Oregon Live: Supporters Cheer House Vote to Ban Offshore Drilling for 10 years

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Supporters cheer House vote to ban off-shore drilling for 10 years
By Michelle Cole, The Oregonian
February 08, 2010, 4:20PM
 SALEM — Oregon’s coastal waters — at least the three-mile-wide strip that the state controls — would remain off-limits to oil and gas drilling for the next decade under a bill that passed the House Monday.

Supporters, including the Oregon League of Conservation Voters and the state’s crab, salmon and trawl commissions, said a moratorium will signal to the federal government that Oregon’s coast should be off limits for drilling.
–Michelle Cole.

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Canadian Business

Oregon House votes to extend ban on offshore drilling for oil and gas for next 10 years

SALEM, Ore. (AP) – The Oregon House has voted to extend a ban on drilling for oil and gas off Oregon’s coast for the next decade.

The vote Monday was 38-21. The bill goes to the Senate.

A state moratorium on drilling expired in January. The state has regulatory power to three miles out. Beyond that, the federal government is in charge of drilling regulation.

Backers of the bill say there are no plans for drilling, but the state should take precautions to protect the beauty of the coastline and its fishing economies.

Sport and commercial fishing groups supported a permanent ban on drilling. But some legislators wanted a briefer moratorium, and they worked out a compromise for a 10-year extension.

State officials first adopted a drilling moratorium in the 1990s and lawmakers readopted a three-year ban in 2007. But that expired on Jan. 2 of this year.

After more than a half hour’s debate, the House voted 38-21 in support of House Bill 3613, which would extend the drilling ban for another 10 years. The vote moves the bill on to the Senate for consideration.

“Oregonians are not willing to risk our off-shore resources for a few days of energy,” argued Rep. Ben Cannon, D-Portland.

But others questioned whether 10 years is too long to lock up a resource Oregon might need.

Rep. Wayne Krieger, R-Gold Beach, said rapidly evolving technology may make it possible to extract oil and gas without harming the environment. Krieger asked: “How can you create jobs without using natural resources in our rural communities?”

Environmental and fishing industry groups, often adversaries on public policy issues, teamed up in favor of seeing the ban renewed during this month’s special session. The original version of the bill called for a permanent ban but a compromise was struck shortening it to 10 years.

No one expects oil companies are planning to begin drilling anytime soon. Yet the idea does come up. Two years ago, with gas prices topping $4 a gallon, some in Congress called for the nation to tap its off-shore reserves.

Brian Doherty, lobbyist for the Western States Petroleum Association, testified in committee that the are no proven commercial quantities of oil or natural gas in Oregon’s territorial sea. But his group opposed a permanent ban.

Special thanks to  Richard Charter

Pinellas County, Fl: “Hands Across the Sand”–People gather in protest of Fla. Offshore Oil Drilling

“Hands Across the Sand” – People gather in protest of Florida off-shore oil drilling
 Kathryn Bursch     6 hrs ago
               
St. Pete Beach, Florida – Even on a cool day, the Dahl family from North Dakota enjoys looking for shells and walking along St. Pete Beach.

“People who live here may take it for granted, but we find this is pretty breathtaking,” says Ardys Dahl.

And keeping Florida’s beaches attractive to both tourists and wildlife is the aim of a statewide demonstration planned for this Saturday.

It’s called Hands Across the Sand. Organizers want people to hit the beach at 1:00 p.m. and hold hands, in order to show their opposition to oil drilling off Florida’s coast.

“This is why we visit here. This is why we have a $65 billion a year tourist industry.”
While the move to lift Florida’s oil drilling ban has recently lost some momentum in Tallahassee, just like the waves, this controversial issue is expected to come back time and time again.

“If we don’t think this is coming back next year, we’re kidding ourselves,” says Rep. Rick Kriseman, D-St. Petersburg. “Everything we do now, lays the groundwork not only to defeat it this year, but to beat it back the following year.”

Those pushing for oil exploration say Florida will benefit from millions in royalty dollars. But those gathering on Saturday consider clean water and sand priceless.

Here is more information on the demonstrations in Pinellas: 
the Facebook group Love Tourists Not Drilling.

You can also get more information for demonstrations across the state.
See flyer:  

St. Pete Times: Offshore Oil Drilling Foes to Protest on Beaches

http://www.tampabay.com/news/environment/offshore-oil-drilling-foes-to-protest-on-beaches/1072362
St. Pete Times
TampaBay.com

By Craig Pittman, Times Staff Writer . Special thanks to Richard Charter
In Print: Thursday, February 11, 2010

Opponents of offshore drilling are hoping thousands of people dressed in black will join them Saturday holding hands on beaches around the state for 10 minutes.

The idea for the “Hands Across the Sand” protest came from Dave Rauschkolb, 48, who for the past 24 years has owned a beachfront restaurant called Bud & Alley’s in the Panhandle community of Seaside.

Rauschkolb, a surfer for more than 30 years, said his plan was as simple as could be: “How hard is it to get people to go to the beach in Florida?”
When he pitched the idea to some friends, it began to snowball. Now there are 70 beaches around the state where various groups have agreed to help sponsor a local version of the protest.

Doug Daniels, the Daytona Beach attorney representing the pro-drilling Florida Energy Associates LLC, said he hadn’t heard about Hands Across the Sand but that “it sounds like a fine protest.” As for whether it will have any impact on the Legislature, though, he said, “I doubt that it will.”

In fact, he said, he hopes his side can convince the protesters that drilling is environmentally safe. “We hope at the end of the day, we’ll have their support,” he said.

In the Tampa Bay area there are protests slated for Upham Beach, Clearwater Beach, Fort De Soto, St. Pete Beach, Gulfport, Lassing Park, Madeira Beach, Pass-a-Grille, Redington Shores, Clam Bayou, Treasure Island, and Tarpon Springs.

Organizers are asking opponents of drilling to dress in black – the color of an oil spill – and gather at their designated beach at 1 p.m. They want them to hold hands for 10 minutes, showing their solidarity.

 Craig Pittman can be reached at craig@sptimes.com or (727) 893-8530.

Virginian-Pilot: Virginia Senate kills bill on offshore oil drilling profits

http://hamptonroads.com/2010/02/virginia-senate-kills-bill-offshoredrilling-profits

By Julian Walker
The Virginian-Pilot
© February 10, 2010

special thanks to Richard Charter

The Democratic majority in Virginia’s Senate this afternoon killed for the year legislation from Virginia Beach Republican Sen. Frank Wagner to dedicate future offshore drilling royalties to the state general fund, a coastal energy research consortium and to localities for transportation fixes.

Wagner carried SB601 on behalf of Gov. Bob McDonnell, whose transportation funding plan partly relies on money from drilling. It was defeated on a 22-18 party line vote.

Noting that federal officials haven’t yet approved drilling off Virginia’s coast or decided how royalties would be dispersed, Senate Majority Leader Richard Saslaw, D-Fairfax, called the bill “a fantasy” that seeks to dedicate dollars “the state is never going to see.”

In rebuttal remarks, Wagner said actions at the state and federal level in recent years have put Virginia closer to being granted approval for offshore drilling. Rejecting the bill sends the wrong signal to Washington, he argued. Upcoming November elections could alter the political makeup of Congress and change how it deals with offshore drilling, he added.

A similar defeat likely awaits offshore-drilling royalty legislation from Del. Chris Stolle, R-Virginia Beach, which previously passed the House of Delegates. That measure, HB756, already rests in the Senate Finance Committee, to which Wagner’s bill was dispatched.
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http://www.dailypress.com/news/virginia/dp-va–xgr-offshoredrill0210feb10,0,1076395.story http://www.dailypress.com/news/virginia/dp-va–xgr-offshoredrill0210feb10,0,1076395.story
Daily Press
Dems say bill would give ‘false hope’
RICHMOND, Va. – The Virginia Senate has killed a measure pushed by Gov. Bob McDonnell to allocate funds received from possible offshore drilling for oil and gas off the state’s coast to services such as education, health care and public safety.

Democrats argued that Congress was not likely to approve the sale of leases for drilling rights, and to pass a bill allocating such royalties would give citizens false hope in tough economic times.

The Senate voted 22-18 Wednesday along party lines to send the proposal back to committee, where it will be carried over until next year.

The House passed a similar measure on Monday that would divert 70 percent of the revenues to transportation, 20 percent to energy research and 10 percent to localities.

Pensacola News Journal:Hands Span Coast Against Offshore Oil Drilling

http://www.pnj.com/article/20100209/NEWS01/2090315/1006/NEWS01/Hands-span-coast-against-offshore-oil-drilling

Pensacola News Journal

Hands span coast against offshore oil drilling
Opponents gathering across state to fight oil, gas exploration
BILL COTTERELL * NEWS JOURNAL CAPITAL BUREAU * FEBRUARY 9, 2010

The statewide “Hands Across the Sand” demonstration opposes proposals to permit oil and gas exploration in the Gulf of Mexico. An industry spokesman said Monday the opponents are unfamiliar with cleaner new technology.

“The metaphor of joining hands goes much farther than what’s happening on Saturday,” said Dave Rauschkolb, a Seaside restaurateur who has spent about four months working on the project. “We can beat this in the Legislature if they hear the message of Floridians. We hope to make this a very unpopular thing for any member to vote for.”

Rauschkolb and environmental groups and coastal businesses fear tourism and fishing would be hurt by offshore rigs.

Using social-network sites, they arranged groups in almost every city and county along the coastlines to get like-minded people to the beach on Saturday, most wearing black, to symbolize an oil spill, for a hand-holding protest.

Nobody is estimating how many will turnout in any area, but the idea is to make the opposition highly visible.

“I’m hoping for more than 100 out here,” said Chasidy Hobbs of Pensacola Beach, who works with Emerald Coastkeeper, an environmental group. “We believe the economic benefits that can be gained from oil drilling are nowhere near the economic benefits that Florida reaps already from our coastline.”

Despite a surge of support in the Florida House last session, when a bill authorizing the governor and Cabinet to grant drilling leases was passed but stalled in the Senate, opponents are fired up and confident for the session starting March 2.

Dave Mica, executive director of the Florida Petroleum Council, said House Speaker-designate Dean Cannon, R-Winter Park, remains an enthusiastic advocate of authorizing future leasing. Senate President Jeff Atwater, R-North Palm Beach, has told committees in his chamber to make a thorough study of tax benefits, jobs and environmental implications of drilling, effectively slowing the proposal.
“We hope we can at least create the framework legally for the state to process leases,” said Mica. “There will always be some detractors, but we believe they’re not looking at what the industry is doing now, in terms of being able to protect the coast.”

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