For Immediate Release
4/29/08

Contact:

Patrick Henderson (717) 787-9684
phenderson@pasen.gov

Senator Mary Jo White - Senator Mary Jo White
Senator Don White - Senator Don White

Measures to Resolve Disputes over Coal Bed Methane Wells, Encourage Brownfield Redevelopment Agreements Approved by Committee

Also approves White measure protecting property rights. 

Harrisburg – Measures aimed at resolving disputes over coal bed methane wells, encouraging brownfield redevelopment and protecting property rights were unanimously approved today by the Senate Environmental Resources and Energy Committee, chaired by Sen. Mary Jo White (R-21).

Senate Bill 1330, sponsored by Sen. Don White (R-41), establishes a process to resolve objections between a surface land owner and the mineral rights estate owner regarding the location of coal bed methane wells or access roads.

The legislation was the product of a process initiated after the committee held a public hearing on the subject last year. Under the bill, a well operator intending to drill or construct an access road must provide written notification to the surface owner. The notification must advise the surface owner of the right to file objections with a Coal Bed Methane Review Board, which is established by the bill.  The Board will work with the surface owner and well operator and attempt to find common ground on the location of the well and accompanying access roads.

Senate Bill 1062, sponsored by Sen. Rob Wonderling (R-24), is designed to encourage the redevelopment of contaminated property known as "brownfield sites." The bill authorizes the state Secretary of Environmental Protection to enter into redevelopment agreements with developers who remediate brownfield sites, with developers eligible to receive a reimbursement of up to 75 percent of the remediation costs.

Senate Resolution 294, sponsored by Senator Mary Jo White, addresses a forest management plan adopted by the Allegheny National Forest in February.  The plan imposes new restrictions on the development of mineral rights underneath the forest. (More than 90 percent of the minerals underneath the forest are privately held, and were retained when the surface was sold to create the forest.)

Senate Resolution 294 urges the federal government to re-evaluate the plan, and reaffirms that when the commonwealth allowed land to be acquired to create the Allegheny National Forest it did not confer any authority to the U.S. government to diminish the commonwealth's property rights or the rights of private property owners.

More information on the Committee's activities are available online at www.senatormjwhite.com (choose "Senate Environmental Resources & Energy Committee).

Additional Information:
Environment

 

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