Testimony on State Methane Rules: Kayley Shoup

Members and supporters of New Mexico Interfaith Power & Light have prepared testimony  for hearings held by the  Environmental Improvement Board. The hearings, held the week of Sept. 20-24, are in support of the The New Mexico Environment Department’s  (NMED) strong proposal to cut ozone-forming volatile organic compounds (VOCs) and methane released by the oil and gas industry. The first comment is from Kayley Shoup, an organizer for NM-IPL affiliate Citizens Caring for the Future.

Hello my name is Kayley Shoup and I am an organizer with Citizens Caring for the Future in Carlsbad, and today I will be sharing why as a frontline community member in the Permian I strongly support the proposed methane and ozone rules. For years I believed, like many in my community still do, that regulatory agencies were doing their best to protect frontline communities like mine. As everyday I was learning of more young people being diagnosed with cancer, I continued to believe that we were being protected, that the pollution couldn’t be that bad, and that maybe I was just someone that was trying to find a reason as to why I was surrounded by so much tragedy.

Over the past year I have learned that all of those beliefs were false. Those of us in frontline communities actually aren’t being protected. I now know that the state does not have one air monitor that tracks methane or VOC pollution in the Permian Basin. I now know after being out in the field that the pollution is that bad and it is constant, and I also understand that two years ago I wasn’t just a girl trying to find meaning in seeing her loved ones ravaged by cancer but a girl that was starting to realize the danger that surrounded her.

Because of the abysmal lack of enforcement in the Permian we must have stronger rules such as those being proposed today. Rules that require things like frequent inspections, especially at sites near schools and neighborhoods. Rules that can be realistically enforced, such as I believe these rules can be. They are currently our only line of defense against methane and VOC pollution. I’m not sure how the Governor or NMED plans to slash methane pollution that they aren’t properly monitoring, but I do believe these rules are a start. As a community member in the region of the state that contributes the most to the New Mexico State Budget, I believe the least the state can do is implement the proposed rules. When we prioritize the needs of the communities most affected by methane and VOC pollution first and foremost. When we work to prioritize the health and lives of those human beings in frontline communities. When we value doing what is right and not just politically simple. We set off a ripple that becomes a wave, and THAT wave makes real and meaningful change. Thank you for your time.

Make Your Voice Heard on Methane in New Mexico

With a few key additions NMED Air Quality Rules can lead the nation Methane Matters.org urges you to make your voices heard ! Oil and gas operations in New Mexico […]

The Guardian: Big Oil, Lobbyists & New Mexico’s Permian Basin

(Here is an excerpt from an article published in the British newspaper The Guardian about the oil industry in New Mexico and the reaction of local authorities to the Biden administration’s decision to pause oil gas drilling leases on federal lands).

How big oil keeps a grip on New Mexico – with the help of a major lobbyist

When Joe Biden paused oil and gas drilling leases on federal lands earlier this year, the alarm bells rang in southeastern New Mexico.

Officials in Eddy county – which, along with neighboring Lea county, holds New Mexico’s share of the oil- and gas-rich Permian Basin – immediately worried about potential economic fallout.

“This news is exceptionally disappointing,” county manager Allen Davis wrote in an email to colleagues. “The message couldn’t be more clear: south-east New Mexico is not a business friendly for an industry that has sustained the state of New Mexico finances for decades [sic].”

Kayley Shoup, a Carlsbad-based organizer with the environmental group Citizens Caring for the Future, said local leaders are pushing a false narrative.

It “keeps our local community from having a seat at the table when it comes to this long economic transition that our country is and will be undergoing,” Shoup said.

Situated in the Chihuahuan desert of New Mexico’s staunchly Republican southeast region, Eddy county is a rural, industrial area, where the top employers are in the mining and oil and gas industries. And county leaders appeared to be depending on their influential allies, including the international lobbying firm FTI Consulting, to keep it that way.

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