Resolutions

NARUC: GS-1 resolution supporting state regulation of hydraulic fracturing (July 2009)

Alabama: Requesting Congress to preserve the primacy of the State Oil and Gas Board to regulate hydraulic fracturing (March 2009)

Alaska: A resolution urging Congress not to regulate hydraulic fracturing under the provisions of the Safe Drinking Water Act (March 2009)

Colorado’s Garfield County:  Garfield joins Delta, Mesa, Moffat, Morgan, Rio Blanco, Washington, Weld, and Yuma counties among the growing number of Colorado municipalities and organizations to pass language formally opposing Rep. Diana DeGette’s FRAC Act. (November 2009)

Louisiana: A concurrent resolution to memorialize the United States Congress to take such actions as are necessary to preserve hydraulic fracturing (May 2009)

Mississippi: A concurrent resolution requesting United State Congress to preserve the primacy of the State Oil and Gas Board of Mississippi to regulate hydraulic fracturing (June 2009)

North Dakota: A concurrent resolution urging Congress to preserve the Safe Drinking Water Act and to not enact legislation that removes the exemption for hydraulic fracturing (January 2009)

Oklahoma: A concurrent resolution expressing support for the preservation of the Safe Drinking Water Act; urging Congress not to pass legislation that imposes federal regulation over hydraulic fracturing (February 2009)

Pennsylvania: A resolution supporting continued State regulation of hydraulic fracturing and the Congress of the United States not to approve legislation that would remove State hydraulic fracturing regulating practices under the Safe Drinking Water Act. (January 2010)

Texas: Urging the United States Congress to maintain state regulatory coverage of hydraulic fracturing (February 2009)

Utah: A joint resolution of the legislature urging Congress to preserve the Safe Drinking Water Act and to refrain from passing legislation that would place hydraulic fracturing under it (February 2009)

Wyoming: A joint resolution requesting Congress to preserve the Safe Drinking Water Act and to not pass any future legislation which would place hydraulic fracturing under its authority (January 2009)

Interstate Oil & Gas Compact Commission (IOGCC): Urging Congress not to re-write current law to place authority to regulate hydraulic fracturing in Safe Drinking Water Act (May 2009)

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