COMMUNITY MEETING ABOUT HYDRAULIC FRACTURING (FRACKING) IN ST. TAMMANY PARISH!

Join Concerned Citizens of St. Tammany for a discussion about preventing fracking in  our Parish and how YOU can help! Hydraulic fracturing, known as “fracking” involves pumping high pressured water along   with a number of chemicals into the ground to fracture the rock below and bring up any   oil and gas. This has been associated with many problems, including: drops in housing   and property values, loss of local businesses and jobs and water and air pollution. We’ll be talking with soon-to-be lawyers from Loyola Law School who have been   working for months to figure out new ways to stop fracking in St. Tammany. Come learn   about our existing laws and how we can use them – or change them – to help us win! There will be a short presentation on the new proposed strategies, a discussion on how we   all can get involved and then a question and answer session with the students and their   professor, a long time environmental attorney. CCST then will present a segment on “Frackonomics.” The economics on fracking! Date: April 1st, 2015 Time: 6:30 pm Location: John Davis Center 61100 North 12th St. Lacombe, LA 70445 985-882-7782 office Contact Marianne Cufone mcufone@loyno.edu / Rick Franzo...

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LATEST HOME RULE CHARTER UPDATES

BELOW ARE LINKS THAT GIVE INFORMATION AND UPDATES ON THE LATEST EFFORTS TO IMPROVE THE HOME RULE CHARTER     http://www.nola.com/politics/index.ssf/2014/09/st_tammany_parishs_charter_rev.html   http://www.nola.com/politics/index.ssf/2014/10/st_tammany_home_rule_charter_c.html#incart_river

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Letter sent to Parish Government and St. Tammany West Chamber from CCST.

Letter sent to Parish Government and St. Tammany West Chamber from CCST. Friday, October 03, 2014 St. Tammany Parish Government 21490 Koop Drive Mandeville LA. 70471 St. Tammany West Chamber of Commerce 610 Holly Crest Blvd. Covington, LA. 70433 Dear Friends We call on local business owners, as we are calling on all levels of Parish leadership, to actively oppose an imposition of ‘Fracking’ by forces who have pitted themselves against the spirit and the letter of our Home Rule Charter. As a statement of goals and principles, the preamble to the Charter clearly states it is the obligation of elected and appointed officials working for and with residents of the Parish to: “preserve and enhance the quality of life and the environment for ourselves and future generations.” “Quality of life” and “the environment” are mentioned specifically and separately, implying that they are two sides of the same coin of community health, safety and welfare and each has equal weight in driving public policy toward the greatest good. Most of us have grown up hearing the voices of preceding generations say two things about life and quality of life: (1) Only God can make a tree; (2) Money can’t buy happiness. Under the LA Constitution, the St. Tammany Parish Home Rule Charter empowers its citizens to decide to allow or not allow any uses, including oil and gas exploration and production, in STP. This principle is reinforced by STP and its municipalities through the adoption of zoning ordinances that clearly establish ‘uses by right’ and ‘conditional uses’ in each zoning district. In the case of the proposed drilling activity, the target area is zoned residential. There is no language stating ‘by right’ or ‘conditional’ uses to permit Drilling for oil (by traditional or enhanced methods) in the St. Tammany Parish Code of Ordinances, or in the STP Unified Code of Development (UDC). There is no question that a wave of oil and gas exploration and production, with its focus on hydraulic fracturing, will bring substantial changes to our home place. Depending on point of view, those changes represent either promise or threat. For a small but politically powerful group, ‘promise’ is oil production; large royalties; the creation and control of drilling/production service jobs. For a great many who actually live in St. Tammany, ‘threat’ is irreparable damage to the air, water and landscape of one of the most beautiful and ecologically diverse places left in the Gulf Region. It only takes a glance at the ‘post fracking’ landscapes of Bossier, DeSoto and Caddo Parishes or of counties in Pennsylvania, Texas and North Dakota to see what aggressive exploration and production bring to a place in a very short time....

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