Paring their list of recommendations down from 56 to about 40, Colorado's 21-member Oil and Gas Task Force has just one more meeting to make final decisions to meet an end of the month deadline. range from hiring more staff at oil and gas regulatory agencies to requiring greater disclosure of chemicals used in the fracking process.
Task force member Jon Goldin-Dubois worries the industry members of the group will not come to substantive compromise on the biggest conflict, giving local governments more control over where drilling can take place.
"If we don't address that, we will have failed," Goldin-Dubois said.
whittles down recommendations from 56 to 40. Final votes come end of February; 2/3 approval needed then.
— Dan Boyce (@BoyceDan)
the task force did advance a proposal requiring drillers seek local approval before applying for state permits. Local governments and operators would go through a mediation process if there was disagreement. The measure is less than what the local control advocates wanted, and members like Goldin-Dubois said it doesn't go far enough.
that proposals to increase the distance between homes or schools and drilling operations – known as the setback – most likely will not be advanced by the task force.
While industry members of the task force declined comment, Colorado Oil and Gas Association President Tisha Schuller was watching the proceedings. She said the past five months of meetings have proved there are no easy answers to these conflicts. She pointed out many of the recommendations suggested by industry members have been warmly received by the group as a whole.
"It seems to me that real collaboration is happening," Schuller said, "and all the participants are trying to work towards complex solutions that aren't going to meet everyone's needs but are going to move the process forward."
, at which time they will take final votes on the policy recommendations. Those receiving at least a two-thirds vote will advance to either the legislature or to the governor's office for consideration.