HomeMy WebLinkAboutResponse To Constituent Letter - Mail Packet - 12/20/2022 - Letter From Mayor Jeni Arndt To Air Quality Advisory Board Re: Oil And Gas Code Recommendations
Mayor
City Hall
300 LaPorte Ave.
PO Box 580
Fort Collins, CO 80522
970.416.2154
970.224.6107 - fax
fcgov.com
December 15, 2022
Air Quality Advisory Board
c/o Cassie Archuleta
PO Box 580
Fort Collins, CO 80522
Dear Chair Artell and Board Members:
On behalf of City Council, thank you for providing us with the December 12, 2022
memorandum regarding “Oil and Gas Code Recommendations” wherein you urged us to
consider three categories when adopting regulations:
(1) Reducing the pace of the regulation adoption process;
(2) increasing transparency and reducing Director discretion in the regulations’
implementation; and
(3) utilizing the broader range of O&G regulatory measures available to local
governments under SB 19-181 and the City’s Home Rule status.
Thank you for your continuing involvement in improving the air quality of our community and
for the time you took to review the draft regulations.
Best Regards,
Jeni Arndt
Mayor
/sek
Cc: City Council Members
Kelly DiMartino, City Manager
1
Environmental Services
222 Laporte Ave
PO Box 580
Fort Collins, CO 80522
970-221-6600
fcgov.com
MEMORANDUM
DATE: December 12, 2022
TO: Mayor and City Councilmembers
FROM: Air Quality Advisory Board; Chair, Karen Artell
RE: Oil and Gas Code Recommendations
The Northern Colorado Front Range, including Fort Collins, faces significant and growing air
quality, public health, public safety, and livability challenges associated with rapidly increasing Oil
and Gas (O&G) development. The Air Quality Advisory Board (AQAB) applauds the City Council’s
commitment to adopting regulations that seek to prevent, limit, and mitigate O&G development’s
adverse impacts on air quality and climate change.
In 2019, SB 19-181 gave local governments the power to regulate the surface impacts of oil and
gas operations to protect and minimize adverse impacts to public health, safety and welfare and
the environment in a manner equal to or more stringent than state level regulations.
Our recommendations fall into three categories: (1) Reducing the pace of the regulation adoption
process; (2) increasing transparency and reducing Director discretion in the regulations’
implementation; and (3) utilizing the broader range of O&G regulatory measures available to local
governments under SB 19-181 and the City’s Home Rule status.
Please note that these AQAB recommendations were written prior to receiving updated draft oil
and gas V.2 regulations the afternoon of Dec. 12. The AQAB will review the updates and comment
further as needed.
1. The AQAB requests a slower process for developing and approving oil and gas regulations to
allow for careful consideration and public input. This includes:
• Allowing more time for review of the draft regulations and how they fit into the new land
development code; we recommend adoption of a moratorium to allow additional time.
• Holding a public forum with City staff for community discussion and collaboration regarding
the draft regulations.
• Extending the review time between the first reading and second reading of any new
regulations, as actual code language with revisions is not expected to be available until
after the first reading. See note above regarding V. 2 availability.
2. The AQAB recommends the following to increase transparency:
• A firm 2,000 foot setback should be required from residential/occupied buildings for new oil
and gas facilities; no waivers, variances, modifications or off-ramps should be allowed.
• Setbacks should be measured from property boundaries, rather than the nearest wall, for
any existing or platted building approved or to be approved as occupiable space (as
defined under City Building code 5.17.4 (A)(2)(i)).
• Oil and gas facilities should only be allowed in industrial zoned areas, with no exceptions.
• Applicants proposing oil and gas facilities and/or pipelines should not be allowed:
2
o to add permitted uses not listed or permitted in the current development code or
zoning map.
o to seek a text amendment to the land development code, or to use any other means
such as a standards modification, development code amendment, or zoning map
amendment, to expand allowable uses.
o to seek variances or other requests designed to expand allowable uses.
• Remove pipeline locations as an allowed use from public lands and residential zone
districts, including HMN, LMN, MH, MMN, RL, UE, RF, and RUL.
• Increase pipeline setbacks in all other zone areas to a minimum 150 feet and include leak
detection, secondary containment, or other mitigations with no provision for a City waiver.
Gas facilities and all pipelines should be subject to Planning and Zoning Commission
Review, a type 2 review, and not a basic development review.
• Add enhanced natural habitat feature to pipeline review.
• Add dwelling tenants to all notification requirements.
• Require neighborhood meetings for oil and gas location/facility development proposals prior
to approval of an application.
• Deem all meetings that fail written notification requirements to be a violation of the
permitting process.
• Remove the following wording from proposed regulations: “This prohibition shall not be
interpreted to include oil and gas operation, facilities, or pipelines as defined in this Code
and addressed in Division 5.17” The permitted uses are evident in the OMB definitions.
3. We encourage the City to expand its regulatory aperture to consider the wider range of O&G
regulatory options available to it under SB 19-181 and the City’s Home Rule status:
• Establish operator financial assurance requirements sufficient to ensure adequate
resources are available to provide for proper maintenance, decommissioning, removal,
response, and remediation of O&G operations and facilities.
• Require the operator to provide a cumulative impacts analysis and a natural habitat /
natural feature review prior to development plan approval for all O&G facilities and
operations (including pipelines).
• Require the applicant operator to provide an up-front showing that the water supply for the
proposed O&G operation will be adequate for the project’s needs.
• Establish a schedule of impact fees to fund infrastructure and services necessary to serve
oil and gas development, including roads, emergency management, and city planning and
enforcement staff time.
• Establish Inspection, enforcement, and penalty provisions for violations of operational
requirements.
• Establish industry standard control, control systems, and monitoring requirements to
properly monitor and respond to safety alerts for oil and gas operations and pipelines.