EQB To Consider Final Drinking Water Fee Increases, Review Report On Oil & Gas Drilling Fees April 17

The Environmental Quality Board meets April 17 to consider final regulations increasing Safe Drinking Water Program fees and to hear a report on the adequacy of current Oil and Gas Program fees.

Safe Drinking Water

The final recommended Safe Drinking Water Program fees will generate approximately $7.5 million annually and will account for nearly 50 percent of the program’s state funding. The fees will augment the $7.7 million in funding currently coming from the state’s General Fund.

By increasing fees, DEP hopes to hire up to 33 additional staff in the Safe Drinking Water Program to address major deficiencies in the program identified by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency.

The final fees to be considered by the Board still use population served by water systems as basis for assessing the fees.

The final regulation also makes other changes to the Safe Drinking Water Program, including to provisions related to the lead and copper requirements for drinking water, provisions for general permits to simplify permitting and other changes.

Oil & Gas Fees

The Board will also hear a presentation on a report on the adequacy of DEP’s Oil and Gas Regulatory Program fees that demonstrates current oil and gas well fees will not generate adequate income to support the program starting in FY 2019-20, despite reductions in program staff and operating expenses.

In a permit reform proposal white paper released in January, DEP said the Oil and Gas Program is running a $600,000 per month deficit and would soon propose regulation changes to increase the well permit fee from $5,000 per well to $12,500 per well.

Also on the agenda is a final regulation setting emission limits on volatile organic compounds from industrial cleaning solvents and additional RACT requirements for major sources of nitrogen oxide and VOCs.

The meeting will be held in Room 105 of the Rachel Carson Building starting at 9:00.

For more information and available handouts, visit the Environmental Quality Board webpage or contact Laura Edinger at 717-772-3277 or send email to: ledinger@pa.gov.

NewsClips:

Reserve Twp Finds High Levels Of Lead In Water Supplied By Pittsburgh Water Authority

Pittsburgh Residents File First Pittsburgh Water Authority Complaints

Landslide, Water Main Break Force Evacuations In East Pittsburgh

Residents Urged To Get Water Well Testing Done Near New Drilling Waste Injection Well

[Posted: April 3, 2018]


4/9/2018

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