Friday, May 5, 2017

UPDATED: Opponents Of Mariner East 2 Pipeline File Lawsuit Against Sunoco To Enforce Delaware County Twp. Ordinance

Six Middletown, Delaware County residents on Friday filed a complaint in Delaware County Court of Common Pleas against Sunoco's Mariner East 2 Pipeline seeking enforcement of a section of The Middletown Township Code which provides in part that “in no case shall there be a distance of less than 75 feet between a dwelling unit and a petroleum or petroleum products transmission line.”
The Code also states that such lines must be “installed in the center of the easement.”
Sunoco has proposed to construct its Mariner East 2 pipelines at distances of less than 75 feet from dwelling units in six locations in Middletown, according to the complaint. The plaintiffs also contend that the pipelines will not be installed at the center of the easements.
Michael Bomstein of Pinnola & Bomstein, counsel for the plaintiffs, said “The Pennsylvania Supreme Court has affirmed in the Robinson Township series of cases that Pennsylvania municipalities have the authority to adopt and enforce ordinances to protect their residents from hazardous industrial operations. Unfortunately, Middletown Council has failed to seek enforcement of its own ordinances, leading to this complaint.”
The six plaintiffs, Meghan Flynn, Gina Soscia, James Fishwick, Glenn Jacobs, Glenn Kasper and Alison L. Higgins, note in their complaint that the ordinance they seek enforcement of was adopted more than fifty years ago, long before defendant Sunoco’s announcement of its Mariner East project.
Sunoco proposes to construct its pipelines through Middletown in order to transport for export “natural gas liquids,” which are gases that have been liquefied under high pressure. If released to the atmosphere, they return to gaseous form, in which they are colorless, odorless, heavier than air, and extremely flammable or explosive.
Sunoco has reported leaking these materials three separate times in the last year from the so-called “Mariner East 1” pipeline, which follows much of the same route as ME2, most recently on April 1, 2017 in Morgantown, Pennsylvania.
A recent report conducted for MCCS by Quest Consultants indicated that, under one particular set of atmospheric conditions, a delayed-ignition event in an NGL vapor cloud could produce blast damage 1,800 feet from the point of release.
Plaintiffs in this case have referred questions to their attorneys and to MCCS.  Questions should be direct to: middletowncoalition@gmail.com or 484-441-3308.
For more information, visit the Middletown Coalition for Community Safety website.
(Photo: Red line is pipeline route through the Turnbridge Apartments where some of the plaintiffs live.)
NewsClips:
FERC Appointment Delays Another Roadblock For PennEast Pipeline

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