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Press Releases


July 21, 2005  
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LIEBERMAN SAYS BLM DISREGARDS ITS OBLIGATION TO PROTECT THE ENVIRONMENT FROM OIL AND GAS DRILLING DAMAGE
Permits for Drilling up 255 Percent In Past Six Years; No Comparable Increase in BLM Budget, Staff for Environmental Inspections
 
WASHINGTON - Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee Ranking Member Joe Lieberman, D-Conn., Thursday said the Interior Department=s Bureau of Land Management is so focused on issuing permits for oil and gas drilling that it’s neglecting its responsibility to protect the land, air, water, fish, and wildlife damaged by the drilling.

Lieberman based his comments on a report he requested from the Government Accountability Office, which was made public Thursday. According to the report, the BLM is failing to fulfill its obligations to inspect well sites, to monitor the long term impact of drilling, and to ensure drillers eliminate evidence of old wells and repair and restore the land they have leased.

“This Administration appears to have lost its sense of balance between granting drilling permits to the oil and gas industry and protecting the natural wonder of the environment,” Lieberman said. “Striking the right balance is BLM’s statutory responsibility. Irresponsible stewardship of public lands while the oil and gas industry profits is not an acceptable balance.”

BLM manages 261 million acres of public land and issues leases and drilling permits on that land for oil and gas exploration. The agency is supposed to oversee mitigation of the negative effects of development on the leased land by tracking wells that are no longer producing oil to make sure they do not become liabilities to the federal government and by ensuring that public lands on which drilling has occurred are properly reclaimed and restored so the natural beauty of the land can once again be enjoyed.

“This report sheds important new light on the Administration’s shortsighted approach,” Lieberman said. “Its emphasis on streamlining the process for granting drilling permits means that BLM staff spends less time remedying the environmental effects of the oil and gas drilling and more time processing drilling permit applications.
To make matters worse, the House Energy bill, now in conference, would speed up the permitting process.”

GAO found that oil and gas development on BLM-managed lands increased by 255 percent over the past six years: approved drilling permits rose from 1,803 in Fiscal Year 1999 to 6,399 in Fiscal Year 2004. But the BLM’s oil and gas management budget rose just 64 percent and its staffing levels rose only 21 percent.

The report also found:

The two BLM field offices that issued the largest percentage increase of drilling permits met annual inspection goals only once in the past six years. One of these offices, in Buffalo, Wyo., last met its goal in 2000. The other, in Vernal, Utah, last met its goal in 1999. Combined, the eight offices visited by GAO met their annual environmental inspections goals only about half of the time during the past six years.

In FY 2004, the Buffalo, Wyo., field office achieved only 27 percent of its required inspection goals.

Half of the field offices surveyed had a backlog of past due idle-well reviews.

Seven of the eight field offices had a backlog of reclamation inspections.

Half of the field offices have failed to develop any resource monitoring plans. The report specifically noted that heavy workload associated with processing drilling permits has slowed the development of resource monitoring plans in the Powder River Basin of Wyoming.
 
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July 2005 Press Releases
June   August   --   2004   2006  
 
July 27 - Senate Homeland Security Leaders Call For Increased Mass Transit Security Funding

 
July 27 - Mining Reclamation is Poorly Managed By BLM

 
July 22 - Senators Collins and Lieberman Criticize TSA For Violating Privacy Laws While Testing Passenger Prescreening System

 
July 22 - Senators Collins, Lieberman Launch Investigation Into Mass Transit Security In the U.S.

 
July 22 - Lieberman Disagrees With Decision On Air Traffic Specialists

 
July 21 current Press Release

 
July 20 - LIEBERMAN EXPECTS MORE FROM DHS CYBERSECURITY EFFORTS

 
July 18 - NEW HAVEN TO GET MORE THAN $37 MILLION FOR TRANSIT SECURITY, DODD AND LIEBERMAN ANNOUNCE

 
July 13 - SENATORS COLLINS & LIEBERMAN QUESTION INDUSTRY AND OTHER EXPERTS ON PRIORITIES FOR FEDERAL LEGISLATION TO MAKE CHEMICAL FACILITIES MORE SECURE

 
July 12 - LIEBERMAN CALLS ON CONGRESS/ADMINISTRATION TO BETTER FUND A RANGE OF HOMELAND SECURITY NEEDS

 
July 12 - SENATE APPROVES COLLINS-LIEBERMAN FIRST RESPONDER GRANT FORMULA, DOUBLES RISK-BASED HOMELAND SECURITY FUNDING

 
July 11 - SENATORS COLLINS & LIEBERMAN OFFER FIRST RESPONDER GRANT LEGISLATION AS AMENDMENT TO HOMELAND SECURITY APPROPRIATIONS BILL

 
July 11 - DHS IS FAILING IN ITS CYBER-SECURITY RESPONSIBILITIES

 
July 10 - SENATORS COLLINS & LIEBERMAN RELEASE FINDINGS AND RECOMMENDATIONS TO IMPROVE SAFEGUARDS IN FEMA'S DISASTER RELIEF PROGRAM

 
July 8 - DODD, LIEBERMAN URGE DHS TO EXPEDITE DISTRIBUTION OF RAIL AND TRANSIT SECURITY FUNDS
 

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