(Promoted by Colorado Pols)
Colorado’s GOP House leader says fellow Republicans are fighting Colorado’s new oil-and-gas safety law by trying to get elected to county commissions, which now have more authority over oil-and-gas operations.
Discussing the new oil-and-gas law last week on KLZ 560-AM, state Rep. Patrick Neville said the “next election cycle in 2020 is pretty pivotal” in terms of exerting local control, as allowed under the law.
Neville pointed to state Rep. Lori Saine (R-Firestone), who is running for Weld county commissioner, as the type of candidate needed to fight back against the new law, passed this year to make health and safety the top priority in oil-and-gas regulations.
“I think it’s important that we actually get people like [Saine] – especially in Weld County – elected as a county commissioner in Weld County, because she will fight!” said Neville on air. “You guys know Lori, she will fight tooth and nail for that local control aspect. And so, we’ve got to have rock solid people at that local level fighting up.”
In fact, Saine wants Weld County to be an “oil-and-gas sanctuary,” free from enforcing any oil-and-gas regulations.
Neville said former state Sen. Ray Scott (R-Grand Junction) is running for Mesa County Commissioner “for kind of the same reasons Lori is.”
Scott acknowledge the importance of oil-and-gas issues in his decision to run.
“I’m going to have 11 years of legislative experience, and I’ve dealt with thousands of issues,” Scott told the Grand Junction Sentinel. “We need a very strong energy voice because we’re going to be losing one of the commissioners who’s heavily involved in oil and gas issues. When you have connections up and down the food chain all the way to Washington, D.C., that’s very helpful to a county.”
Former lawmaker Phil Covarrubias (R-Brighton) is joining his colleagues in running for county commissioner.
He announced on Facebook that he’s running for Adams County Commissioner.
“They really want to take it on the local level,” said Neville on air. “Because they were saying all along, this bill is local control. Let’s see if it truly is.”
Neville has been skeptical about whether local jurisdictions will be able to exert power under the new law, but he told KLZ host John Rush that he wants counties “fighting these laws through the court system.”
The job of county commissioner also pays substantially higher, at about $80,000 per year on average in Colorado, versus an average of about $40,000 for state legislators.
CORRECTIONS: This post initially stated, incorrectly, that Saine was no longer in office due to term limits. She is actually still in office. Also, the salary for state legislators is Colorado is about $40,000, not $30,000 as initially stated in this post.
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I'm sure Scott will be elected here. He'll do nothing to promote any economic diversity and will drag Mesa County into fruitless lawsuits. I hope the D's here run candidates in both races but who knows about that?
It doesn't matter if the Democrats have candidates or not in Mesa County. The sheep will vote R, no matter how much it hurts their own self-interest. Their belief in O&G is unshakable.
And how is that any different from the past?? Putting more righties on Weld and Mesa Commissions produces more of the same results. Remember, they can't be less stringent than the state regulations.
Unless Ray Scott can alter the price of natural gas, development will continue to be suppressed on the West Slope.
The Chosen One has already shown us how easy it is to win (trade) wars. Open your mind and just think of the power of an "I hereby demand…." proclamation on Twitter to raise the price of NG? If that doesn't work Ray can always just sell a few more gas fireplaces, increasing demand, prices go up. Problem solved. Trillions of #FreedumbMolecules liberated. Can't we burn our way into prosperity?