Energy – SB 1624 by Sen. Jay Collins was temporarily postponed as the first action of the Senate Appropriations Subcommittee on Agriculture, Environment and General Government. Though sometimes a “temporary postponement” can mean a bill is meeting resistance, this bill has a secured agenda date of 10:30 a.m. on Feb. 20 in the subcommittee's next meeting.
This anti-clean energy preemption bill seeks to:
- Make “resiliency facilities” to store and distribute natural gas a permitted land use in every county and municipality in Florida. This would include Compressed and Liquified Natural Gas (LNG). No community could refuse to allow these facilities, because the bill rewrites all comprehensive plans to consider them a permitted use in commercial, industrial, and manufacturing categories and their corresponding zones throughout all Florida jurisdictions.
- Discourage state agencies and local governments from purchasing electric vehicles by striking the requirement that the most fuel-efficient models be selected.
- Reduce public input on and review of natural gas pipelines by extending the exemption from the certification process for pipelines up to 100 miles in length (up from the current 15-mile threshold.)
- Strike the genuine clean renewable energy grant programs in the state, and at the same time, provide cost recovery for the natural gas industry (which will be billed to ratepayers).
The House version, HB 1645 by Rep. Bobby Payne has cleared all three of its committees and is headed for a House floor vote next.
At a time when clean energy advocates have shown the dangers and expense of fracking and the benefits of job-creating clean energy alternatives, this bill advances mandates that will only add to increased use of toxic greenhouse gasses at the expense of our health and our communities' ability to regulate their own land use.