My WebLink
|
Help
|
About
|
Sign Out
Home
BIL 129 Draft 01 2012-2014
ClerkCouncil
>
Council Records
>
Bills
>
2012-2014
>
BIL 129 Draft 01 2012-2014
Metadata
Thumbnails
Annotations
Entry Properties
Last modified
9/20/2013 4:32:01 PM
Creation date
9/3/2013 11:32:05 AM
Metadata
Fields
Template:
Bill/Resolution
Bill/Resolution - Type
BIL
Bill/Resolution - Council Term
2012-2014
Bill/Resolution
129
Draft
01
Introducer
Brenda J. Ford, Council Member
Referred To
AWESC
Action 1
AWESC-11: Recommends passage of Bill 129 as amended to Draft 2, on first reading - 9/17/13
Document Relationships
AGE AWESC 2013/09/17 2012-2014
(Related)
Path:
\Council Records\Agendas\2012-2014\Agriculture, Water, & Energy Sustainability Committee (AWESC)
COM 0421.000 2012-2014
(Related To)
Path:
\Council Records\Communications\2012-2014
There are no annotations on this page.
Document management portal powered by Laserfiche WebLink 9 © 1998-2015
Laserfiche.
All rights reserved.
/
9
PDF
Print
Pages to print
Enter page numbers and/or page ranges separated by commas. For example, 1,3,5-12.
After downloading, print the document using a PDF reader (e.g. Adobe Reader).
View images
View plain text
(4) The very nature of hydraulic fracturing increases permeability and porosity of the island's <br /> underground geologic formation which may lead to infiltration of chemicals and toxins <br /> into our aquifers, wells, rivers, shoreline, and ocean. Such increased permeability and <br /> porosity may allow lateral, vertical, or descending movement of human- introduced toxic <br /> chemicals or even additional naturally-occurring volcanic toxins; and <br /> (5) The County of Hawai`i has an immediate need to protect against and prepare for the <br /> emergencies and incidents related to any drilling operation and its related activities; and <br /> (6) The cost of repairing road infrastructure from the damage caused in part by the drilling <br /> rig, support equipment, and massive number and weight of water tankers required for <br /> such a hydraulic fracturing project is beyond the limited maintenance budget of the <br /> County; and <br /> (7) Hydraulic fracturing causes earthquakes. It breaks and displaces rock at depth. The <br /> magnitude is typically one to two on the Richter scale. Injecting fluids into fault systems <br /> has been known to lubricate the fault and earthquakes subsequently can occur. There is <br /> now recognized a class of earthquakes called silent earthquakes where the fault moves <br /> without rupture; and <br /> (8) Emergencies and negative incidents caused by hydraulic fracturing have been reported <br /> and range from small localized events to far-reaching disasters with complex <br /> consequences that may require the involvement and coordination among many agencies <br /> of the county, state, and federal government. It is unknown how the County of Hawai`i, <br /> the State of Hawai`i, and the U.S. Government would be able to quickly respond to such <br /> emergencies or negative events that cause harm to our people, animals, plants, land, air, <br /> water, or ocean; and <br /> (9) Industry cannot be relied upon to provide adequate monitoring for the safety of human, <br /> animal, or plant health, water, ocean, and environmental issues nor is the county or state <br /> equipped to monitor these projects, as revealed in the report issued by the Geothermal <br /> Public Health Assessment Study Group; and <br /> (10) There is inadequate public or private funding to mitigate large-scale disasters caused by <br /> hydraulic fracturing; and <br /> (11) There are no monitoring data available to indicate the risks of hydraulic fracturing on the <br /> Island of Hawai`i and to determine its impact on the health and safety of the public and <br /> the protection of current environmental resources. Even small-scale disasters might <br /> negatively impact the County of Hawai`i if state or federal assistance was denied or such <br /> levels of government were slow to respond to such a disaster; and <br /> (12) Mechanisms to ensure funding, coordination, equipment, and County manpower for <br /> response to these impacts have not been identified and adopted; and <br /> 2 <br />
The URL can be used to link to this page
Your browser does not support the video tag.