NMIPL IN THE NEWS
Carlsbad Current Argus. Sep. 3, 2020 New Mexico finalizes oil and gas wastewater regulations, lawmakers hear testimony (Rev. Nick King Quoted)
Las Cruces Sun-News, Aug. 19, 2020, Report on solving climate crisis brings hope (Co-authored by Michael Sells, Clara Sims and Edith Yanez)
Santa Fe New Mexican, Aug. 15, 2020 Vote your values this November (Commentary by Larry Rasmussen and Tabitha Arnold)
New Mexicans Testify at EPA Hearing: John Maddaus
/in Actions, Featured Articles, NEWS /by adminEPA Methane Pollution rules hearing statement, November 30, 2021
Testimony by John Maddaus Albuquerque, NM
I am John Maddaus, and I am a resident of Albuquerque and a member of First Congregational Church UCC.
I support strong ozone precursor rules and strict enforcement of those rules.
The great tragedy of the industrial revolution of the last 300 years or so has been the externalization of costs and the increase of profits by dumping of toxic chemicals on our soils, into our waters, and into the air we breathe.
If this were a case of heavy toxic chemicals, such as mercury, being dumped on the soils of an industrial site and into the adjacent waters, the site would long ago have been designated a superfund site, and the responsible corporation forced to spend millions of dollars on clean-up.
Does dumping gaseous toxic chemicals like methane into the air make it OK, just because there is no identifiable site? No, it is not OK!
Already there are industrial sacrifice zones where these toxic gases have concentrated, and where it is difficult to live because it is difficult to breathe.
And as toxic gases are dispersed in the air, they contribute to heat waves, droughts, wildfires, extreme weather events, ocean acidification and sea level rise.
Already there are climate refugees fleeing our gulf coast, and nations such as Haiti and Honduras. If climate change continues there will eventually to no place to run to.
The atmosphere of our earth, upon which all life depends, is thin and fragile. We must protect it. Stop releases of methane and other toxic gases. NOW!
Thank you to the Environmental Improvement Board for this hearing and for all your work on this issue.
New Mexicans Testify at EPA Hearing: Joan Brown, OSF
/in Featured Articles, Media, NEWS, NMIPL in the News /by adminEPA Methane Pollution rules hearing statement, November 30, 2021
Joan Brown, Franciscan Sister and Executive Director, NM & El Paso Region Interfaith Power & Light
My name is Joan Brown, I am a Franciscan Sister and Executive Director of New Mexico and El Paso Region Interfaith Power and Light living in Albuquerque. Thank you for this hearing and for putting forth rules that will address existing and new oil and gas facilities regarding methane.
I work with faith leaders and people of faith and conscience all over the state and we have been working to get strong methane rules for nearly 10 years. During this time we have worked in solidarity with frontline communities, where live many racially diverse people on the economic margins and they are disproportionatly suffering from health problems and the effects of climate change.
I have gone into the field with faith leaders where we wear air masks because the air is so bad. We have visited homes, including African American families in the Permian Basin who have foul air coming into their homes from nearby wells where there are violations we have seen with infrared cameras.
We need strong rules and we need them now. In 2015 at the UN Climate meeting Pope Francis said we were on a climate suicidal path. We are still on that path, only it has gotten worse. St. Francis of Assisi centuries ago wrote to civic leaders to care for the common good. All in leadership and regulatory agencies are still delegated to an ethical and moral standard to care for the common good and our Sacred Creation and Common Home.
We need these improvements:
These elements would assist the health of frontline communities; help us address climate change; protect species and future generations.
Finally, I have been in the hospital the last week with my sister who is going on hospice. This has given me time to think about our Sacred Planet and community of life who are being put on hospice. People of faith and faith leaders in NM and the El Paso region are now wondering why they still need to show up and speak at hearings, try to work on legislation that does not seem to address the greatest ethical and moral challenge of our day, climate justice. While they are still showing up they now state that they need to be hospice workers and chaplains for our dying planet, the grieving young people, the depressed many, and the species being extincted yearly. Our work is to be of hope and life and yet now we are moving into hospice mode.
The book of Ecclesiastes says there is a time for every purpose under heaven. We have been in the time to take action for some time now. We need strong rules and more. Thank you for your work and peace this day.
Interim Committee Endorses Green Amendment Initiative
/in Earth & Faith, Featured Articles, Green Amendment, NEWS, NM Legislature /by adminThe New Mexico State Legislature’s interim Radioactive and Hazardous Materials Committee (comprised of House and Senate members) has voted overwhelmingly (6-1) to bring an initiative on the Green Amendment to the legislative floor during the 2022 session. The initiative was proposed in the 2021 session, but did not advance. If passed, the resolution would implement a future public vote to adopt language to uphold environmental rights for all New Mexicans. The initiative would that would codify into the State’s Constitution the public’s right to a “healthy environment,” citing ongoing concerns for pollution and climate change.
“Giving the people of New Mexico an opportunity to vote to amend our constitution so as to protect our precious air, land, water, flora and fauna will be a powerful statement from ‘We, the People’ of New Mexico about our priority to preserve our beautiful and environmentally fragile state, Sen. Antoinette Sedillo Lopez, a co-sponsor of the 2021 Green Amendment initiative, said in testimony to the committee. She is not a member of the committee.
Sens. Jeff Steinborn, Nancy Rodriguez and Brenda McKenna, and Reps. Lee Alcon , Joanne Ferrary and Debra Sariñana voted to endorse the resolution. The lone dissenter was Sen. Christin Chandler, who argued that the initiative could potentially create legal liability and subsequent financial burdens for state and municipal governments.
Read article in Carlsbad Current-Argus