[Durham INC] FW: Update on today’s action on S 612, the Regulatory Reform Act of 2013 (AKA, the Holy Frankenstein Bill)

Pat Carstensen pats1717 at hotmail.com
Wed May 1 17:11:34 EDT 2013


This is the bill that would eviscerate Durham's ability to control storm water and probably mess with other environmental rules.  Please thank Senator McKissick.

Date: Wed, 1 May 2013 16:50:38 -0400
From: dustin.chicurel-bayard at sierraclub.org
Subject: Update on today’s action on S 612, the Regulatory Reform Act of 2013 (AKA, the Holy Frankenstein Bill)
To: NC-CONS-FORUM at LISTS.SIERRACLUB.ORG



Update on today’s action on S 612, the Regulatory Reform Act of 2013 (AKA, the Holy Frankenstein Bill)


The NC Senate today gave tentative approval to approve S 612, the Regulatory Reform Act of 2013.  The bill passed its second reading handily, but there was an objection to third reading.  The bill is expected to be heard tomorrow on the Senate floor again for its final reading.


Neal Hunt offered an amendment, that appeared to be unanimously supported, that removed the section of the bill that would have effectively exempted the Neuse and Tar-Pamlico Rivers from the riparian buffer rule.


Despite the removal of the buffer provisions, this remains a very harmful bill.   See below for a more information follows on what the bill does.


Concerns were raised on the floor by Sen. Stein, Sen. Kinnaird and Sen. McKissick about the limitations local governments would have in creating policies that make sense for them.


What you can do:


Please thank Senator Hunt for bring forward an amendment removing the section of the bill that would have effectively eliminated riparian buffers in the Neuse River and Tar -Pamlico watersheds. Senators Stein, Kinnaird and McKissick also deserve thanks for asking tough questions about the bill on the floor.


What S 612 does: 




Prohibit local environmental ordinances that are more stringent than state or federal statutes or regulations;  overturns existing ordinances that fit this profile.  Among the local rules most at risk are local government stormwater regulations.   Stormwater is a larger source of pollution than waste water.  Local stormwater programs are often  more robust than state and federal minimums because they are designed not only to protect water quality, but also to minimize flooding.




Requires the repeal or revision of all existing environmental rules that are more stringent than those imposed by federal statutes or regulations. In 2011, state agencies compiled a report of these rules following the first of these measures, Regulatory Reform Act of 2011.  Environmental attorney and former NC DENR Secretary Robin Smith offers some examples and outlines the questions raised by this provision in a recent blog post:  http://www.smithenvironment.com/




Directs DENR and DOT to petition the Corps to ease siting requirements for wetlands mitigation:   This petition, if granted, would primarily benefit wetlands mitigation bankers and developers at the expense of water quality.




Allows power plants to contaminate groundwater beneath surface drinking water supplies.




Allows for the on-site disposal of demolition debris from power plants that are being decommissioned.  






Dustin Chicurel-BayardCommunications Director, NC Sierra Club


919.833.8467 - o609.529.7145 - c





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