Responding to three deadly pipeline accidents in the past seven months, the federal government has announced a push to improve the nation’s aging pipeline network.
As the Associated Press reports, Transportation Secretary Ray LaHood is promising to revamp regulation of oil and gas pipelines around the country, toughening inspection and reporting requirements, and making more information available to the public.
LaHood also said that he plans to propose legislation to increase the maximum civil fines for pipeline violations from $100,000 to $250,000 a day, along with boosting penalties for a series of violations, from $1 million currently to as much as $2.5 million.
“People deserve to know that they can turn on the lights, the heat, or the stove without endangering their families and neighbors,” LaHood said in a news release.
LaHood, in addition, is calling on utilities to speed up the renovation and replacement of aging pipelines, to correct problems before another disaster strikes.
The Department of Transportation announced a forum on pipeline safety on April 18, where industry officials and analysts can discuss the best way to approach pipeline safety.
While the number of deadly pipeline accidents has dropped dramatically over the past two decades, a rash of recent explosions has brought more attention to the issue.
In September, a gas pipeline rupture in San Bruno, Calif., killed eight people and destroyed dozens of homes. A January gas line blast in Philadelphia killed a worker and injured six others. In Allentown, Pa., where LaHood formally announced the new safety push, a February pipeline blast killed five people and razed dozens of homes and businesses.
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