The Wise Report

Editorial comment:

The Texas legislative session is drawing to a close and bills are being sent to the Governor for his signature.  Once sent to him, he has 10 days to sign, veto, or allow to pass without his signature.  The most closely watched bill this year was HB 1311 (relating to the continuation and functions of the Texas Board of Professional Geoscientists (TBPG)), which passed without the Governor’s signature.

I want to thank the Texas Geoscience Council (TGC) for taking on and leading the herculean task of assuring the continuation of the TBPG (full disclosure, I am on the TGC Board of Directors as the AIPG-Texas representative).  Typically, the Texas legislature will follow the Sunset Commission’s recommendations.  The Sunset Commission’s staff report for the TBPG recommended abolishment.  This recommendation took everyone by surprise and the TGC was originally founded to change this recommendation.  The TGC quickly organized a massive campaign with most of the Texas geologic organizations for a letter-writing campaign, testimony by a number of people from various Texas geological organizations and businesses, and hiring a lobbyist.  Funding for the lobbyist was provided by many geological organizations, businesses, and individuals.

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The Wise Report

The State Legislature is now in session and bills are being filed and worked on. New information is listed in bold (0 new bills listed):

HB 223, by Reynolds, Relating to the funding through greenhouse gas emissions fees of energy efficiency programs administered by certain utilities; authorizing a fee. Referred to State Affairs, 2/19/2019. For more information go to: https://capitol.texas.gov/BillLookup/history.aspx?LegSess=86R&Bill=HB223

HB 225, by Reynolds, Relating to the analysis of inspection and maintenance requirements for air quality permits issued by the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality for certain oil and gas facilities. Regulates fugitive emissions from all oil field equipment, the use of venting and flaring, etc. Referred to Environmental Regulation, 2/19/2019. https://capitol.texas.gov/BillLookup/history.aspx?LegSess=86R&Bill=HB225

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Good News: HB 1311 passes!

HB 1311, the bill to continue the regulation and functions of the Texas Board of Professional
Geoscientists, has been passed in both the House of Representatives and the Senate. The bill now awaits approval from Governor Abbott.

The Wise Report

The State Legislature is now in session and bills are being filed and worked on. New information is listed in bold (0 new bills listed):

HB 223, by Reynolds, Relating to the funding through greenhouse gas emissions fees of energy efficiency programs administered by certain utilities; authorizing a fee. Referred to State Affairs, 2/19/2019. For more information go to: https://capitol.texas.gov/BillLookup/history.aspx?LegSess=86R&Bill=HB223

HB 225, by Reynolds, Relating to the analysis of inspection and maintenance requirements for air quality permits issued by the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality for certain oil and gas facilities. Regulates fugitive emissions from all oil field equipment, the use of venting and flaring, etc. Referred to Environmental Regulation, 2/19/2019. https://capitol.texas.gov/BillLookup/history.aspx?LegSess=86R&Bill=HB225

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Internet/Computer Advice from David Campbell, AIPG-TX Webmaster

Because of the problems encountered these days with the Internet, e.g., hacking, phishing, and related fraud, the AIPG-TX webmaster suggested that he post a link on the AIPG-TX News to a MarineBio webpage that provides Internet/computer assistance to his readership:

https://marinebio.org/marinebio/frontline-marine-conservation-support/

Also, consider sponsoring MarineBio.org