The College Station city council continues to be asked to enact more restrictive regulations on oil and gas drilling. Rich Woodward of College Station Citizens For Safe Fracking was at the council’s last meeting, calling for two changes to city staff’s latest draft. One was a minimum 1,500 foot distance between wells and homes, schools, hospitals, and churches. The other is to have fenceline monitoring of air quality and noise levels. The council could consider recommendations for the city’s first changes to drilling regulations in more than 20 years in January.
Click below for comments from Rich Woodward:
121814 Comments from Rich Woodward
At the same meeting, an energy company that purchased treated wastewater from College Station for its fracking operations was given the Brazos Valley Groundwater Management District’s industrial conservationist of the year award. General Manager Alan Day made the presentation to Apache Corporation. City officials said at the time of the $5 million dollar deal that it saves the equivalent of potable water used by at least 25,000 residential customers a day.
Click below for comments from Alan Day: