The Independent News September 2015 issue

Page 1

SEPTEMBER 2015

Volume 6 • Issue 9

www.theindnews.com

Residents in Payette, Eagle Brace for Sept. 16 Hearing on Gas & Oil Drilling Alta Mesa possesses 13 ‘split estate’ leases in Eagle: Residents have ‘no idea’ group says

By Philip A. Janquart BOISE – A hearing to determine whether an oil company can force landowners to sign leases for gas and oil drilling on their property will be held Sept. 16 at the Capital building in Boise. Alta Mesa Holdings, Inc. owns about 15 gas wells in Payette County near the rural farming communities of Fruitland, New Plymouth and Payette. Some residents say they fear they may be forced to sign leases that would give Alta Mesa the right to drill for resources that exist under their homes, through “any means necessary.” The Texas-based company offers landowners the opportunity to invest in its venture through outright investment in return for a royalty on the natural resources that are acquired. Residents who can’t afford to make an up-front investment can pay the company back through payments taken out of their royalty awards.

way because Some landownmany mortgage ers, who want companies renothing to do serve the right with the drilling, to accelerate a say they may end mortgage if the up being forced property is to sign leases leased, sold or through what the transferred withgas and oil indusout notice. try calls “integra“What they are tion.” doing is forcing Citizens Allied residents to sign for Integrity and leases for the Accountability mineral rights to (CAIA), an exA worker discards waste at a 'mini-refinery' their property,” panding grass located off I-84, at the New Plymouth's Exit 9, west roots organization of Eagle. The refinery will process gas from drill she said. “Through laws dedicated to chalpads in New Plymouth, Fruitland and Payette passed by Idaho’s lenging “big oil,” legislators over the past three years, Alta Mesa calls it “forced pooling.” can force property owners to sign a lease that Executive director Alma Hasse, a Payette allows them to extract the resources in the County resident, says homeowners who sign ground through any means necessary.” leases could be putting themselves in harms

Alta Mesa has submitted two applications to the Idaho Department of Lands’ Oil and Gas Commission, seeking approval to force landowners to sign the leases or suffer a 300 percent penalty on the investment they would have made in the venture, which, in some cases, is hundreds of thousands of dollars. At a preliminary hearing last month, Alta Mesa claimed it served notice on residents within two “spacing units” in Payette County about its intention to proceed with the integration process. Several residents, represented by local attorneys, have since come forward, stating they were in fact not notified in time to attend the preliminary hearing and that, as a result, have had very little time to respond within the 21-day deadline. The Sept. 16 hearing gives Alta Mesa and respondents the opportunity to make their case for or against approving the applications. Continued on page 5

By Philip A. Janquart Eagle city councilman Stan Ridgeway has announced he is running for Mayor in the November 2015 general elections. Ridgeway, elected to the city council two years ago, says he was inspired to run for mayor after watching how the city has operated in the past. “I started going to city council meetings about three years ago, and just watching the way our city council ran, I questioned whether our mayor had the necessary experience to guide city staff and the council,” he

said, referring to Eagle Mayor Jim Reynolds. “To me, it was obvious: council members were interrupting him, and talking over him, and he never used the gavel. It made me question ‘who is running the ship?’” Ridgeway came to Idaho from Alaska where he served two terms on the Juneau Board of Education and one term in the Juneau Assembly (city council). Ridgeway also noted a lack of transparency and “respectful” communication between the Eagle city council and its constituents. “Before I was elected to the council, I attended numerous meetings where Eagle residents were interrupted, berated and harassed while giving testimony before the council,” he said. “It’s the mayor’s job to make sure that doesn’t happen. The mayor must assure the taxpayers that they can come before their elected representatives without fear of being rebuked.” Ridgeway was the Deputy Director for the Division of Vocational Rehabilitation and a Program Coordinator for the Alaska Department of Health & Social Services and Labor before retiring in 2003 as the Deputy Director

of the Alaska Division of Insurance. He says Eagle’s city leaders need to take a more “Fiscally conservative” approach to spending taxpayer dollars. “I think Eagle has made some bad investments that seem to benefit private enterprise while Eagle taxpayers foot the bill,” said Ridgeway. “The Terrain Park is a perfect example. The deal was done without going through proper bidding procedures, without thoroughly vetting the applicant and without the city doing its own, independent financial analysis of the proposal.” He also takes a distinct stance regarding private property rights and the processes involving the development of the city’s annual budget, adding that he feels the city was too aggressive in how it handled the abandoned gas station at State Street and Eagle Road. “In some cases the property owners were hampered by Eagle city leaders’ actions from developing their property,” he said. “Eagle has spent far too much time and taxpayer money on issues where I think we are on questionable legal footing. I believe a strong mayor would direct the council to carefully

weigh a situation like this before taking action and choose a more appropriate, potentially successful path.” Ridgeway says he believes a strong leader would “take a different, more conservative approach to budgeting” than Eagle city leaders have in the past. “The mayor should work with staff to determine each department’s needs, then seek input from each council member before putting together the budget,” he added. “The process currently has the council determining how much they can raise the budget within the legal limits, then they look for ways they can spend the money. That’s not an efficient, cost-effective way to budget.” If elected, Ridgeway would nominate an individual to take his place on the council. The council would then be tasked with confirming the nomination. Look for The Independent’s Oct. 1 story on all the candidates running for mayor, as well as the candidates running for the two open city council seats being vacated by Mark Butler and Mary McFarland, who are not running for re-election, according to Butler.

Eagle Councilman Ridgeway Announces Run for Mayor

Eagle Mayoral Candidate, Stan Ridgeway

PRSRT STD U.S. POSTAGE PAID EAGLE, IDAHO PERMIT NO. 60

ECRWSS

POSTAL PATRON LOCAL

City of Eagle Honors Steve Gleason pg. 4

Eagle PT Celebrates 20 Years pg. 11

Star’s New Mural pg. 18


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.