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Crude Oil Moratorium. May 3, 2016 Vancouver City Council Workshop Sandra Towne, Planning Manager Brent Boger, Assistant City Attorney. Presentation Overview. Provide brief background Provide staff recommendation on how to address the crude oil facilities moratorium
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Crude Oil Moratorium May 3, 2016 Vancouver City Council Workshop Sandra Towne, Planning Manager Brent Boger, Assistant City Attorney
Presentation Overview • Provide brief background • Provide staff recommendation on how to address the crude oil facilities moratorium • Provide next steps and schedule Crude Oil Moratorium - 2
Prior Council Review • September 2014 – Ordinance M4090 Established a moratorium on applications for permits for the establishment or expansion of all crude petroleum facilities that accept crude oil except those vested or contingently vested. • March 2015 – Ordinance M4118 moratorium extension • August 2015 – Ordinance M-4132 moratorium extension • February 2015 – Ordinance M-4157 moratorium extension (Expires 8/17/16) Crude Oil Moratorium - 3
Why the Moratorium • Crude oil facilities will increase the transportation of Bakken crude oil resulting in an increase in the transportation of that commodity through the city • Human error, acts of nature, and unforeseen disasters are beyond the control of measures proposed for the transportation of Bakken crude oil and could have devastating effects on the entire community • The City has a paramount interest in the health, safety, and welfare of its citizens, and the City Council believes that the development of additional and expanded crude petroleum facilities is contrary to the health, safety, and welfare of its citizens and business community. Crude Oil Moratorium - 4
Staff Research • Two Washington Cities limit fossil fuel refining and storage • City of Bellingham –limits petroleum refining and storage to one barrel at a single time. • City of Hoquiam – Prohibits bulk crude oil storage and handling facilities and provides a definition for bulk crude oil storage and handling facility Crude Oil Moratorium - 5
Staff Research cont • Staff recommends to focus on bulk crude oil storage and oil refineries to address the Council’s moratorium. • Substantial safety concerns across the nation provides justification to limit crude oil storage and refinement processes • The EFSEC draft EIS was released on November 24, 2015, and is seriously deficient in analyzing the risks associated with petroleum use expansion in the Port of Vancouver area. • Two other Washington city development codes provide good examples Crude Oil Moratorium - 6
Stakeholder /Interested Parties Outreach • Attempt to schedule a specific stakeholder meeting with Vancouver petroleum companies, the Port, and CREDC • Mailing to over 50 industrial companies • Mailing to several environmental groups • Mailing to Neighborhood Associations • SEPA notifications • Planning Commission and City Council meetings Crude Oil Moratorium – 7
Staff Recommendation • Staff recommendation: • Prohibit bulk crude oil storage and handling facilities • Provide a definition of crude oil storage and handling facilities, based on Hoquiam’s example • Prohibit oil refineries • Prohibit expansion of existing crude oil storage and handling facilities Crude Oil Moratorium – 8
Next Steps/Timeline • June 13, 2016 – City Council workshop • July 11, 2016 – City Council consent agenda • July 18, 2016 – City Council public hearing • August 17, 2016 – Ordinance M4157 expires Crude Oil Moratorium - 9
Questions Crude Oil Moratorium - 10