Doug Meiklejohn, founder of the New Mexico Environmental Law Center, said the legislative session that opens today offers the “best chance ever” of passing environmental legislation since his Santa Fe-based organization, founded in 1987 to fight for environmental justice, began working with the legislature in 1989.
NMELC held an online “legislative priorities” preview event on Jan. 14, with Meiklejohn and several staff members and staff attorneys explaining the five bills it has written and will advance during the 60-day legislative session ending March 20.
Sizing up the prospects for success, NMELC Staff Attorney Gail Evans explained this legislative session looks promising because there is a “very strong environmental, Democratic caucus in the Senate. The real fight is going to be in the House.”
It is likely Governor Michelle Lujan Grisham will sign environmental legislation that reaches her desk. Very early in her term, Grisham issued an executive order requiring “all state agencies to contribute to a statewide climate strategy and incorporate climate mitigation and adaptation practices into their programs and operations.”
“New Mexico will join the U.S. Climate Alliance, fully embracing the goals set by the 2015 Paris Agreement, aligning New Mexico with the U.S. governors and states that have committed to a climate conscious future and moves to protect people, natural resources and cultural heritage,” a press release explaining the Jan. 29, 2019, executive order stated.
FIVE BILLS NMELC IS ADVANCING
RIGHT OF PRIVATE ACTION FOR CERTAIN STATUTES
House Bill 50. Representative Georgene Louis, D-District 26, is the sponsor.
Currently a private individual can only bring suit for environmental pollution against a party that violates the state Mining Act. The bill will create “private rights of action,” allowing individuals to bring suit for violations of the state Air Quality Control Act, the Water Quality Act, the Hazardous Waste Act, the Solid Waste Act and the Oil and Gas Act.
“As it stands now,” NMELC Staff Attorney Eric Jantz said, “only state agencies have the right to enforce environmental law,” with the exception of mining and coal laws.
“For example, if wells are polluted, the people affected must persuade the state agency to make the polluter follow the New Mexico Water Quality Act. That is a problem if you can’t get the environment department to move,” Jantz said. “An individual can sue the polluter directly if this legislation passes.”
The bill includes provisions for granting “relief” to the harmed individual, as well as recovering the cost of litigation, including experts’ and attorneys’ fees, Jantz said. Environmental equity is more likely to be achieved, Jantz said, by making it affordable for disadvantaged communities—so often chosen as the sites for heavy manufacturing plants—to fight against pollution.
STRINGENCY LEGISLATION
No number has yet been assigned to this bill. Senator Peter Wirth, D-District 25, is the sponsor and Representative Andrés Romero, D-District 10, has agreed to carry it in the House.
Currently there are clauses in the state Air Quality Control Act and the Hazardous Waste Act “that prevent New Mexico from setting its own standards,” NMELC Staff Attorney Maslyn Locke said. Enforcement is limited to the federal government standards. She referred to the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency as “the distant wizard in Washington, D.C.” that controls local enforcement from afar.
Under the provisions of this bill, local governments could pass regulations more stringent than the federal government’s, Locke said, and the people “can propose standards to the New Mexico Environment Department and pressure them to pass more stringent laws.”
One area the NMED could be pressured to regulate is oil and gas industry emissions, a NMELC press release on its legislative priorities states. Reducing the release of hydrocarbons and nitrogen oxides—known as ozone “precusors“—“effectively reduces methane emissions, and combats climate change.”
INCREASE MAXIMUM CIVIL PENALTIES
No number has yet been assigned to this bill. Senator Siah Correa Hemphill, D-District 28, and Senator Jeff Steinborn, District 36, will co-sponsor the bill.
Currently penalties that can be collected under the state’s environmental statutes are 30 to 40 years old. Attorney Maslyn Locke hammered home the need to increase penalty fees to present-day standards by comparing 1990 gas prices to today’s. The per-gallon price was about 70 cents then and is about $2.30 now.
The bill would double penalties under the Air Quality Control Act, the Water Quality Act, the Hazardous Waste Act, the Solid Waste Act and the Mining Act. It would not cover the Oil and Gas Act, since that law’s penalty provision was amended just last year.
PROTECTION FROM OIL AND GAS WASTE WATER
No number has yet been assigned to this bill. Senator Antoinette Sedillo Lopez. D-District 16, is the sponsor.
Attorney Gail Evans said that for every gallon of oil produced, four to 10 gallons of liquid waste are created—a process “using hundreds of millions of gallons of fresh water” every year in drought-ridden New Mexico. The bill requires oil and gas producers to conserve fresh water by reusing polluted waste water on site.
In addition, the bill prohibits the use of waste water (i.e. “produced water”) outside of oil and gas production, unless the producer can show that it will not result in water pollution.
Evans said “produced water is a misnomer,” since the waste water is “literally radioactive,” containing uranium, lead, mercury and other dangerous pollutants.
GREENHOUSE GAS EMISSIONS
No number has yet been assigned to this bill. Representative Melanie Stansbury, D-District 28, and Senator Peter Wirth, D-District 25, are the sponsors.
Noting that former Governor Susana Martinez repealed legislation controlling greenhouse gas emissions, Attorney Eric Jantz explained this bill mandates the creation of a climate change leadership council, whose role would be to “assist local communities in developing resiliency to climate change, to adopt policies creating job diversity so we are not so dependent on oil and gas. Most importantly, it requires the New Mexico Environment Department and other government agencies to adopt regulations to reduce greenhouse emissions by industry.” For example, methane emission limits could be established specifically for the oil and gas industry, Jantz said.
In addition, this legislation, if passed, will ensure that certain aspects of Governor Lujan Grisham’s executive order on the Paris Climate Agreement are enshrined in law. This provision ensures policy continuity, Jantz said, “since executive orders are easily repealed by the next governor.”
BILLS NMELC SUPPORTS
HOUSE BILL 26
This bill would prohibit “tax increment development districts” from being created in previously undeveloped areas.
“TIDDs were originally established to help failed communities, not new development,” NMELC founder Douglas Meiklejohn said. TIDDs divert tax revenue away from local governmental entities, putting the revenue into a qualifying economic development project. A baseline tax revenue is established and frozen, and any incremental increase in tax revenue is diverted away from schools, counties and cities within the tax district and given to the economic development project for 10 to 30 years.
NMELC has been working to prevent a TIDD from forming in the West Mesa areas of Albuquerque and Bernalillo designated for a planned community called “Santolina.” The development, which will build housing for about 95,000 people on 14,000 acres of “greenfield,” would strain local government entities if they were denied sufficient tax revenues to cover the extension of infrastructure and services to the new community, Meiklejohn said.
HOUSE BILL 76
This bill would add a “bad actor” provision to the state’s Air Quality Act and other environmental acts. Currently the New Mexico Environment Department cannot reject applications for a factory, for example, from corporations or businesses or people who have a history of violating pollution laws. Bad actors would be rejected at the outset, ending present policies that allow them to move into the state or expand their operations here.
EXPANSION OF HAZARDOUS WASTE DEFINITIONS TO INCLUDE “PRODUCED WATER”
No number yet has been assigned to this bill.
Currently the oil and gas industries’ “produced water” is excluded as a pollutant under the state’s Hazardous Waste Act, therefore the toxins it contains are not measured or controlled. This legislation would strike produced water from the list of exemptions.
STRATEGIC PLAN FOR A SUSTAINABLE ECONOMY
No number has yet been assigned to this bill.
The bill requires the New Mexico Economic Development Department to draft a plan to transition the state’s economy away from reliance on the gas and oil industry and encourage diversification through the development of green industries. Training for employment in sustainable industries, such as green construction, is part of the bill.
“We are not going to get there unless we plan for it,” Attorney Gail Evans said.
GREEN AMENDMENT TO THE STATE CONSTITUTION
If this legislation passes, the voters will be asked to approve a constitutional amendment that will make clean air, land and water a right of New Mexican citizenship.
Furthermore, if the “private right of action” bill (referenced above) also passes, it will lay out legal procedures for defending the individual rights granted by the Green Amendment.
“The New Mexico Supreme Court interpretation of the law asserts the status quo: an individual must go to the administering agency and ask it to pass legislation on water, land and air pollution,” Attorney Eric Jantz explained. The Green Amendment is needed, he said, to empower the individual and protect the disenfranchised.