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GSX decision expected in 10 days
By
Jack Kintner
Whatcom
County Hearing Examiner Michael Bobbink concluded the
second of two public hearings Tuesday over the proposed
GSX natural gas pipeline that would cross Whatcom County
on its way from Aldergrove B.C. to Vancouver Island.
At
issue in the hearing are two permits that Georgia Strait
Crossing, or GSX, has applied for. A related issue that
GSX attorney Steve Snarr repeatedly asked Bobbink to
ignore was whether or not the project requires a major
development permit. Meanwhile, GSX is contesting Whatcom
County’s
jurisdiction to issue any permits since under shoreline
management rules both the Washington State Department
of Ecology (DOE) and the county missed a required 120
day response deadline to GSX’s initial application.
GSX contends that if the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission
(FERC) approves their project this also gives a blanket
approval for all permits at the county and state level
if those bodies have not responded with the required
120 days to a permit application.
GSX
initially applied for its permits in April, 2001, and
received FERC’s
approval in 2002.
On
the other side of the issue, were Whatcom County’s
team of Jeff Chalfant and Jim Thompson from the planning
and department services and whatcom county chief
civil deputy prosecutor Randy Watts. Watts insisted that
GSX needs to go through the more involved permitting
process required by a major development permit, which
then goes to county council, where “the county
council will turn you down flat I guarantee,” he
said bluntly. Applications under the major development
permit process have no time limits, so the county and
state’s jurisdiction
is not an issue because there are no time limits
or deadlines GSX could have violated, according to
Watts.
Thompson
explained later that GSX initially applied for both a
conditional use permit and a substantial development
permit to run their natural gas pipeline. “But
since the project’s worth more than $5 million and
required an environmental impact statement (EIS) then the
rule is that it has to go through a different process,
or regime. It requires a major development permit,” Thompson
said, “and on that there’s no time
limit for responding because the procedures tend
to be lengthy and complex.”
Thompson
said that initially the county believed Williams only
needed the two shorelines permits but later notified
that major development regime would have to be
followed. GSX disagrees and has thus far refused
to file for a major development permit.
According
to Thompson, Bobbink “could decide in any
number of ways, remanding the issue back to GSX
for a more complete application or referring it on to
the county council for example.”
The Washington State Department of Ecology has
filed suit in 10th Federal District Court in Denver
contesting FERC’s
assertion that the state and local approval
process were vacated. Snarr left Tuesday’s proceedings early
in order to attend a hearing at the court on Wednesday. The
lawsuit has been joined by Fred Felleman, an
environmentalist who heads Fuel Safe Washington.
“This [pipeline]
idea is just plain stupid,” Felleman
said, echoing the words of several others in
the room. “There’s
a lot of problems with this but the bigger
issue is why would we want to allow these guys to dig a trench right
through the best herring spawning eel grass
beds in the area when this project has no local benefit?” Felleman
pointed out that the herring stock in the area
has already suffered a substantial decline. |