By now you are probably aware of the dangerous proposal from the Trump administration to open up over 90% of the nation's coasts to offshore oil and gas drilling. There will be one presentation in Washington, February 5th, from the Bureau of Ocean Energy Management (BOEM) on this proposal. Follow the link below for more information on the day, ways to make your voice heard, and contact information to get involved. Make plans to attend on Monday for a strong showing that says no to drilling off our coast.
It's gonna be a fun and festive day with a variety of ways the public can be involved! There will be a prestigious list of speakers at the press conference which will be followed up by a People's Hearing. BOEM will not be accepting oral comments and the setup for their public open house is more of a walk through of the proposal. We will be hosting our own People's Hearing where individuals can give public comment that will be recorded and submitted for the record. Make plans to attend February 5th to stand up and show that the people of Washington do not want drilling off our coast! For any questions, please contact WA Field Manager Brice Boland
February 5th Agenda
Location: Landmark Convention Center 47 St Helens Ave, Tacoma, WA 98402
Press Conference: Gothic Room 1pm-2pm
People's Hearing: Gothic Room 2pm-8pm
Bureau of Ocean Management Open House 3pm-7pm
Rally: Meet in Gothic Room 5:30pm
Please be sure to submit your comment online if you are unable to attend. Below is also more information on ways to be involved on February 5th and over the course of the public comment period.
- Contact Your Federal Representative & Senators via our Action Alert
- Attend the Offshore Drilling Rally Feb 5th in Tacoma
- Submit Public Comments on the Plan via BOEM Public Comment by March 9th (See Fact sheet and sample letter)
- Spread the word and get active with your local Surfrider Chapter
- Download the Oil Rig picture below and share via your favorite form of social media
West Coast Leaders Speak Up To Defend Our Coasts: Washington Governor Jay Inslee, California Governor Jerry Brown and Oregon Governor Kate Brown recently issued this joint statement following the announcement that the U.S. Department of Interior would seek to open the Pacific Coast to oil and gas offshore drilling for the first time in decades:
“This political decision to open the magnificent and beautiful Pacific Coast waters to oil and gas drilling flies in the face of decades of strong opposition on the part of Washington, Oregon and California – from Republicans and Democrats alike.
“They’ve chosen to forget the utter devastation of past offshore oil spills to wildlife and to the fishing, recreation and tourism industries in our states. They’ve chosen to ignore the science that tells us our climate is changing and we must reduce our dependence on fossil fuels. But we won’t forget history or ignore science.
“For more than 30 years, our shared coastline has been protected from further federal drilling and we’ll do whatever it takes to stop this reckless, short-sighted action.”
Senator Maria Cantwell: “Offshore oil and gas development poses a direct threat to Washington state jobs in coastal communities like Grays Harbor, Ilwaco, Aberdeen, and Port Angeles. The Washington coast economy relies on healthy, sustainable oceans which support fisheries, seafood processing, recreation, shipbuilding, trade, transportation, and tourism.
“Suddenly excluding certain states from future consideration, while Washington state has long been united in opposition to oil and gas production off our coast, is arbitrary, short-sighted, and inconsistent with the Outer Continental Shelf Lands Act.
“Pacific Northwest waters should be removed from any further consideration of the National Outer Continental Shelf Oil and Gas Leasing Program for 2019-2024.”
SW Washington Representative Jamie Herrera-Beutler: “I don’t support offshore oil & gas exploration in states that don’t want it & WA’s citizens have never indicated any desire to have oil and gas activity off their coast.”
The Washington Coast is a Special Place Worthy of Protection
The Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife, Department of Ecology, and Department of Natural Resources pulled together an impressive letter that was sent to BOEM last August in opposition to offshore drilling and clearly articulating all of the important uses and resources that would be reasonably foreseeable to be effected by oil and gas drilling.
Download the Letter–> 2017-08-Request for Information Letter FINAL signed
Apparently Secretary of the Interior Ryan Zinke didn’t get Washington’s memo… as it was recently announced that Florida would be removed from consideration for drilling, Zinke said, due to the importance of tourism to the state. Maybe he’d also be interested in taking a look at the Washington Coast Recreational Use Study which demonstrated that in 2014 Washington’s residents spent nearly a half of billion dollars on coastal tourism and recreation.
The Surfrider Foundation is pleased that Secretary Zinke has recognized that Florida’s coasts are heavily reliant on tourism and that its communities, businesses, and state leaders are strongly opposed to offshore drilling. Hundreds of local communities and state leaders across the country have been loud and clear in opposition of new offshore drilling for the same reasons. We call on the Secretary to listen to the voices from all U.S. states on both the Atlantic and Pacific coasts, which are heavily dependent on coastal tourism, and withdraw his destructive oil drilling plan.
Is there a method to this madness? Danny Westneat posed that question in an article in the Seattle Times, highlighting the fact that “in Washington, where it’s believed there are some oil and gas deposits, the general area of drilling overlaps in large part with the 4,000-square-mile Olympic Coast National Marine Sanctuary — where oil drilling currently is barred.