FERC Showing Cracks, It’s Time to Act
By Ted Glick
“If someone is upset with fracking, they should probably talk to the states.” - Norman Bay, Chairman of the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC), May 14, 2015
Why
protest? Why demonstrate? Why nonviolent direct action? Part of the
reason is to put pressure on those in power to smoke them out, to get
them to say things publicly they might otherwise not say, to expose the
truth about how and why things are working the way they are.
FERC
has more to do with fracking than any other federal agency, and much
more than any one state. They approve interstate pipelines to carry
fracked gas, compressor stations to push the gas along, storage
terminals to store it and, for the last two years, export terminals to
ship it around the world. Without this infrastructure, fracking wouldn’t
be happening.
Norman
Bay is not stupid. He knows this. And yet, because FERC has been a
target of nonviolent direct action for over 10 months, organized by Beyond Extreme Energy, and because BXE is planning a return to FERC from May 21-29, he has been thrown off, saying and doing things that have not been helpful to resolve “the situation” they are now in.
Bay
made this ridiculous statement on the day that FERC had its monthly
public meeting. But it was not held on the regular third Thursday
of the month that it has been held for years and years. Bay and his
fellow FERC Commissioners canceled it because of a disingenuous concern,
they said, for “the safety of FERC staff and the public” in the face of
BXE’s publicly-announced plans to take nonviolent action at FERC on
that day.
To
add insult to injury, on the May 14 day that this meeting was
rescheduled for, dozens of members of the public were kept from the room
where the “public” meeting was held, six were detained by Federal
Protective Services police and three were arrested.
I
was contacted by a reporter after this action, wanting to know why BXE
was engaged in this campaign, where it came from. I proceeded to explain
to him that it had emerged out of years of experience by lots of
grassroots people trying to get a fair hearing from FERC concerning
pipelines, compressors and storage and export terminals being proposed
for their communities. These are people who played by FERC’s rules,
going to the one public meeting attended by FERC staff to learn about
the proposed project, becoming an official “intervenor,” presenting
well-researched arguments against proposed infrastructure projects,
filing large numbers of comments with FERC, appealing a FERC decision
within the FERC administrative process, and the results were always the
same: FERC approval of what the gas industry wanted.
Many
of us who, several years ago, had never heard of FERC now understand
that it is a rubber stamp for the fossil fuel industry.
A month ago a story, “Employees negotiate for industry jobs under agency’s eye,”
published by E&E’s Greenwire and written by Hannah Northey and
Kevin Bogardus, reported on the corrupt, internal FERC culture which
explains FERC’s rubber-stamping ways:
“Employees
at the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission have deep ties to the
industry they regulate, according to agency documents detailing their
job negotiations and stock holdings.
“Ethics
records throughout 2014 show agency staff seeking employment with grid
operators, law firms and utilities that the agency has jurisdiction over
and often meets with as it sets new orders and rules. In addition, FERC
employees have held stock in or remain part of pension plans from
companies that can be affected by the agency's work. Greenwire obtained the 88 ethics documents under the Freedom of Information Act.
“The
disclosures reflect how FERC, which oversees the interstate
transmission of electricity and permitting of gas infrastructure, is
regulating an industry that many of its staffers are well-suited for and
often courted to work in.”
This
corruption, this washing of hands of any responsibility for the massive
harms of fracking and its threat to the climate, is why hundreds of
people are planning to participate over the course of BXE’s May 21-29 Stop the #FERCus actions. FERC is rattled; it’s time to ratchet up the pressure!
Ted
Glick is the National Campaign Coordinator of the Chesapeake Climate
Action Network. Past writings and other information can be found at http://tedglick.com, and he can be followed on Twitter at http://twitter.com/jtglick.
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