Transcript Slide 1

May 22, 2012
How We Managed an Oil Boom
Williston Basin Petroleum Conference
Presented by Cindy DeLancey
• Current population of Wyoming 536,626.
• Population up 14.1% latest census.
• Population increase largely attributed to
Energy Industry.
 Growth taken place in rural counties.
 Sublette County, Wyoming led the pack by
Growing 73% in the county.
City of Gillette grew by 48%
Unemployment rate 6.4% compared to 9.4%
national average.
WY 7th largest oil producing state and in 2008
ranked 2nd for natural gas reserves.
Regulation in Wyoming
 Wyoming Oil and Gas Conservation Commission.
 Board made up of Governor, Director of Office of State Lands, State Geologist
and two other Commission members.
 Oversees permitting process for Oil and Gas drilling in the state.
 Counties do not have regulatory authority over permitting of Oil or Gas.
 Oil and Gas development is exempt from Industrial Siting (No Impact
Assistance)
 Pros and Cons of no regulatory authority at county level.
 Split Estate Laws apply in Wyoming codified in 2005.
 Road usage
 Air Quality
 Strain on Social Services
 Change of local character of
Community
 Crime Increase
 Strain on aging infrastructure or
lack of adequate infrastructure
 Communication is Key!!
 Get to know your commissioners and local elected officials
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and keep them informed about activities in their area.
Ask the Local Officials in your preliminary meetings to
articulate their expectations up front. This will avoid
misunderstandings later.
Continue communications frequently and often.
Share the good and the bad. No one likes surprises!!
Educate the local elected officials about the oil industry.
Provide current local company contacts on who to contact if
there is a problem.
Encourage your elected officials to come for a tour.
Seeing is believing.
 Wyoming Business Council
 www.wyomingbusiness.org
 Funded through the Wyoming Legislature.
 Last Budget session about $15 million dollars for local
development of public infrastructure.
 Business council helps communities build critical
infrastructure.
 Programs include: Business Ready Community Grant
program, Community Development Block Grants and
Community Facilities Grant and Loan program.
 Business Council has developed programs to
assist with Business Relocation Assistance.
 Industrial Development often needs so
many other ancillary businesses to help the
industry be successful.
 Business Council in Wyoming has also been
successful in attempting to attract new
industries to an area to help diversify Local
and State economies.
 State Permanent Mineral Trust Fund : Money that is
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deposited into a long term savings account that flows from
revenues collected from mineral extraction revenues.
Current balance as of the end of 2011: $5.3 Billion.
WY also has another $1.2 Billion in our “rainy day fund”.
Money is there at the state level for the future.
Campbell County, WY started their own local permanent
mineral trust fund.
Wyoming counties would like statutory mechanism to
develop local savings.
Trust funds are necessary to preserve money for future
sustainability of infrastructure built today.
 Partnership
 Examples of effective collaboration
 Monthly breakfast with elected officials
 Working with community colleges on job training
programs
 Helping develop emergency services
 Developing responsible and reasonable regulation
through the public process
 Working with local governments on legislative issues
 County Road Impact Fund
 Socioeconomic study: Governments need help in developing
Elk Herd
 20 of the 23 Counties in Wyoming have gas production. (All have
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pipelines)
Sublette County 2011 Production 389,149,877 Mcf
Johnson County 2011 Production 125,853,618 Mcf
We are supplying our nation with domestic energy.
2009 Wyoming 2nd in Natural gas production with Sublette
County leading the way. (Jonah Field)
25,666 wells in Wyoming producing gas, 15,725 were coal bed
natural gas wells.
In 2009 Wyoming had 44 operating gas plants processing 72% of
the state’s gas production.
 Jobs… jobs…. jobs…… 20,000 people in industry.
 Minerals are only class or kind of property in Wyoming valued
and taxed at 100% of their actual value.
 Wyoming taxes paid by Natural Gas in 2009
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$524,467,321 in Property Taxes to Wyoming
Counties. (Schools are funded from this also)
Wyoming collected approximately $355,260,588 in
severance taxes from Natural Gas in 2009.
Severance Tax rate 6%: Tax distributed to State
General fund, schools, cities and counties highways
and water development.
Sales Tax Collection 2009: $163.1 million .
Bottom Line: Direct payment of nearly $4,692 for
every person living in Wyoming. Keeps our taxes
low.
 Join forces with your local government officials as they
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are the government closest to the people.
Inform the elected officials as much as you can so they
know what is going on.
No politician likes to have to say … “I don’t know”.
Impacts are real, must be aware and address together.
Socioeconomics of impacts are complicated and
resources need help.
The impacts are hard now, but there will come a point
when they level off and the community can go forward
and do some great things.
Cindy DeLancey
Executive Director, WCCA
[email protected]
307-630-2557 cell
307-632-5409 office