Texas
Related: About this forumTexas' oil, gas regulator refuses to talk to media
HOUSTON Texas oil and gas regulator has instituted a blanket policy barring staff from doing media interviews, raising questions about transparency just as the state grapples with the intricacies of one of the largest energy booms in decades.
The three-member Texas Railroad Commission, which is one of the largest state agencies of its kind in the country, approved the policy in August, about a year after Milton Rister took over as the commissions executive director. Since then, all media inquiries have been funneled through a spokeswoman who responds via email and bars any direct access to staff.
The commission, which also regulates pipelines and mining, devotes much of its time to permitting oil and gas drilling and production, ensuring wells are safe and investigating complaints or problems at those sites.
For a Texas agency to ban all media interviews is unusual. Typically, the media relations department is not the source of information, but rather acts as a liaison to connect journalists with the staff they need to speak with for a particular story.
More at http://lubbockonline.com/filed-online/2014-06-15/texas-oil-gas-regulator-refuses-talk-media#comment-337307 .
mbperrin
(7,672 posts)to kiss their ass.
Secrecy in a state agency surely must be illegal, and especially in one that does not do its job - I'd have a hot flash if I ever actually heard of them doing anything to improve safety, and they simply ignore complaints about the industry, including drill sites too close to residences, destruction of private fences, gates, and roads and worse.
Maybe someone can talk him into actually visiting a drillsite. "Nah, Milt, hard hats are for punks - now just stand right there..."