WASHINGTON, D.C. – Kansas Senators Pat Roberts and Jerry Moran Wednesday introduced legislation to protect Kansans from the threat of dangerous natural gas explosions by allowing states to monitor underground natural gas storage in the absence of federal action.
“It’s been over 10 years since we lost two lives to a gas explosion in Hutchinson, and the federal government is still nowhere to be found,” Roberts said. “This threat is real. Our first priority is to protect Kansans from harm.
“This legislation fills a void by allowing states to step in when the federal government fails to monitor natural gas storage sites,” Moran said. “Our country’s citizens should be protected from the threat of explosions, and this common-sense approach puts safety first.”
At issue is a 2009 District Court ruling that determined Kansas, through the Kansas Corporation Commission (KCC), could not monitor its own storage fields if the gas in those facilities is in interstate transportation.
In the four years since the ruling, the state has been barred from inspecting storage sites, and the federal government, specifically the Department of Transportation’s (DOT) Pipeline and Hazardous Materials Safety Administration (PHMSA) has failed to act.
In Kansas, there are 11 interstate underground storage sites containing over 270 billion cubic feet of gas.
In January of 2001, a gas leak migrated to underground caverns in and around Hutchinson and the explosion and fire destroyed two downtown buildings and shattered the windows of several more. Two people were killed in a subsequent explosion.