Transparency is the least
you could hope for if you’re against fracking for
energy. If North Carolina Republicans get their way, such transparency could
result in a felony.
Three state senators
introduced a bill late last week that would charge people with a felony if they
disclose what chemicals companies are using to extract dirty energy from shale
formations. That might even include the officials who respond to the explosions
and other emergencies caused by the dangerous process.
“The felony provision is far
stricter than most states’ provisions in terms of the penalty for violating
trade secrets,” Hannah Wiseman, a Florida State University assistant law
professor who studies fracking regulations, told Mother Jones.
[…]
“I think the only penalties
to fire chiefs and doctors, if they talked about it at their annual conference,
would be the penalties contained in the confidentiality agreement. But [the
bill] is so poorly worded, I cannot confirm that if an emergency responder or
fire chief discloses that confidential information, they too would not be
subject to a felony.”
However, Wiseman believes
“that appears to be the case” in some sections of the potential legislation.
“It allows for trade secrets
to remain trade secrets, it provides only limited exceptions for reasons of
emergency and health problems, and provides penalties for failure to honor the
trade secret,” Wiseman continued.
Earlier this month, the U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) announced that it is exploring requiring
companies to the exact opposite of the North Carolina state senators’
wishes—disclose those trade secrets to the government and the public. EPA
Administrator Gina McCarthy signed a prepublication of a proposed law that
would not protect the secrets.
“We want to be sure that
there is some agency that actually is collecting this information about what is
being used in these shale plays across the country,” Deborah Goldberg, a lawyer
at Earthjustice, told Salon. “The disclosure we are getting right now is spotty.”
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