[Congressional Record Volume 160, Number 48 (Wednesday, March 26, 2014)]
[House]
[Pages H2685-H2690]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
CONGRESSIONAL PROGRESSIVE CAUCUS DISCUSSES FRACKING
The SPEAKER pro tempore. Under the Speaker's announced policy of
January 3, 2013, the gentleman from Wisconsin (Mr. Pocan) is recognized
for 60 minutes as the designee of the minority leader.
Mr. POCAN. Mr. Speaker, I rise today on behalf of the Congressional
Progressive Caucus, and we are here today to talk about the issue of
fracturing, also known as fracking, and the need to have more
regulation on fracking to protect our environment, our groundwater, our
air, and the families who live around the over half-million wells that
are across the country, and also talk a little bit about global
warming.
The Progressive Caucus has been at the forefront of talking about
issues that are important to our environment. We have so much to do to
stop the effects of global warming that are happening. Climate change
is real. It is one of the greatest threats that we have to our country
and to our planet. There are increasing CO2 levels in our
atmosphere, and if we continue to leave that unchecked, they carry very
dire consequences for the future of the planet.
Rising sea levels, unpredictable and dangerous weather patterns, and
drought are all examples of the consequences of failing to take action
to address this threat. For generations, those who have come before us
have held the ideal that they should leave their descendants with a
better life. This is an integral part of our American story.
I joined the Safe Climate Caucus because I believe in leaving a safer
environment for future generations of Americans. Stewardship of our
environment, of the air we breathe and the water we drink, is essential
to this commitment.
That is why I am here today to voice my support for commonsense
legislation that will end unnecessary exemptions that protect the oil
and gas industry from basic regulations and instead extend protections
for our families and communities in all areas that effect global
warming. But specifically tonight, we want to talk a little bit about
fracturing.
I would like to first yield to a colleague, the gentlewoman from
Wisconsin (Ms. Moore), a great poet. I think we are going to be
entertained and informed through that entertainment.
Ms. MOORE. Mr. Speaker, I thank the gentleman for yielding me the
time. This is just a little short ditty because I am very concerned as
a person who lives in an inner city environment, I have become
intensely aware of how environmental injustice affects the health and
safety of our communities.
So I just wanted to talk a little bit about fracking this evening.
As we frack, under intense pressure, we force a fissure
through the delicate veins of our unbound Earth and a black
hole forms, poisoning the valley and streams of our spirit.
Man, don't you fear it? Wrecking the ecosystem and trekking
recklessly over pristine black loam.
Man, don't you hear it? The harsh acid rain as it drains
into the vital marsh of our existence.
Oh, but, of course, the coarse priority of wealth strips
our Earth's fertility and reservoir of life. Fracked and
cracked, lost, perhaps for all eternity.
[[Page H2686]]
Alas, it is true, there is none so blind as he who will not
see.
Mr. POCAN. I thank Representative Moore for that. Your poetry is
always much appreciated not only on this floor, but also in our State
of Wisconsin. Thank you for sharing today.
Before I get to fracking, I want to talk about one part of global
warming that recently got a little attention back home but serves as a
debate when we talk on the floor of Congress. When I spoke before on
the floor of Congress about the need to address global warming, one of
the things I said, and this is about 6 weeks ago, was that in
Wisconsin, ice fishermen are already noticing fewer days they can be
out on our ice-covered lakes.
Now, the conservative right in Wisconsin, they decided to have a
field day. There was a shock jock in Milwaukee who decided to play up
on this. He said, can you imagine in Wisconsin, where this winter we
had days that were minus 22 degrees, real temperature, minus 40 and 50
degrees with wind chill, how can we possibly be talking about fewer
days of ice coverage. Based on that cold experience, clearly there is
no global warming. Now I know that is not a scientist's statement, that
is a shock jock, but they went with it and let it roll.
Here is the reality. We are a planet that is warming. And that
statement, despite the polar vortex that we experienced in Wisconsin
and other parts of the country that gave us some really cold weather,
that is exactly what we are talking about, these intense swings in the
weather that can produce that.
What was so interesting was when the conservative movement went so
hard to say clearly there is no global warming--they are all climate
change deniers that were out doing this attack--they decided to
approach a group called PolitiFact. Now PolitiFact often takes things
that politicians say and decides where the truth is. Sometimes it is in
a TV commercial, sometimes it is in a speech. Specifically, they were
asked to address that statement that I made, which was, ice fishermen
are already noticing fewer days they can be out on our ice-covered
lakes.
Here is what they said. First of all, they rated that statement as
true, and here is why. They said it is not just about this winter; it
is about what has happened over all in winters in Wisconsin. There is a
site called climatewisconsin.org that is done by a number of professors
and other professionals in the field in Wisconsin. They have been
tracking ice coverage on the lakes in Madison, Lake Mendota, and Lake
Monona, going back 150 years. And you know what they found?
Overall, the average number of days of ice cover on the
Madison lakes has decreased by around 29 to 35 days over the
past 150 years.
Not my words; these are scientists with knowledge, people who work
specifically in the field who are measuring our lakes. So when people
talk about climate change and they want to deny the facts, the science,
that over 95 percent of scientists who work in this field clearly have
said we have a climate that is changing because we have global warming
because of human activity, well, this is just one example where a
simple 1-minute speech on the floor talking about climate change became
a shock jock's material for weeks to talk about why doesn't Congressman
Pocan come home and see the weather.
Well, I get home every chance I can. Every single weekend, I am home
in Wisconsin. When we are not here, I am in Wisconsin. Trust me, I
would prefer to spend my time in the district talking to the people of
the district that I represent. I get back there.
Yes, we had cold days. But to determine everything based on a few
cold days, that is not science, that is just rhetoric. And that is
exactly what PolitiFact found. That their charges were rhetoric, and we
are seeing a serious climate change. And when you actually test 150
years of ice coverage in the State of Wisconsin, we now have 29 to 35
fewer days because of global warming.
So before we start talking about fracturing, I wanted to put that out
there because it is all a part of why we are talking about this subject
today.
At this point, I would yield to the gentleman from Minnesota (Mr.
Ellison), the cochair of the Progressive Caucus.
Mr. ELLISON. I appreciate the gentleman for yielding. Congressman
Pocan has been just a beacon, a voice for working Americans all over
the country. Our States are next to each other, and we share a lot. I
am honored to be here with you today.
We are going to talk about fracking, but I just want to set the stage
for the conversation. You know, we are in the United States House of
Representatives and we have had stagnant wages for 40 years, yet we
can't see a way, a bill to raise the minimum wage on the House floor.
We see that unemployment insurance has been stalled since December
28, 2013. Mr. Pocan has made this point abundantly clear, and over 2
million people are now without that unemployment insurance support, and
yet we still see no action on the House floor here.
We see our infrastructure crumbling across the United States. In
Minnesota, we saw our I-35 bridge fall into the Mississippi River. We
have seen water mains break and problems with grids, and yet we see no
action here on the House floor.
We all thought we were going to get some action on immigration
reform. In fact, even the Speaker, to his credit, said I have some
principles out there, let's talk about how we move forward. The Senate
already has moved forward. Yet no sooner than the Speaker said he had
some principles he wanted to start working on did he come back and say
he can't trust Obama so we can't have an immigration bill.
It is outrageous how little substantive work we have done on this
floor of the House of Representatives: no to immigration reform; no to
unemployment insurance; no to raising the minimum wage; and no to all
these key things that Americans really, really need. What is the idea
here? What is the idea when we won't do anything other than politically
charged bills to sort of make a point? I mean, what is that all about?
Well, today we are going to talk a little bit about fracking, but I
ask the question, Mr. Speaker: When are we going to get to some real
work around here? We cannot be in this House of Representatives with a
responsibility to discharge the duties of the American people, and we
are completely unresponsive under this Republican leadership to what
the American people want. People are unemployed. People need a raise.
People need a better life, and we are not doing anything to help.
In fact, the only time we ever care about NEPA, which is
environmental review, is if it is going to block monuments that the
President may want to decide to establish. Every other time, it is a
``job-killing regulation.'' It is total lingo, total rhetoric, and it
is just really a shame. I am getting to the point, Mr. Speaker, and I
want to yield back to the gentleman so we can begin talking about
fracking, but it is really getting frustrating.
We know we are here with different political points of view. I am a
proud, progressive liberal, absolutely. Just like Hubert H. Humphrey,
LBJ, Martin Luther King, I admired them all, and I am not apologizing
to anybody for being as progressive liberal as I am. But that doesn't
stop me from talking to a conservative Republican as long as we are
both trying to solve the problem. But they are not trying to solve
anything.
I am happy to talk to Republicans with their conservative views. We
will haggle it out, and we will meet somewhere in the middle. It will
not be everything I want, and it will not do everything they want, but
we will do something.
Where are we at? No immigration, nothing. Where are we at with UI,
people are suffering, 2 million strong? Nowhere. Where are we at on
raising the minimum wage, which has been sliding as inflation goes up,
and we have lower minimum wage than we did since the 1950s when you
adjust it for inflation? Nothing. We are just not meeting the needs of
the American people.
We have tried to repeal ObamaCare--I even hate that phrasing--the
Affordable Care Act, 53 times. This is an outrage.
We shut down the government for 16 days for the one purpose of
stopping people getting access to health care, and yet it feels like we
are in ``Star Wars,'' Mr. Speaker.
I just had to share those views and just share my thoughts that it is
time, high time, for us to get to work, to
[[Page H2687]]
stop this party of no business, to stop this obstructionism and bring
our values, different though they are, to this debate and come up with
something to meet the needs of the American people.
I thank the gentleman for letting me share my views on those matters.
{time} 1730
Mr. POCAN. Thank you very much, Mr. Ellison. I share your concern. I
came to Congress as a new Member, thinking that we are going to get
some important work done for the country.
I remember, in history class, I believe it was the Congress of 1948
that got so little done that they were dubbed the do-nothing Congress--
well, because they did nothing, right? So they get the label. That do-
nothing Congress passed 350 bills. That is it.
Our Congress last year passed 62 bills.
Mr. ELLISON. Will the gentleman yield?
Mr. POCAN. Absolutely.
Mr. ELLISON. If we were the do-nothing Congress of the 1940s, that
would be more activity than we have right now. We are the do-nothing
Congress. We are the do-nothing Congress. Our goal is to improve the
lives of Americans. I would be surprised if it was even half of the 60
that we actually did pass.
It is hard to get a label, gentlemen, to what you would call worse
than the do-nothing Congress. I don't know what the label would be to
establish to us. It has been a highly unproductive Congress.
What was interesting, at the end of January, I got on the elevator
with a Republican who I won't name, and I said: We have been here for
two weeks again, and we haven't done anything.
The response I got is: Don't worry. It will get better in 3 or 4
years.
I don't know about you, gentleman, but I didn't come to Congress to
wait 3 or 4 years. We have real work to do.
Mr. ELLISON. That's right.
Mr. POCAN. Whether it be the fact that we have discharge petitions
now on rasing the minimum wage, so that people can be lifted out of
poverty who are working hard every single day, playing by the rules,
and just trying to get by; by extending unemployment benefits to the
millions of people in the country who have lost those extended
benefits--including a gentleman from Mount Horeb, Wisconsin, who was my
guest right here in this Chamber for the State of the Union.
He was my guest. He had lost his benefits at the end of December. He
was a steamfitter, worked hard all of his life, played by the rules,
and because of not extending the emergency benefits, they are in dire
financial straits.
His wife wrote me an email. This is how we found out about them.
Their daughter wanted to bring a friend over for dinner, and they said:
I don't know if we can afford another plate at the table.
They have their home up for sale because they don't want to be
foreclosed on. This is the reality of Congress not acting.
Today, we now have a discharge petition on immigration reform,
something that will effect millions and millions of people across this
country. This Congress is not acting.
What we are going to talk about in just a little bit are 5 bills that
effect fracking--fracturing--to make sure that everyone can have
cleaner air, cleaner water and that people can actually know what
toxins are going in the ground when so many people live so close to
these wells across the country.
There is more of an agenda that the Progressive Caucus is working on
and that we are trying to put out there. Again, I think, gentlemen, we
would be remiss if we didn't talk about, just very briefly, the
Progressive Caucus' budget, the better-off budget, to make sure people
are better actually investing in infrastructure, to actually invest in
research and development, to actually invest in education, and to get
people back to work now.
Mr. ELLISON. If the gentleman would yield about the better-off
budget?
All I want to say about the better-off budget is that it is going
make Americans better off. That is what the better-off budget does.
The better-off budget toplines 8.8 million jobs--8.8 million jobs--in
3 years. That is what we do by making infrastructures in education and
infrastructure, putting people back to work, making sure that public
employees, teachers, police officers, people like that, stay on the
job. This is what the better-off budget does.
Now, the Republicans are going to come in here with a budget, and
they are going to brag about how much deficit reduction it does. We
have already been reducing the deficit significantly, by the way; but
they are going to talk about what they have cut.
They are going say: oh, we cut food stamps, we cut Head Start, we cut
medical research, we cut research on Alzheimer's and Parkinson's, and
things like that. They are going to brag about how many people they
have left behind.
I think that the real thing is that, as we invested 8.8 million jobs,
our better-off budget actually has deficit reductions to a tune of
about $4 trillion in 10 years because, as people are working, they are
paying taxes, and we are growing ourselves out of the debt and deficit
picture.
That is why even some conservative groups have said that this is a
good budget because we are being responsible about the debt, not
because we are pointing straight at it, but because we are pointing
straight at putting people back to work, people are working, people are
paying taxes, and we are dealing with our fiscal picture. So the
better-off budget is definitely worth people reading about. It is an
awesome budget.
A few things I just want to mention about the better-off budget, and
then we can talk about it another time. We also require in our budget
that the amount of money going to our spy agencies, our intelligence
agencies, the topline be revealed, not the nuts and bolts and the guts
of it, but just in these days of NSA spying and things like that, I
think it is important to have budget accountability, so that people
really know.
This is something that we hope people will really look at and feel
that Congress is actually exercising its proper role in doing oversight
with this.
The other thing is there was a huge fight over chained CPI. This is
that form of CPI, this measure of inflation, which literally cut
benefits for people who are older Americans, people who are on
disability benefits, and people who are on survivor benefits. It cuts
their benefit over time.
CPI-E, another measure of inflation that actually enhances retirement
benefit because it really reflects the real cost associated with making
a living in the United States, so we put CPI-E in our budget, which we
believe is a far better measure of what is really going on in days of
retirement insecurity brought about because of decisions of the
Republican Caucus.
It is important that we really invest in making sure that we have
some retirement security.
So those are just a few lines on the better-off budget, but I do want
to thank you for raising it.
Mr. POCAN. Thank you, Mr. Ellison, for all your leadership and your
cochairing the Progressive Caucus.
One other thing that is in that budget, in addition to growing us out
of the economic problems we have had in this country that we have
slowly been rebounding out of, we also take away the subsidies to oil
and gas companies, which save this country money that we can invest
in creating jobs, but also deals directly with the issue at hand, which
is the issue of fracking.
What is fracking? It is hydraulic fracturing, or it is called
fracking. Is a process of drilling by injecting a fluid, which is a
chemical water-sand mix, into the ground, at a very high pressure, in
order to fracture shale rocks to release natural gas inside. That is
the basic concept behind fracking. There are about a half a million
active natural gas wells in the United States right now.
Here is what is involved in the process that I think people don't
really realize: Every single gas well requires an average of 400 tanker
trucks to carry water and supplies to the site. It takes 1 to 8 million
gallons of water to complete each fracturing job.
To run all the active wells in the U.S., that would be 72 trillion--
trillion with a t-r--trillion gallons of water and 360 billion gallons
of chemicals that are used in this process. The water is brought in, it
is mixed with sand in a chemical mix to create a fracturing fluid.
[[Page H2688]]
Now, one of the things I think that people don't realize is we don't
know what is in that fracturing fluid because the companies say that it
is proprietary. If they gave up that information, it is a secret sauce
that they put together that allows them to do this; and if they
disclose that, somehow, a competitor could find out what it is.
The problem is that also means you and I don't know what those toxic
chemicals are. We have an idea, in some cases, what is used, but the
exact mix, you don't know in any specific well.
So you have 40,000 gallons of chemicals used per fracturing, with up
to 600 chemicals in any fracking fluid, which has known carcinogens and
toxins. This fracking fluid has been pressure injected into the ground
through a drilled pipeline about 10,000 feet deep.
The mixture reaches the end of the well, where the high pressure
causes the nearby shale rock to crack, creating fissures where the
natural gas can flow into the wells. Only about 30 or 50 percent of the
fracturing fluid is ever recovered. The rest of the toxic mix is left
in the ground, and it is not biodegradable.
Also, during this process, methane gas and toxic chemicals leach out
of the system and contaminate our nearby groundwater. Methane
concentrations are 17 times higher in drinking water wells near
fracturing sites than normal wells.
You may remember--I believe Time magazine had it, and I have seen it
on TV--where people in Pennsylvania, in some cases, near wells, have
turned on their drinking water and a match and lit the drinking water
on fire from what has been released into the groundwater from fracking
wells.
This contaminated well water is then used for drinking water, like I
explained, in these nearby communities, and there have been over a
thousand documented cases of water contamination next to areas of gas
drilling, as well as cases of sensory, respiratory, and neurological
damage due to ingested contaminated water.
In the end, the hydraulic fracking produces about 300,000 barrels of
natural gas a day, but the price is numerous environmental, safety, and
health hazards that we have to deal with.
I yield time to Mr. Ellison.
Mr. ELLISON. Certainly. I think it is really important for the
gentleman to bring us to this conversation about fracking today. It is
a lot of courage that you bring to this debate as well.
The interests that are really promoting fracking are powerful,
wealthy, energy companies; and opposing them, you know, is something
that, I believe, is something that not everybody would do. I think
raising real questions about how this is affecting the health and the
environment are critical.
I had the occasion of talking with a number of people in my office
who came and told me really amazing stories about what their
experiences with fracking were. One gentleman actually told me a story
about the lighting of the fire coming out of the faucet in the sink.
Another told me a story about how his cows drank the water that was
contaminated with the fracking fluid, and those cows died. Another
individual told me how, when they made complaints about it, there was
just a lack of responsiveness.
These are folks who--before they came to my office, I didn't know
them--but they wanted to talk to me about a problem of common concern,
so I said: Sure. Share with me what you know.
What they shared with me caused me to do my own research. I was
particularly disturbed by the fact that the process, particularly the
fluid that is used, is not something that we can know. I think you are
talking about injecting a fluid into the ground that is causing the
natural gas to come up, and yet, it has proprietary protections.
Now, how can we safeguard the public interest if we don't even know
what is in that stuff? If nothing in there is harmful, why don't they
want to share what is in that stuff?
At the end of day, there are stories of regular citizens, cropping up
all over this country, about dead farm animals, toxic drinking water,
fire coming out of the water faucet, and all sorts of things. It has
happened to people who thought that they could lead a good life, trying
to farm, trying to live in rural America, and yet, the answers just are
not coming for them.
I remain very concerned. I believe that we do have a public interest
in knowing much more about this process. A few years ago, Mr. Speaker,
we were sort of sold that natural gas would be the answer to get off
petroleum, but what we didn't know is all the health hazards that were
involved with trying to make that conversion.
It is absolutely essential that we, as the American people, get to
the bottom of the health risks associated with all of the ingredients
of fracking. These same folks who came to my office, Mr. Speaker, made
complaints about skin irritation, nasal irritation, eye problems,
chronic issues; they talk about farm animals and other sorts of issues
that they have lost. It is just something that I think is crying out
for real answers.
If Congress does not stand up and say, look, we have got to figure
out what the environmental health impacts on fracking are on our
citizens, then who is now going to?
Europe has already asked some tough questions about how fracking
works. Europe has already said: Well, wait a minute. We need to know a
little bit more about this.
In some places, the practice has been banned. I really believe that
this is an appalling situation, calling out for answers, and it is our
public duty to get those answers.
I appreciate the time to talk about my exposure, my discussions with
people who have experienced fracking firsthand.
I also need to mention one other thing that I forgot. One gentleman
talked about the frequency of earthquakes near the fracking area. When
he tried to figure out and when he asked questions about, well, is the
fracking causing the earthquakes because, before you were fracking,
there were no earthquakes, he really was stonewalled and didn't get any
answers.
It makes sense--you are doing something to disrupt the ground, you
are shooting a substance into the ground causing these sort of issues,
like tremors in the Earth; and then this farmer who talked to me could
not get any answers and could not get much responsiveness.
Again, this is something I remain concerned about and look forward to
people Facebooking, Tweeting, and writing regular old emails and snail
mails telling their stories about what they are going through, so that
we can make a case. The true, real investigation needs to take place,
and we can actually look out for the public interest.
{time} 1745
Mr. POCAN. Thank you, Mr. Ellison.
It is not just members of the Progressive Caucus, Democrats, or
concerned citizens who live near these wells who are talking about
this. There actually was a recent investigation that was done by The
Weather Channel, the Center for Public Integrity, and InsideClimate
News that found numerous violations on current sites.
At one, they found, for example, that the State of Texas, that they
know ``almost nothing'' about the pollution that one of these shale
drilling wells causes. They said that thousands of Texas oil and gas
facilities are allowed to self-audit their emissions, meaning they
don't have to report them to the State. They go on to talk about
pollution complaints. They also said in another study in the U.K. and
Pennsylvania that they looked at multiple data sets of wells in
Pennsylvania to determine the rate of well failures, and they found
that one-third of a data set of 3,500 wells were reported for
environmental violations between 2008 and 2011.
So, while we have special exemptions in clean water and in clean air
laws for this process, we are finding severe violations by groups like
The Weather Channel--hardly someone who is biased--who actually look at
these facilities. Then when you actually look at the list of chemicals,
at some of the known 600 chemicals that go into these mixes, and when
you look at the actual effects--the colors--that are on here, you have
got chemicals that lead to skin, eye, and sensory organ problems,
problems with respiratory, in gastrointestinal, in the brain and
nervous systems, the immune systems, with the kidney, cardiovascular
and blood, with carcinogens, mutagens, developmental,
[[Page H2689]]
reproductive, and endocrine disrupters. These are the types of effects
that can happen from the chemicals that we are not even allowed to know
that are happening.
I think one of the most telling parts of this is that 15.3 million
people in this country live within a mile of one of these wells that
have been drilled since the year 2000. That is more than the entire
State of Michigan. These are people who live near a well who don't have
the public information that they need to know for their families'
safety.
Members of this caucus, the Progressive Caucus, have worked on five
bills that have been kind of called the ``frac pack,'' which address
specific concerns that we have on the regulation of this. We are not
saying that you are going to stop this completely, but we should know
what we are doing, not proceed until you know what you are doing and
make sure we provide the clean air, the clean water and the
notification requirements so that we actually know what we are doing
before we proceed. I would like to go over those bills if I could. I
would like to just give you a little idea of some of the bills that are
out there.
One bill by Representative Diana DeGette, from the State of Colorado,
is called the FRAC Act. That bill would close the so-called
``Halliburton loophole.'' That loophole protects the special sauce
recipe of chemicals that they use for this fracturing process. It also
protects the companies that drill for natural gas from disclosing those
chemicals involved in the fracking operations, which would normally be
required by our clean water laws that we have at the Federal level. It
has three major provisions:
One, it repeals the exemptions granted to oil, gas, and geothermal
fracking operations under the Safe Drinking Water Act. Let's make sure
our water is safe as the Safe Drinking Water Act says;
Second, it would make sure that all fracking operations would be
required to disclose to the State as well as the public the fracking
chemical cocktail intended for use prior to the commencement of any
operations--not after your water is set on fire, not after your cows
are sick, not after your family has problems, but prior to the use of
those chemicals;
Finally, if a medical emergency should arise, any fracking operation
would be required to disclose the exact chemical formula of any
compounds utilized.
It is a pretty basic set of ideas that would make sure that you have
at least information to know.
There are four other bills.
Another bill that is part of the frac pack is the BREATHE Act,
introduced by Representative Cartwright from Pennsylvania and
Representative Polis from Colorado. It would close the loopholes of the
Clean Air Act that currently exempt the oil and gas industry from
essential protections from toxic air pollution, as those studies have
been proven from the wells they tested in Pennsylvania. The bill would
also require that toxic emissions of multiple related smelt sources be
aggregated to determine total emissions, just like other industries
have to, so they are not exempted in other ways, and it makes sure,
with all fracking operations that release pollutants, including
benzene, that we have protections in these areas.
Another bill is the CLEANER Act, which has been introduced, again, by
Representative Cartwright from Pennsylvania and Representative Jared
Huffman from California. This bill would specifically protect the
environment and the public health by closing a loophole in the Resource
Conservation and Recovery Act, which currently prevents adequate,
consistent regulation of harmful waste associated with oil and natural
gas production and, particularly, with fracking, and it has a few other
compounds specifically related to that.
The next bill is the FRESHER Act, introduced, again, by
Representative Cartwright from Pennsylvania. This would close the
loophole in the Clean Water Act, and it would require oil and gas
producers to obtain the standard permits necessary for activities that
increase storm water runoff and risk water pollution. Treat them like
everybody else so that we know what is going on in the process. It also
makes oil and gas companies play by the exact same rules that apply to
other industries, and it conducts a basic study to further make sure
that we understand what they are using.
The final bill that is part of the frac pack is a bill called the
SHARED Act, introduced by Jan Schakowsky from the State of Illinois.
This bill would provide further protection for public health by
requiring water testing before fracking begins, and it would help
document any drinking water contamination within a mile's radius of a
site operation.
Now, none of these are crazy ideas, saying we are absolutely closing
down every operation because we don't like it. It is saying let's make
sure they follow the law like any other industry would follow the law
when it comes to our clean water and our clean air and that we know
what toxic compounds are being put into the groundwater since we know
so much of it is left there, especially when you live nearby, like 15.3
million Americans do. Those are simple bills that we have put out there
that we are hoping this body will take up, because it is important that
we provide those safeguards for the people across the country.
Mr. ELLISON. I do appreciate the gentleman for going over all of
those bills, which, I think, will bring about transparency,
accountability, disclosure--all things that are just basic fairness
issues.
In the United States, we pride ourselves on having due process and
fairness and accountability, and I think every one of those bills has a
lot of merit and should be carefully considered because they will allow
Americans to make decisions about whether this practice of hydraulic
fracking is something that we need to just continue to let happen as it
happens now.
There is an idea in economics, which is, if you make the money, you
need to pay the cost, right? If you are going to internalize the
profits, you should internalize the costs of what you are doing. If you
are going to make a lemonade stand, then you should buy the lemons; you
should get the water; you should put in whatever sweetener you have;
you should clean up after yourself after you make the lemonade; and you
should deal with problems that you cause in the sale of your lemonade.
Yet, when it comes to fracking, the profits are absolutely
internalized, but the cost is forced on everyone else.
How is that good, free market economics to say that we are going to
keep the money we make by getting this natural gas but that we are not
going to clean up after ourselves and that we are not going to tell
everybody what we are doing even though it affects them?
I mean, there is just something very unfair about the way fracking is
being done right now. So I think that this set of bills, the frac pack,
and this Special Order are really important.
Again, I really urge people, Mr. Speaker, to let their voices be
heard because we were told that this is the clean energy future--
fracking, natural gas--that it is much cleaner than petroleum. It is.
Natural gas is cleaner. It is still a fossil fuel, though, and there
are still social and economic and environmental and health costs as a
result of the way we get this natural gas.
Unfortunately, I do have to go to another meeting, but I want to say,
Mr. Speaker, that there are other ways to power our world. Let us have
a real conversation about investing in renewable energy, in zero waste,
in living in societies that have more transit options, that are more
walkable so we use less, that we make our buildings much more fuel
efficient.
One of the sad days in Washington was when President Ronald Reagan
took down the solar panels that Jimmy Carter had put up on the White
House. That was too bad. That was unfortunate that that decision was
made. Think about if, in the seventies, we had been moving aggressively
into renewables. Think about the world we would live in if we truly had
recycling, composting, reuse. Right now, according to the scientists,
we have put so much CO2 up into the atmosphere that we are
changing the climate. So who knows if the action that we take now will
be enough. We had better take that action. We dare not avoid taking
that action. I just think to myself that these things like fracking are
not the only answer. Oil and gas exploration is not the only answer.
There are other
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things we can do to power our world, and I absolutely urge us to do it.
I just want to wrap up by saying, too, that, when we think about what
we are going to use our tax dollars to subsidize, we are subsidizing
the fossil fuel industry. Bernie Sanders and I worked on a bill called
the End Polluter Welfare Act. We have documented up to about $110
billion worth of subsidies to the oil and gas industry, which is six
times the subsidy that goes to renewable energy sources--solar, wind.
It is high time we started investing in the wind and in the Sun and in
the wave technology and in other forms of technology that can help us
power our world that don't have these ugly, costly, expensive
externalities.
I would ask the gentleman to excuse me now, but thank you for hosting
this very important Special Order on raising questions around fracking.
Mr. POCAN. Again, thank you, Representative Ellison, for all of the
work you do with the Progressive Caucus.
This was a Special Order hour tonight to talk about why we need to
have safer practices around hydraulic fracturing, or fracking, in this
country. For the 15.3 million people who live within a mile of the
wells, for everyone who has to eventually suffer the effects of the
environment and the health pollutants that are put out by this, there
are bills that are introduced in this body that can make sure that we
regulate this better, that can make sure they are not exempt from clean
air and clean water protections, and that disclose the toxins that are
used so that we can make sure that this process is safer, healthier,
and better for everyone.
Mr. Speaker, I would just like to add as a reminder to everyone,
which is also important, that March 31 is the deadline for signing up
for the Affordable Care Act. There are extensions. If you have tried to
do it and if you can't get it done, there is a little bit of an
extension at this time, but you need to do it by March 31. I think we
have got some of my colleagues who are going to be talking about that
in just a little bit, but I would like to encourage everyone to take
advantage of that while they have time in the remaining week.
With that, Mr. Speaker, I yield back the balance of my time.
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