Colorado鈥檚 oil and gas conservation commission has voted in favor of increasing the drilling setback distance between oil and gas wells and homes statewide. But the move doesn鈥檛 go far enough for the environmental community and goes too far for industry.
State regulators overwhelming approved the new 500 foot distance between wells and buildings, such as homes. Right now the setback distance is 350 feet in urban areas. The rule change comes as oil and gas development moves into populated areas along the front range and concerns about its impacts on health continue to grow.
鈥淢y sense is we probably will see some bills on fracking,鈥� said Senate President John Morse (D-Colorado Springs). 鈥淎nd some may be more study related to say can we get some more data on how water quality or air quality impact public health, but I can鈥檛 point to a specific bill.鈥�
Several Democratic lawmakers have been pushing for a drilling setback distance of at least 1 thousand feet. Under the new rules, energy operators drilling near homes and schools would also have to take extra measures to reduce noise, dust and traffic. The industry says the rules are too extreme.
鈥淥ur biggest concern is that it doesn鈥檛 give enough flexibility for the site specifics of the many stakeholders involved,鈥� said Tisha Schuller, head of the Colorado Oil and Gas Association. 鈥淎nd once you set a distance like 500 feet, the bigger the distance, the more complicated the solution is.鈥�
Schuller says her group wants to move beyond the polarizing debate of us vs. them, and make sure the rule is properly implemented. She says she hopes lawmakers respect the year long process and don鈥檛 try to upend it with new legislation.