alone has at least 21,000 wells. It ranks 11th in oil production in the U.S.—and is .
When activists protested as the site was prepared for drilling, one was arrested.
I belong to a team that unites social scientists, epidemiologists, and statisticians. Together, we are completing a detailed study that measures how . We have conducted surveys, in-depth interviews, ethnography and even taken blood and hair samples to examine how drilling may affect people’s stress levels and health, their daily lives and physical symptoms of stress, like elevated cortisol levels.
While doing this research, I have personally witnessed the toll that underregulation is taking. To collect our data, I’ve sat around kitchen tables and listened as people described their concerns about , and .
They are uncertain about how it affects the health of their children, grandchildren and elderly parents. I’ve visited once-idyllic homes, now set in the shadows of standing 30 feet tall and stretching for hundreds of feet.
No way out
Coloradans who want to stop fracking and drilling near their homes now have two options. They can draft agreements about protocols with a willing operator—a process that often requires expensive legal advice and lots of time. Or, residents can locate an acceptable alternative site that is equally suitable for production—which, of course, only .
But some people have little recourse. Consider the situation facing , a Weld County middle school. Its students are primarily Latino and belong to low-income households. Many have undocumented relatives.
Despite efforts by activists to block drilling, a company called Extraction Oil and Gas aims to place within about 1,300 feet of the school and even closer to its athletic fields.
When activists protested as the site was prepared for drilling, one was arrested. , along with unnamed “John and Jane Does.”
Environmental injustice
The Colorado context illustrates the lived reality of what researchers like me call “” amid the oil and gas development also afflicting .
People who live near drilling may be exposed to a wide array of environmental and health risks. In this way, they experience “,” due to their exposure to more than their fair share of pollutants and hazards. have shown that people of color, low-income communities, and otherwise marginalized groups in the U.S. are more likely to be exposed to disproportionate environmental risks and hazards from polluting facilities and industrial activities.
The public has little power to zone or regulate oil and gas production near their homes, especially in states like Colorado. This is a form of “.”
When local governments try to restrict oil and gas production, they can meant to discourage local control.
The Trump administration’s efforts to further reduce federal regulations will surely escalate these sorts of injustices. Instead of serving the interests of communities where oil, gas, and coal production take place, I believe that its actions will disempower and divide the public.
This article was originally published by . It has been edited for YES! Magazine.