House Passes Challenge to Allegheny National Forest Oil & Gas Drilling Rules
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The House this week unanimously passed House Resolution 693 (Rapp-R-Warren) that challenges new regulations imposed by the U. S. Forest Service to limit the development of private oil and gas rights within the Allegheny National Forest "In addition to throwing up yet another unnecessary obstacle on Pennsylvania's road to foreign energy independence, I am gravely concerned that this new Allegheny National Forest management plan oversteps the limits of federal law that authorized the creation of the forest 97 years ago," said Rep. Kathy Rapp. According to Rep. Rapp, the new rules take the form of so-called "design criteria" and "standards" in the Forest Service's latest Land Resources Management Plan for the "When the Commonwealth approved the creation of As further evidence, Rep. Rapp cites the Weeks Act of 1911, the law granting the federal government the authority to purchase lands for National Forest Reserves in the The Weeks Act clearly states in no uncertain terms that the Forest Service may regulate private mineral rights, easements and other private property interests associated with purchased forest lands only to the extent that such rules and regulations are contained in the deeds conveying ownership of the lands to the Rep. Rapp maintains that the new forest management plan reverses long-standing Forest Service practices and rewrites national policy. "Current law is crystal clear when it comes to restricting the amount of oil, natural gas and other resources that can be produced by non-government employers operating in Rep. Rapp's resolution states that the Commonwealth's consent to the creation of the "The U.S. Forest Service should step back from these misguided and uninvited new rules to embrace the proper relationship it has maintained with private natural resources producers for nearly a century," said Rep. Rapp. "That means recognizing that the federal government is neither the Chief Executive Officer, nor an equal stakeholder with private land owners or private industry. In reality, the Forest Service is a taxpayer funded servant that is legally bound from interfering with privately purchased mineral rights or private economic development." |
4/11/2008 |
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