Yes on Measure Z- Protect Our Water

Yes on Measure Z- Protect Our Water Vote Yes on Measure Z to Ban Fracking and Protect our Water in Monterey County! A Grassroots coaliti Join together to ban fracking in Monterey County.

Protect Monterey County is a Citizens Initiative working to safe-guard our water, protect our county's agricultural production and assure a bright, healthy future for Central Coast families. Fracking and other high-intensity, unconventional petroleum operations put our future at risk. In the absence of strict state and county regulations we, the people, have no choice but to take the protection of

our health, our environment, and our thriving local economies into our own hands. The people of Monterey County should be able to decide the quality of our future, not the outside oil and gas industries. OFFICE LOCATION:

Jeffery Square
201 John St, Suite J-3
Salinas, CA 93901

Mailing Address:
Protect Monterey County
P.O. Box 1946
Monterey, CA 93942

Thirty Measure Z supporters attended a rally on May 25th outside the Salinas Courthouse to celebrate Measure Z being hea...
05/27/2023

Thirty Measure Z supporters attended a rally on May 25th outside the Salinas Courthouse to celebrate Measure Z being heard by the CA State Supreme Court. (They couldn't attend the actual court hearing because of remodeling work at the SF Courthouse.) Later, the group watched a livestream of the Supreme Court hearing. A decision by the court will be made in 90 days.

Below is an article about the rally in the Monterey Herald:

A rally was held in front of the Salinas courthouse Thursday in defense of a voter-approved ban on fracking and a type of oil and gas recovery in Monterey County, just minutes before the California…

Excellent article by Tomas Rebecchi about Big Oil's effort to weaken oil and gas rules via the referendum process... Loc...
11/27/2022

Excellent article by Tomas Rebecchi about Big Oil's effort to weaken oil and gas rules via the referendum process... Locally, we see professional signature gatherers (paid up to $10 per signature) asking gullible voters to sign petitions that they claim to "cut the price of gas". DON'T SIGN THE PETITIONS!

Fossil fuel interests are spending big on ballot measure referendums to reverse democratically established laws that protect Californians and the climate.

JUDGES RULE AGAINST MEASURE Z: A panel of judges on the California 6th District Court of Appeals (mostly Gov. Deukmejian...
10/13/2021

JUDGES RULE AGAINST MEASURE Z: A panel of judges on the California 6th District Court of Appeals (mostly Gov. Deukmejian appointees) sided today with the oil industry and invalidated two parts of Monterey County’s Measure Z: The ban on new oil wells and the phase out of wastewater injection. The judges ignored the vote of Monterey County citizens and the clear threat to our water, health, and climate. They agreed with the oil industry’s position that Measure Z is preempted by California state law. This decision puts at risk not just our county but also other cities and counties in California that have acted to limit the activities of the oil industry. Four years ago, our grassroots group decided to take our Measure Z legal fight to the California Supreme Court and we remain committed to this decision. While we wait for the more progressive state Supreme Court to reverse today's decision, we urge the Governor and the legislature to take urgent action to rein in the oil industry and ensure a more livable future for our children.

The huge hidden cost of abandoned oil wells for future generations.... Taxpayers of Monterey County may have to shoulder...
07/29/2021

The huge hidden cost of abandoned oil wells for future generations.... Taxpayers of Monterey County may have to shoulder the cost of plugging abandoned oil wells where operators have gone bankrupt or are unknown. These abandoned oil wells are a continual risk to our groundwater. Even after they've been plugged, they may leak.

Rusted pipes litter the sandy fields of Ashley Williams Watt’s cattle ranch in windswept West Texas. The corroded skeletons are all that remain of hundreds of abandoned oil wells that were drilled long before her family owned the land. The wells, unable to produce any useful amounts of oil or gas,...

Salinas Rally against SB10: Thanks to 28 activists who came out to defend local initiatives from attack by the CA state ...
07/13/2021

Salinas Rally against SB10: Thanks to 28 activists who came out to defend local initiatives from attack by the CA state legislature -- folks from Protect Monterey County, Protect San Benito County, Watsonville Urban Growth Boundary, Public Water Now, Sunrise Salinas, Preserve Our Rural Communities, Don't Dump on San Benito, and Springfield Grange.

We're urging Asm. Robert Rivas & Sen. Anna Caballero, who co-authored SB10, to amend the bill by removing language undermining local initiatives and by adding requirements for affordable housing. The current bill provides zero affordable housing and can cause gentrification of low income communities.

We're pleased that 10 local youth leaders attended today's rally, including 16 year old Gabby who spoke.

How much will taxpayers have to pay to clean up old oil wells in Monterey County? This article discusses the costs of en...
06/29/2021

How much will taxpayers have to pay to clean up old oil wells in Monterey County? This article discusses the costs of environmental cleanup after oil companies go bankrupt -- which is happening quite often in the twilight of the dying oil industry.

Randeep Singh Grewal built a fossil fuel empire around his Greka group of companies. Now, taxpayers are paying millions to clean up Rincon Island.

Call Asm. Robert Rivas and Sen. Anna Caballero today (co-authors of SB 10). Ask them why CA DEMs are suppressing Direct ...
06/27/2021

Call Asm. Robert Rivas and Sen. Anna Caballero today (co-authors of SB 10). Ask them why CA DEMs are suppressing Direct Democracy with bills like SB 10 which allow a few elected officials to override initiatives approved by thousands of voters. (The bill is close to passing & being pushed by developers & Facebook.) Democrats decry Republican voter suppression methods but bills like SB10 are much worse because they allow Supervisors & City Councils to cancel thousands of votes already cast for citizens' initiatives. (Protect Monterey County won Measure Z, the ban on fracking & other risky oil extraction in 2016, so we are wary of any bills that empower a handful of corrupt Supervisors to overturn local initiatives.)

Labor leader, Rusty Hicks, was re-elected today (Apr 24, 2021) as Chair of the CA Democratic Party. What's disturbing is...
04/25/2021

Labor leader, Rusty Hicks, was re-elected today (Apr 24, 2021) as Chair of the CA Democratic Party. What's disturbing is that he signed a pledge in 2019 to not take money from fossil fuel companies when he ran to lead the CA Democratic Party. But in late 2020, he accepted $330,000 from Sempra Energy, the company responsible for the huge methane leak disaster at Aliso Canyon in SoCal. This is a small example of how the fossil fuel industry has corrupted the CA Democratic Party. And explains why it's so hard to pass serious Climate Change legislation. Read more below...

- A Sierra Club investigation revealed that Hicks had broken his pledge and contradicted the clear instructions of the Party.

Chevron is one of the companies extracting oil from the San Ardo oil field along the Salinas River in South Monterey Cou...
03/15/2021

Chevron is one of the companies extracting oil from the San Ardo oil field along the Salinas River in South Monterey County. A PMC member sent the following video to remind everyone that Chevron has been degrading the environment surrounding their oil fields all around the world. Communities must protect themselves from Chevron's shocking disregard of the environment.

Deep in the Amazon Rainforest of Ecuador lies the "Amazon Chernobyl", a 1,700-square-mile environmental disaster brought on by oil extraction and production....

Climate Change requires that we shift to renewable energies sources like solar and wind. Nuclear power is NOT a climate ...
02/19/2021

Climate Change requires that we shift to renewable energies sources like solar and wind. Nuclear power is NOT a climate solution. Learn why from this excellent short video...

Nuclear advocates suggest that to address the climate crisis, we need to continue using nuclear power. In fact, aside from fossil fuels, nuclear power would...

You can read the complete Monterey Herald article below...--- STUDY: SAN ARDO-AREA QUAKES TIED TO OIL OPERATIONS ---When...
02/18/2021

You can read the complete Monterey Herald article below...

--- STUDY: SAN ARDO-AREA QUAKES TIED TO OIL OPERATIONS ---

When petroleum companies draw crude oil from the earth, it is accompanied by large volumes of water. This wastewater is then pumped through wells thousands of feet deep into the earth. A recent study links seismic activity around the San Ardo oil field to the use of wastewater injection. (Nikk Ogasa — Special to the Monterey Herald)

By NIKK OGASA | [email protected] |
December 12, 2020 at 11:05 a.m.

SAN ARDO — For decades, oil operators in the Salinas Valley have been shooting water deep into the earth. Now, scientists believe that activity may have been triggering earthquakes.

A recent study links seismic activity around the San Ardo oil field to the use of “wastewater injection.” When petroleum companies draw crude oil from the earth, it is accompanied by large volumes of water. This wastewater is then pumped through wells thousands of feet deep into the earth.

The research is not the first to tie earthquakes to wastewater injection. More than a thousand miles away in the Sooner State, the link is well accepted. In 2016 the largest earthquake in Oklahoma’s history, a magnitude 5.8, struck near the city of Pawnee, damaging structures up to 300 miles away and prompting the Pawnee Nation to declare a state of emergency. Scientists believe this quake and thousands of others in Oklahoma were triggered by wastewater injection.

But in a statement to the Herald, the Western States Petroleum Association said it would be out of place to compare seismic activity in California to what is taking place in states like Oklahoma, because of differences in geology and oilfield activity.

Responding to the Association’s claim, the study’s lead author, Thomas Goebel, said “faults don’t care if they are in Oklahoma or California. Earthquake physics and triggering processes are the same everywhere.”

THE STUDY
Goebel, a professor of seismology at the University of Memphis, and Manoochehr Shirzaei, a professor of geophysics at Virginia Tech, took a close look at more than 40 years of wastewater injection data and 1,735 local earthquakes.

What they found was that earthquakes in San Ardo tended to occur near wastewater disposal wells and that changes to the rates of wastewater injection were shadowed by changes in earthquake activity, with a delay of around 13 to 17 months.

As Goebel describes it: “the up and downs in earthquake rates followed ups and downs in injection rates.”

A similar delayed response is described by studies of the quake-injection connection in Oklahoma.

A recent study links seismic activity around the San Ardo oil field to the use of wastewater injection. (Nikk Ogasa — Special to the Herald)

Before 2008, the Sooner State was relatively quiet in terms of seismic activity. But over the last decade, oil operations have dramatically increased their use of wastewater injection. And in that same period of time, the state has experienced an explosion of earthquakes.

According to the United States Geological Survey, the majority of quakes in Oklahoma are caused by the injection of wastewater into the ground.

HOW IT HAPPENS
Wastewater and fracking fluids can trigger, or “induce” earthquakes because they’re forced underground at very high pressures. They squeeze their way through pore spaces and fractures in the rock, which are themselves already under immense tectonic stress.
Like the surface of an air hockey table, which shoots air under the puck to lower friction and help it slide smoothly, pumping high-pressure fluids into underground faults and fractures makes it easier for them to slip and produce earthquakes.

But as stated by the USGS, wastewater injection is far more likely than fracking to trigger earthquakes. That is because compared to fracking operations, wastewater disposal wells pump larger volumes of fluid, for longer periods of time.

For their analysis, Goebel and Shirzaei procured earthquake data from the Northern California Earthquake Data Center, and wastewater injection data from the California Geologic Energy Management Division. All oil operators are required by law to report wastewater injection data to CalGEM.

Goebel and Shirzaei also looked at satellite imagery and found the valley floor was rising, in some areas more than half an inch per year. According to Goebel, this is evidence that pressures underground are out of balance, forcing the earth to expand.
Oil operations in California are typically associated with the ground sinking, noted Joern Kaven, a geophysicist from the USGS. “Here, you actually see inflation, so there’s a lot of wastewater that is getting injected.”

FAULTING THE SAN ANDREAS
The Western States Petroleum Association, which has represented oil operations in California for over a century, rebuked the conclusions of Goebel and Shirzaei, pointing out earthquakes are common and natural in California. The Association further pointed out that the San Andreas plate boundary, a tectonically active feature, sits 22 miles east of the San Ardo oilfield.

But Kaven, who was not involved with the research, said it would be strange for the San Andreas fault to trigger so many earthquakes at the distance the oilfield sits.

In their study, Goebel and Shirzaei show wastewater injection and earthquake rates are strongly correlated, and this link included earthquakes up to 15 miles from the oilfield. When they tried to factor in earthquakes along the San Andreas into their calculations, the correlation weakened.

The researchers also noticed that earthquakes appeared to crowd near the oilfield, with fewer quakes in the zone between San Ardo and the San Andreas.

According to Goebel, these observations support the conclusion that wastewater injection is triggering earthquakes in the San Ardo area.

MEASURE Z AND OILFIELD PROHIBITIONS
The San Ardo oilfield last came under the spotlight in 2016, when 56% of Monterey County voters passed Measure Z, which banned fracking, wastewater injection and the development of new oil and gas wells in the county.

But after a lawsuit was filed by oil companies, much of Measure Z was invalidated — only the ban on fracking was preserved. Today, pumping wastewater into the ground is still legal.

An appeal to restore Measure Z is currently awaiting review in the appellate court. Its supporters are hoping to reinstate the bans on wastewater injection and new oil and gas well development.
“It was pretty outrageous that a judge would overturn the vote of people,” says Andy Hsia-Coron, co-founder of Protect Monterey County, the grassroots organization behind Measure Z. “There’s plenty of precedent for curtailing these kinds of activities.”

In fact, that precedent can be found right next door.

In 2014, neighboring San Benito County made history by passing the first fracking ban in the state. The pioneering initiative, called Measure J, also banned other “high intensity” petroleum operations in the county, such as wastewater injection.

But with no court date scheduled for Measure Z’s restoration, it appears that the wastewater will continue to flow into the earth.
On the future of earthquakes in the San Ardo oilfield, Goebel said: “the expectation is that what happened over the previous 40 years, the same will hold true for the future if injection continues.”

Address

Salinas, CA

Alerts

Be the first to know and let us send you an email when Yes on Measure Z- Protect Our Water posts news and promotions. Your email address will not be used for any other purpose, and you can unsubscribe at any time.

Contact The Organization

Send a message to Yes on Measure Z- Protect Our Water:

Share