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On February 3rd, 46 religious organizations released a letter urging Congress to preserve the Bureau of Land Management (BLM) Natural Gas Waste Prevention Rule.

The letter arrived on the day the U.S. House of Representatives voted 121-191 to overturn the Rule using the power of the Congressional Review Act (CRA).

The letter, signed by religious organizations with diverse theological and political views included denominations, councils of churches, and nonprofits. It called on Members of Congress to “uphold the Bureau of Land Management’s (BLM) Methane and Natural Gas Waste Rule, a rule that not only curbs methane waste on public lands but safeguards human health and protects God’s creation.” The letter states, “Currently, more than $330 million worth of natural gas is wasted on public and tribal lands each year. This is not good stewardship of the resources God has provided.”

While we are disappointed that the CRA passed the House, we are grateful that a bipartisan group of legislators stood up against the oil and natural gas industry’s wasteful operations, which harm human health, contribute to climate change, and waste taxpayer dollars.

Specifically, we express our gratitude to the 11 Republicans who voted to protect the BLM rule and our climate: Rep. Fitzpatrick (PA-8), Rep. Meehan (PA-7), Rep. Stefanik (NY-21), Rep. Costello (PA-6), Rep. Katko (NY-24), Rep. Sanford (SC-1), Rep. Ros-Lehtinen (FL-27), Rep. Curbelo (FL-26), Rep. Reichert (WA-8), Rep. Faso (NY-19), and Rep. Mast (FL-18).

FULL TEXT OF THE LETTER:

February 3, 2017

Dear Member of Congress:

We are religious organizations of diverse theological and political backgrounds. We are united by our shared commitment to responsible environmental stewardship and protection of the common good.

We write to urge you to uphold the Bureau of Land Management’s (BLM) Methane and Natural Gas Waste Rule, a rule that not only curbs methane waste on public lands but safeguards human health and protects God’s creation. We urge you to vote no on the BLM Methane CRA Resolution.

The BLM rule is a common-sense policy that requires the oil and gas industry to reduce venting, flaring, and leaks at industry operations on public and tribal lands by deploying available technology. Currently, more than $330 million worth of natural gas is wasted on public and tribal lands each year. This is not good stewardship of the resources God has provided.

Oil and gas sources also emit other dangerous pollutants that harm Americans’ health, such as smog-forming volatile organic compounds (VOCs) and cancer-causing toxics like benzene. Wasteful practices only increase this pollution. Repealing this rule would harm public health and reduce revenue to the federal government and Western states.

We request that you vote in opposition to this egregious attack on commonsense standards which protect the God’s creation and the common good. Vote no on the BLM Methane’s CRA Resolution.

Sincerely,

Arizona Interfaith Power & Light
California Interfaith Power & Light
Climate Action Network, Central Pacific Conference, United Church of Christ
Colorado Council of Churches
Delaware Interfaith Power & Light
Delaware Ecumenical Council for Children and Families
Disciples Center for Public Witness, Christian Church (Disciples of Christ)
Earth Justice Ministries in Nevada City, California
Earth Ministry/Washington Interfaith Power & Light
Eco-Justice Ministries
Ecumenical Ministries of Oregon
Episcopal Church in Navajo Land
Evangelical Lutheran Church in America
Florida Council of Churches
Franciscan Action Network
Friends Committee on National Legislation
GreenFaith
Iowa Interfaith Power & Light
Interfaith Climate Group of Gainesville, Florida
Interfaith Power & Light
Jewish Climate Action Network
Jesuit Conference of Canada and the United States
Kentucky Interfaith Power & Light
Maryknoll Office for Global Concerns
Massachusetts Interfaith Power & Light
Michigan Interfaith Power & Light
Mormon Environmental Stewardship Alliance
New Mexico Interfaith Power & Light
North Carolina Council of Churches
North Carolina Interfaith Power & Light
Catholic Diocese of Gallup, NM, Office of Life, Justice, Peace and Creation Stewardship
Oregon Interfaith Power & Light
Pennsylvania Council of Churches
Pennsylvania Interfaith Power & Light
Por La Creación
Presbyterian Church U.S.A.
Rhode Island Interfaith Power & Light
Southwest Conference of the United Church of Christ
The United Methodist Church - General Board of Church and Society
United Church of Christ, Justice and Witness Ministries
Voices for Earth Justice of Southfield, MI
West Virginia Interfaith Power & Light
Wisconsin Council of Churches
Wisconsin Interfaith Power & Light
Wyoming Association of Churches

Emily Wirzba

Emily Wirzba

Former Legislative Manager, Sustainable Energy and Environment

Emily Wirzba led FCNL’s lobbying work to achieve bipartisan recognition of climate change and action in Congress. She served as co-chair of the Washington Interreligious Staff Community’s Energy and Ecology Working Group.

Jose Aguto

Jose Aguto

Former Legislative Secretary, Sustainable Energy and Environment

Jose Aguto advocated for national policies supporting the sustainable use and management of our Earth’s resources and ecosystems so that all may thrive. He lead the Sustainable Energy and Environment Program, which leads interfaith, non-partisan, grassroots and multi-sectoral efforts on climate disruption to promote bipartisan dialogue and solutions in Congress. It also seeks to facilitate stronger relationships and collaboration across different sectors of the climate movement.