Al Armendariz
And not only has Armendariz talked about crucifying oil companies, hes tried to do it. In 2010 his office targeted Range Resources, a Fort Worth-based driller that was among the first to discover the potential of the Marcellus Shale gas field of Pennsylvania the biggest gas field in America and one of the biggest in the world. Armendarizs office declared in an emergency order that Ranges drilling activity had contaminated groundwater in Parker County, Texas. Armendarizs office insisted that Ranges hydraulic fracking activity had caused the pollution and ordered Range to remediate the water. The EPAs case against Range was catnip for the environmental fracktivists who insist with religious zealotry that fracking is evil. Range insisted from the beginning that there was no substance to the allegations.
The former professor at Southern Methodist University is a diehard environmentalist, having grown up in El Paso near a copper smelter that reportedly belched arsenic-laced clouds into the air. (Heres a profile of him in the Dallas Observer.) Texas Monthly called him one of the 25 most powerful Texans, while the Houston Chronicle said hes the most feared environmentalist in the state.
Nevermind that he couldnt prove jack against Range. For a year and a half EPA bickered over the issue, both with Range and with the Texas Railroad Commission, which regulates oil and gas drilling and did its own scientific study of Ranges wells and found no evidence that they polluted anything. In recent months a federal judge slapped the EPA, decreeing that the agency was required to actually do some scientific investigation of wells before penalizing the companies that drilled them. Finally in March the EPA withdrew its emergency order and a federal court dismissed the EPAs case.
talk from the guy these environmentalists still affectionately call “Dr. Al,” activist Allison Silvawho heads a group fighting a proposed coke-fired coal power plant in Corpus Christiechoes a common sentiment about Armendariz for the crowd: “He’s a rock star in my book.”
the most feared environmentalist in Texas, telling a story about when he was just a kid in El Paso, surrounded by the arsenic-laced cloud of the Asarco copper smelter, one of the lucky ones among generations of children who, many studies later showed, were poisoned by the plant.
“You could taste the air,” he recalls for the crowd. “Your throat would tingle with all the metals that were put into the air.”
Wonder how cool he will look when he goes before Sen Inhofe?
After seeing that picture I have to ask, what the hell is that?