Senate/House Agenda/Session Schedule/Bills Introduced
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Here are the Senate and House Calendars for the next voting session day and Committees scheduling action on bills of interest as well as a list of new environmental bills introduced-- Bill Calendars House (Oct. 19): House Bill 188 (Quinn-R-Delaware) providing for an eminent domain bill of rights for projects like pipelines; House Bill 247 (Oberlander-R-Clarion) would amend Act 13 to authorize an accounting mechanism to allow for the drilling of longer unconventional gas well laterals; House Bill 827 (Fritz-R-Wayne) requiring the Delaware River Basin Commission to reimburse property owners for drilling rights if the Commission adopts a ban on fracking was reported from the House Appropriations Committee (House Fiscal Note and summary); House Bill 1106 (Puskaric-R- Allegheny) requires DEP approval of any permit regulating air quality, waste, erosion and sedimentation and dam safety and encroachments within 30 days without regard to public review of permits, creates a new bureaucracy in the form of a “referee” to decide disputes between DEP and applicants over application completeness (Part of House Republican EnergizePA natural gas subsidy package) [Read more here.]; House Bill 1874 (Grove-R -York)-- was amended to authorize any regulated entity at any time to request a review by the little-known, and even less frequently used Joint Committee On Documents to determine if any “published or unpublished document”-- including permits, produced or issued by DEP or other agencies- [Read more here.]; House Bill 2004 (Ortitay-R-Allegheny) gives the General Assembly authority to reallocate monies from the Keystone Recreation, Park and Conservation Fund between participating agencies, instead of having an allocation fixed in law (sponsor summary) [Read more here.]; House Bill 2416 (Everett-R- Lycoming) that would stop any proposed or final environmental or other state agency regulation from being finalized until at least 90 days after the March 6 COVID-19 emergency declaration by the Governor is terminated (House Fiscal Note & Summary); Read more here; House Concurrent Regulatory Review Resolution #3 (Metcalfe-R-Butler) which would prevent the publication of final Environmental Quality Board regulations increasing DEP Air Quality Program fees [Read more here]; Senate Bill 703 (Scarnati-R- Jefferson) which also expands the authority Joint Committee on Documents to determine whether “published or unpublished” documents of agencies should be promulgated as a regulation [Read more here.].<> Click Here for full House Bill Calendar. Senate (Oct. 19): Senate Bill 5 (DiSanto-R-Cumberland) authorizes the General Assembly to kill any final regulation by doing nothing [Read More Here]; Senate Bill 253 (Phillips-Hill) would create yet more bureaucracy in each state agency called an Agency Regulatory Compliance Officer to arbitrarily establish policies for waiving fines or penalties for violators of regulations and law administered by the agency [Read More Here]; Senate Bill 258 (Dinniman-D- Chester, Killion-R-Delaware), a bipartisan initiative to improve emergency response to pipeline incidents; Senate Bill 284 (Killion-R- Delaware, Dinniman-D-Chester) require pipeline companies to provide current emergency response plans to PUC; Senate Bill 679 (Yaw-R-Lycoming) directs the Environmental Quality Board to develop regulations that authorize counties to adopt a program for “stream cleaning” and maintenance and the removal of obstructions and flood-related hazards from our local waterways (sponsor summary); Senate Bill 763 (Bartolotta-R- Washington) would eliminate the annual public report on subsidence damage from underground coal mining; Senate Bill 1307 (Killion-R-Delaware) would provide $25 million for water and wastewater assistance for individual and small business assistance 1307and $100 million for Low-Income Energy Assistance Program and $25 million to the Public Utility Commission for the Small Business Utility Assistance Program from federal CARES funds; House Bill 1737 (A.Davis-D-Allegheny) providing for lender environmental liability protection for land banks redeveloping brownfields under Act 3 of 1995 (House Fiscal Note & Summary); House Bill 1808 (Mackenzie-R-Lehigh) further provides for the recycling of plastics by making it into fuel [Read more here]. <> Click Here for full Senate Bill Calendar.
Committee Meetings This Week House: the House Democratic Policy Committee hearing on oil and gas drilling waste and the loopholes in state programs regulating those wastes and their impact on communities, worker safety and public health [Read more here.] <> Click Here for full House Committee Schedule. Senate: <> Click Here for full Senate Committee Schedule.
Bills Pending In Key Committees Check the PA Environmental Council Bill Tracker for the status and updates on pending state legislation and regulations that affect environmental and conservation efforts in Pennsylvania.
Bills Introduced The following bills of interest were introduced last week-- AEPS Tier I Mandate/Energy Storage: Senate Bill 1297 (Killion-R-Delaware) reorganizes the mandate in the Alternative Portfolio Standard legislation to specify 3.75 percent of the Tier 1 18 percent goal by 2025 should be grid-scale solar and 1.75 percent from rooftop solar projects and sets energy storage deployment targets (sponsor summary). Oil & Gas Drilling Waste: House Bill 2925 (Innamorato-D-Allegheny) adds oil and gas “drilling fluids, produced waters and other waste associated with the exploration, development or production of crude oil, natural gas or geothermal energy” to the definition of hazardous waste under the Solid Waste Management Act (sponsor summary). Oil & Gas Drilling Waste: House Bill 2926 (Innamorato-D-Allegheny) removes the exemption in Act 13 Oil and Gas Act from requirements to obtain a waste permit, track waste from generation to disposal and post financial assurance under the Solid Waste Management Act (sponsor summary). Oil & Gas Drilling Waste: House Bill 2927 (Innamorato-D-Allegheny) would prohibit landfills from accepting drilling waste from oil and gas operations which can contaminate landfill leachate with radioactive materials. It also prohibits wastewater facilities from accepting leachate contaminated with drilling waste runoff (sponsor summary).
House and Senate Co-Sponsorship Memos House: Click Here for all new co-sponsorship memos Senate: Click Here for all new co-sponsorship memos
Session Schedule Here is the latest voting session schedule for the Senate and House-- Senate Senate recessed to the call of the President Pro Tempore October 19, 20, 21 November 10 House House recessed to the call of the House Speaker October 19, 20, 21 November 10 |
10/12/2020 |
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