Pipeline Strategies & Article 97 Lands Arthur Bergeron, Esq. Mirick O’Connell, Worcester David Singer, Esq. Attorney & Mediator, Greenfield Leigh Youngblood, Executive Director Mount Grace Land Conservation Trust March 21 2015 1 Outline Introductions Presenters Pipeline –Northeast Energy Direct Pipeline Alternatives Conserved Land Affected DPU – Access to Survey FERC Docket # Process Resource Reports Sam & Barbara Richardson Eminent Domain Legal Speed Bumps Strategies Article 97 of MA Constitution MEPA and NEPA Other Conservation Protections Charitable Trust Doctrines MGL Chapter 132 Conservation Restrictions Funding Source Requirements Municipal Land Ch. 40 sec. 8C Chapter 61, 61A, 61B Common Law Provisions What You Can Do Questions? 2 Existing pipelines 3 Current Route Northeast Energy Direct (NED) Pipeline Unprecedented Project Scale far outsizing Peak-Demand Problem 4 5 A Few of the Problems The Pipeline Would Create Construction: Clear cutting; Blasting; Excavation Long-term: • Loss of investments in permanent public and private conservation land and restrictions • Perforation of large forest blocks and other habitats • Invasive species introduction • Wetland and waterway degradation • Groundwater disruption and contamination via new pipeline conduit • Historic, tribal, and cultural resource loss Avoidable impacts; unnecessary; and destructive to climate Pipeline Alternatives 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. Fix-It-First Repairs = Jobs Storage Tanks for Peak Use Gas Pricing Reform Energy Efficiency Technology Energy Conservation is most cost-effective strategy Jobs & Training in Renewables Community-scale, distributed energy production, like rooftops 8. More capacity in existing pipelines 7 Conserved Land Statewide, the proposed pipeline would cross (or be<200’ from) at least 148 conserved tracts of land, including: 19 conserved farms 6 state forests 5 state wildlife management areas 26 town forests, conservation areas, or CRs 10 protected watershed areas 5 sections of National Scenic Trails 12 land trust properties 6 sporting clubs a municipal playground a YMCA Summer Camp Land Trusts with Land Directly Affected Berkshire Natural Resources Council The Trustee of Reservations Massachusetts Audubon Society Franklin Land Trust Mount Grace Land Conservation Trust Dracut Land Trust New England Forestry Foundation Andover Village Improvement Society (AVIS) Land Trust Regions Crossed by Current Route Hilltown Land Trust Reading Open Land Trust Lancaster Land Trust Bay Circuit Alliance North County Land Trust Nashoba Conservation Trust Townsend Land Conservation Trust Bolton Conservation Trust Sudbury Valley Trustees Greater Worcester Land Trust Essex County Greenbelt Association DPU - MA Dept. of Public Utilities Authorization for Access to Survey • Sample Deny or Rescind Permission Letters to TGP massplan.org and nofrackedgasinmass.org • Legal Memo - Stopped DPU Forced Access May 2014 mountgrace.org 11 DPU Legal Memo 33-Page Memo Addresses Six Points 1. DPU Authorization does not = a right to excavate or drill 2. Landowners have right to prevent trespass 3. A “taking” requires formal process and payment 4. Timber trespass law in MA protects trees 5. DPU cannot allow violation of Article 97 status or CR 6. Until FERC Permit issued in 2016 – Certificate of Public Convenience and Necessity - all laws apply! Applicable to all land Available at mountgrace.org FERC Federal Energy Regulatory Commission • Tennessee Gas Pipeline Docket # PF 14-22-000 • Cost:Benefit Analysis of Need and Economic & Environmental Impacts • Full FERC Application scheduled Autumn 2015 13 FERC Process Resources • FERC Statement of Policy on New Pipelines - PL99-3-000 • Knowing and Protecting Your Rights –by C. Elefant, Esq. • Del. Riverkeepers v. FERC US Ct of Appeals 6/6/14 • N. Middlesex – Permitting Process Steps - nmcog.org Community Impacts Resource Reports filed with FERC FERC evaluates if applicants “avoid unnecessary impacts to the environment.” Use this framework to list your concerns. 2. Water Use & Quality 3. Fish, Wildlife, Vegetation 4. Cultural Resources 6. Geologic Resources 7. Soils 8. Land Use, Recreation, & Aesthetics 9. Air and Noise Quality “Co-location” requires equivalent land clearing. 15 Land Impacts Example: Conserved 2011 16 Richardson –USFS CR Legal and Land Impacts • National Scenic Trail • National Park Service Hut • State purchase with federal conservation funding via MA DCR (Article 97) • Chapter 61 property tax for conservation purpose • Land trust pre-acquisition for conservation purpose • Wetlands and streams 17 Eminent Domain The FERC Permit - Certificate of Public Convenience and Necessity 18 Eminent Domain • Issuance of Certificate of Public Convenience and Necessity by FERC grants eminent domain power to TGP • Taking of land by eminent domain is a US District Court process of arriving at a price for land taken • Landowners can negotiate for an easement/land sale prior to eminent domain court proceeding, not recommended FERC requires TGP to “avoid unnecessary use of eminent domain”, hence the attempt for an Article 97 vote and negotiation with landowners Once Certificate is issued, state laws and constitution will not protect landowners nor land because the Natural Gas Act preempts state and local laws that interfere Eminent Domain • Issues related to economic, natural, and cultural resources must be raised in the Pre-Filing Stage of the FERC process, which obligates FERC to address them in the EIS • Personal, municipal, and state-level concerns must be researched and articulated now in comments • Concerns must be tied to federal laws that are not preempted by Natural Gas Act, whenever possible • Once Certificate is issued – new issues cannot be raised – only questions of process are accepted for appeal Legal Speed Bumps Federal NOT Pre-empted • Natural Gas Act (limitations) • NEPA - National Environmental Protection Act (requirements) • Clean Water Act, Sec 401&404 • Endangered Species Act • Nat’l Historic Preservation Act State • Global Warming Solutions Act • Energy Facilities Siting Board-10 Citizen Action MGL 30A Sec 10A • DPU Approval of LDC Contracts (Local Distribution Company) • Article 97 of the Massachusetts Constitution Local • Wetlands Protection Act-Conservation Commission Permit 21 Conservation Protections Article 97 of the Massachusetts Constitution • Requires a 2/3 vote of the Legislature • Bill expected Jan 2017 22 Article 97 • Article 97 applies to municipal and state land acquired for conservation purposes and/or land acquired with public conservation funds • Conservation lands and easements shall not be used for other purposes or disposed of- - except by a 2/3 vote - of our Legislators, excerpt of Article 97 • State policy and court decisions inform how Article 97 is interpreted • EEA has a strict policy on disposing of Article 97 land. It is available online at mass.gov.eea Article 97 To Uphold Conservation Status We Need: 14 of 40 MA Senators or 55 of 160 MA Representatives To pledge to vote NOT to compromise Article 97 land To override Art 97 MA Senate: 27 of 40 = 2/3 needed To override Art 97 MA House: 107 of 160 = 2/3 needed (or 2/3 of those present for the vote) • Both the MA House and Senate must roll-call vote to change the use or dispose of Article 97 land or easements. • We must educate All Legislators across the state about these requirements – in person, preferably! Other Conservation Legal Issues The following are covered in the handout and Q&A : Charitable Trust Doctrines MGL Chapter 132 Conservation Restrictions Funding Source Requirements Municipal Land Ch. 40 sec. 8C Chapter 61, 61A, 61B Common Law Provisions 25 Dealing With the Pipeline Developing a Plan Presented by: Arthur P. Bergeron abergeron@mirickoconnell.com THE BAD NEWS 15 USC 717f(h) Federal Preemption FERC Mandate: More Energy ARTICLE 97 THE GOOD NEWS NEPA MEPA (No Preemption) JUSTICE DELAYED IS JUSTICE DENIED PROJECTS DELAYED ARE PROJECTS DECEASED SAME MARKET- 5 PROPOSALS - 1.2 Bcf/d - .8 Bcf/d YOUR GOALS Maximize Permitting Time Maximize Mitigation (in case you lose) YOUR OBJECTIVES Learn the Process Meet Your Friends (or at least Know them) Find the Resources THE ENEMY OF MY ENEMY IS MY FRIEND YOUR FRIENDS IN THE FREE MARKET The Other Pipelines Saudi Arabia NEPA FERC Runs the Process Input from Federal Players Motion to Intervene 18 CFR 380.10 LENGTHY REPORT 18 CFR 380.12 13 Separate Reports MEPA Separate Report Mass. Secretary of Energy and Environmental Affairs • Must sign off 301 CMR 11.09 SPECIAL REVIEW PROCEDURE Citizens Advisory Committee • 10 Members Funding for Staff, Mailings, etc. Monthly Meetings What You Can Do • Learn How We Can Meet Energy Needs With No Pipeline • Submit Comments to FERC: Attend FERC Scoping Sessions • Contact Legislators Statewide, Family, Neighbors, Agencies • Speak in Support of Private Property Rights & Constitution • Document Important Economic, Natural, and Cultural Resources • Support Mount Grace! www.mountgrace.org youngblood@mountgrace.org Questions? Send your written concerns to : Tennessee Gas Company FERC MA DPUEnergy Facilities Siting Board Governor Baker Secretary Beaton Attorney General Healy State and Federal Legislators 42 Conservation Protections Charitable Trust Doctrines • Donor Restrictions • Fiduciary Duty of Care • Duty to Defend 501c3 • Public Charitable Trust 43 Charitable Trust In contrast to Article 97, the Charitable Trust Doctrine applies to nonprofit, land trust land and easements • A Trust, not to be confused with an organization, is a fiduciary relationship in relation to property • This kind of Trust is created by explicit intention that an asset be devoted to a specific charitable purpose, such drinking water, recreation, etc • Common Law applies, and requires a court proceeding, not a legislative vote, to eliminate a Charitable Trust • State law obligates the MA Attorney General to defend Charitable Trusts Charitable Trust • Charitable Trusts are also at issue if cash donations explicitly intended for conservation purposes were used to buy a specific property or easement not otherwise restricted by seller or donor of the land • IRS 501c3 status obligates land trusts to defend their assets held in the public interest • If property is transferred for a specific public purpose to a public entity (e.g. municipality, county, or state) a similar, binding Public Charitable Trust, is created • Caution: limitations apply, acquisition details must be reviewed, not all land trust land is protected! Conservation Protections MGL Chapter 132 Conservation & Agricultural Restrictions 46 MGL Chapter 132 Conservation, Agricultural, Watershed, and Historic Restrictions • Look at specific Purposes clauses each property is protected for as written into CR/APR document These detail some of the specific reasons the pipeline would violate the public interest • Easements are eligible for same treatment as land under charitable and public charitable trust law • Research the funding associated with each CR: donation, bargain sale, foundation grants, dedicated conservation funds. Contact all funders and signatories to weigh in Conservation Protections Funding Source Requirements • • • • • • • Community Preservation Act State LAND and PARC Grants Restricted Foundation Grants Individual Donations MA Conservation Tax Credit Federal Tax Deduction - IRS US Forest Legacy Program-LWCF 48 Funding Source Requirements • At Risk: Billions of dollars of public and private investment; cash; tax incentive; and in-kind • The requirements and interested parties for each source and type of funding should be researched and contacted to at least provide comments • The specific language referenced in guidelines of public or private sources state the public interests • IRS requires that donated CRs must be permanent to qualify for a tax deduction (and must meet specific, minimum conservation value tests) Municipal Conservation Land Chapter 40 sec. 8C …the [conservation] commission may acquire in the name of the city or town… land or water rights, conservation restrictions… to acquire, maintain, improve, protect, limit the future use of or otherwise conserve and properly utilize open spaces in land and water areas within its city or town, and it shall manage and control the same. 2/3 vote to change. Chapters 61, 61A, 61B Current Use for Conservation • If an easement is taken by eminent domain, how are the provisions for Ch. 61 removal complied with? • What if the removed land reduces the acreage below 10 acres so all the land must be withdrawn? • How are penalties (back taxes and possibly conveyance tax) & annual property tax dealt with? • MGL Ch.79 (Eminent Domain) sec. 13 allows landowner to remove the trees and sell them, but only within a specified time or they are relinquished. Conservation Protections Common Law Provisions-Other • • • • • • Trespass Nuisance Harassment Prior Public Use Dedication Other 52
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