EID's Shawn:
"Last week the Cincinnati City Council passed a resolution supporting a statewide ban on injection wells, which unfortunately isn’t the first time they have taken aim at disposal wells. Just last year they passed a resolution to ban injection wells in the city, which is funny because there is not a single producing well in Hamilton County, so why would there ever be a need for a disposal well? But, for some reason, the all-knowing City Council of Cincinnati feels the need to tell eastern Ohioans how they need to live their lives. On behalf of eastern Ohio, thank you for your concern, but I think you should concentrate on your own problems.
Unfortunately, what we have here is a City Council who is legislating on fear of the unknown, instead of from a basis of fact and real-world data. For those of us in eastern Ohio, Class II injection wells are nothing new. In fact, they have been used here in Ohio since the 1960s. Regrettably, the City Council is getting its information from Food & Water Watch, well-known for being an anti oil and gas development organization.
Usually, when making a decision that could potentially affect the whole state, most organizations would like to hear from both sides before making a decision. In this case, a one-sided deluge of misinformation and outright lies is enough for the Cincinnati City Council. However, if the city council would like to learn a bit about Class II injection, this post is for them.
In 1983, the Ohio Department of Natural Resources (ODNR) received primacy from the US EPA to permit, regulate, and enforce Ohio’s Class II underground injection control (UIC) program. In order to gain primacy, ODNR had to demonstrate its rules met or exceeded the federal UIC program. Since that time, Ohio has injected 202 million barrels of brine without one case of groundwater contamination, no doubt a fact that Food & Water Watch left out when lobbying the city council to pass this resolution. Why include facts when falsehoods are much more frightening?
Primacy is also not unique to Ohio. In fact, more than 40 states also have primacy over their UIC programs. In order for Ohio to maintain primacy, it must continue to demonstrate an ability to effectively manage and regulate the program to the EPA, while also being audited by the US EPA on a regular basis.
In addition to being audited (thankfully not by the IRS, especially nowadays), Ohio takes the lead in promulgating rules and regulations to make sure Ohio has one of the most stringent UIC programs in the nation. The UIC program rules and regulations have been updated twice in the past three years, thanks in no small part to on the ground enforcement of the program. This has allowed Ohio to actually go above and beyond what the federal government requires for UIC."
READ THE REST: http://www.eidohio.org/cincinnati-city-council-lacks-education-on-o...
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