Daily Times (Primos, PA)

FBI now in, but pols had pipeline issues for years

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WEST CHESTER >> While news that the FBI is investigat­ing how permits were issued for the Sunoco/ET Mariner East pipeline spread across Chester County and the nation this week, questions about the project and its permits are nothing new for some state lawmakers

State Sen. Andrew Dinniman, D-19 of West Whiteland, perhaps the Legislatur­er’s most vehement Mariner East critic, has been on the record in raising serious concerns about the safety and permitting of the controvers­ial and problempla­gued pipeline project since as early as five years ago – long before it became big news and the subject of three criminal investigat­ions.

“To raise these concerns and ask the same questions month after month, year after year and get no real answers, even as Mariner East caused problems that posed significan­t health, environmen­tal and safety risks again and again and again was, at times, exasperati­ng. I know many of my constituen­ts and neighbors felt the same way. And as a state Senator, it remains challengin­g to confront the failure of multiple government agencies operating in these bureaucrat­ic silos,” Dinniman said. “But I’m sticking with it because I have a duty to my constituen­ts, and I have a responsibi­lity as a good neighbor. After all, I live here, too.”

Dinniman said while he cannot say that any wrongdoing took place, he hopes the FBI investigat­ion shines a bright light on the questions he has raised about the pipeline permitting process.

“I want to be very clear that I am not accusing the state or its agencies of criminal activity. That is the job of the FBI, the Chester County District Attorney, and the Pennsylvan­ia Attorney General. My office is available to assist them and I have volumes of informatio­n and correspond­ence that we are more than happy to provide,” Dinniman said. “But after both me and my constituen­ts were routinely stonewalle­d by the very state agencies responsibl­e for public safety, the fact that the FBI is taking a look at the permitting process gives us hope for getting the answers we never got.”

In 2015, Dinniman contacted the Pennsylvan­ia Public Utility Commission regarding concerns over confusion surroundin­g permitting authority and Sunoco/ET’s land agents aggressive­ly contacting homeowners despite the lack of permit approval.

In a January 29, 2015 letter to PUC Chair Gladys Brown, Dinniman wrote, “I respectful­ly request some clarificat­ion regarding the proper procedure, protocol, and authority granted to companies such as Sunoco Logistics during the planning and negotiatin­g phases of such a complicate­d and intrusive constructi­on project . . . One example of this uncertainl­y can be demonstrat­ed through the permitting

and sighting process.” In the letter, Dinniman questioned how Sunoco/ET and its land agents can move ahead with certain processes despite having incomplete and unapproved permits. He also raised concerns about the lack of regulation and oversight of the pipeline. Read the letter.

In 2016, Dinniman led a group of residents in questionin­g the Pennsylvan­ia Department of Environmen­tal Protection’s considerat­ion of permits at a hearing at West Chester University. At the August hearing he was a vocal and passionate advocate for residents’ “real and valid concerns about the project and its impact on their homes, property

values, health, safety, environmen­t, and quality of life.” Read more.

In 2017, Dinniman called on DEP to revoke Sunoco/ ET’s permits for Mariner East after several wells were negatively impacted, contaminat­ed and even permanentl­y damaged by pipeline constructi­on operations and well-owners were not notified of constructi­on activity in a timely manner as specified in the approved permit.

In a July 14, 2017 letter to DEP Secretary Patrick McDonnell, Dinniman wrote, “It is my strong opinion that Sunoco has violated the agreed upon principals and terms of the Special Conditions listed in DEP’s Water Obstructio­n and Encroachme­nt Permit . . . I respectful­ly request a full review of horizontal directiona­l drilling activities associated

with this permit, a thorough and complete evaluation and identifica­tion of private wells along the approved pipeline route, and an investigat­ion regarding the lack of due diligence demonstrat­ed by Sunoco.” He also called for a suspension of constructi­on activity until groundwate­r safety could be assured. Read the letter.

On August 31, 2017, Dinniman was forced to file a Right-to-Know (RTK) request to attempt to obtain informatio­n from DEP regarding the aforementi­oned listing of private wells and well-owners that were to be notified of pipeline constructi­on activity under the approved permit. Dinniman heard from several residents who said they had not been contacted in a timely manner prior to pipeline constructi­on.

Upon further investigat­ion, he learned that the list used by DEP was so grossly inadequate that even Sunoco/ET recognized its failings. Yet, the department still tried to block Dinniman’s request for more detailed informatio­n. Read the RTK request.

Through 2018 and 2019, Dinniman contacted DEP on numerous occasions raising concerns about permit modificati­ons sought by Sunoco/ET that he cautioned would pose an increased threat to public and environmen­tal safety. Dinniman felt their applicatio­ns for such modificati­ons were lacking vital informatio­n.

In a January 23, 2018 letter to Karen Yordy, Executive Assistant of DEP’s Office of Program’s Dinniman wrote, “It is my strong recommenda­tion that the Department reject this report as incomplete, call for significan­t public involvemen­t and comment, and require Sunoco to perform complete impact evaluation­s to ensure constructi­on activities do not cause permeant and irreparabl­e harm to the environmen­t and the citizens . . .” Despite Dinniman’ s objections, those modificati­ons were ultimately granted. Read that letter here and other examples here and here.

In July 5, 2018, Dinniman contacted the PUC regarding Sunco/ET’s plans and lack of state permitting to repurpose a 12-inch petroleum to carry hazardous natural gas liquids as part of Mariner East. “Once again, I must express my disbelief at how our Commonweal­th, through the PUC, continues to place the public in harm’s way,” he wrote to Brown. “If this modificati­on is a component

of the active interstate pipeline process and as PHMSA has delegated authority to the PUC, how is it appropriat­e to circumvent PUC oversight and regulatory authority?”

In 2019, Dinniman laid bare his concerns regarding the permitting of Mariner East in memo to fellow senators and a letter to McDonnell prior to a vote on his reconfirma­tion as DEP secretary. In the April 25, 2019 letter and memo, Dinniman asks McDonnell, point blank: “Did you personally ask DEP staff to approve this project in early February 2017 rather than continue the review process?” He also asks, “Why would the Department approve permit applicatio­ns prior to the finalizati­on of a report documentin­g potential constructi­on impacts?” Read the memo.

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 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? In this July 5, 2017, file photo, pipes for the Sunoco Mariner East pipeline are placed in South Lebanon Township,
Pa. The FBI is investigat­ing how Gov. Tom Wolf’s administra­tion came to issue permits for constructi­on on a multibilli­on-dollar pipeline to carry natural gas liquids across Pennsylvan­ia, The Associated Press has learned.
ASSOCIATED PRESS In this July 5, 2017, file photo, pipes for the Sunoco Mariner East pipeline are placed in South Lebanon Township, Pa. The FBI is investigat­ing how Gov. Tom Wolf’s administra­tion came to issue permits for constructi­on on a multibilli­on-dollar pipeline to carry natural gas liquids across Pennsylvan­ia, The Associated Press has learned.

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