1 / 9

Chuck Lesniak Environmental Policy Mgr. Austin, Texas

Chuck Lesniak Environmental Policy Mgr. Austin, Texas. PIPA Bringing Guidance to Local Communities Perspective of the Nat’l League of Cities and Nat’l Assoc. of Counties. NLC/NACO Perspective. Why should cities and counties be interested? What do we hope to get out of PIPA?

alvaro
Download Presentation

Chuck Lesniak Environmental Policy Mgr. Austin, Texas

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Chuck Lesniak Environmental Policy Mgr. Austin, Texas PIPABringing Guidance to Local CommunitiesPerspective of the Nat’l League of Cities and Nat’l Assoc. of Counties

  2. NLC/NACO Perspective • Why should cities and counties be interested? • What do we hope to get out of PIPA? • What have been the challenges of the process? • As we near completion, how do we feel about PIPA?

  3. Why Cities and Counties? • Austin is probably typical of many communities • 446 miles of hazardous liquids and natural gas lines in Austin’s jurisdiction • Within 500’ of a hazardous liquids line • 2,600 buildings • 3,200 platted lots • 7000 acres • (2003 data)

  4. Austin Pipelines

  5. Why Cities and Counties? • Urban/Suburban areas • Greatest public safety and economic impacts from accidents • Greatest risk of 3rd party damage to pipelines • Responsible for emergency response and will be in control of first response to accidents • Little control over pipeline placement or operations • Generally control and plan new development

  6. Promise of PIPA • Answer these questions: • What is appropriate land use near pipelines? • How can we protect adjacent development? • How should local planners and developers work with pipeline operators?

  7. Promise of PIPA • Provide tools for cities and counties to: • Do thoughtful, reasoned land use planning near pipelines • Provide best practices that have been vetted by local government, development, and pipeline stakeholders • Allow development near pipelines that is protective of our communities

  8. Challenges • Risk informed vs. risk based • Protecting pipelines vs. protecting communities • Misconceptions of how government does land use planning • How do we have risk informed practices without presenting pipelines as “risky”? • New tools without overburdening new development

  9. PIPA Today PIPA has been a solid process with good faith effort by all parties. NLC and NACO believe the best practices are solid and will provide the tools to help guide local planners and developers. The report acknowledges the value of pipelines while recognizing and addressing the very real concerns of communities. Let’s finish it and get it out the door

More Related