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		Senate Democrats question offshore 
		drilling work amid shutdown 
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		 [January 24, 2019] 
		(Reuters) - U.S. Senate Democrats 
		are questioning the legal basis of the Trump administration's move to 
		continue work on its five-year offshore drilling plan during the partial 
		federal government shutdown. 
 In a letter sent on Tuesday to David Bernhardt, the Department of 
		Interior's acting secretary, and Walter Cruickshank, acting director of 
		the Bureau of Ocean Energy Management (BOEM), the senators asked them to 
		address why the BOEM's contingency plan was updated in January to allow 
		40 employees to work on the offshore leasing program.
 
 It specifically asked on what legal basis the department changed its 
		treatment of offshore oil and gas activities between Dec. 22, when the 
		shutdown began, and January, when it recalled the employees. The letter 
		requested a response by Feb. 1.
 
		
		 
		
 "While the oil industry might view a delay in the approval of new 
		offshore drilling as an emergency, the American people deserve 
		regulators who prioritize safety and environmental protection over 
		political expediency and the wishes of moneyed special interests," said 
		the letter, which was signed by 14 legislators.
 
 Signing the letter were Democratic Senators Robert Menendez, Cory 
		Booker, Edward Markey, Richard Blumenthal, Jack Reed, Ron Wyden, Jeff 
		Merkley, Sherrod Brown, Patrick Leahy, Ben Cardin, Dianne Feinstein, 
		Jeanne Shaheen and Tom Carper and an independent, Bernie Sanders.
 
 The longest U.S. government shutdown in history reached its 33rd day on 
		Wednesday. The Department of Interior, which oversees energy development 
		on federal lands and waters, is among the departments included in the 
		shutdown. The BOEM falls under the Interior Department.
 
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			An oil and gas drilling platform stands offshore near Dauphin 
			Island, Alabama, October 5, 2013. REUTERS/Steve Nesius/File Photo 
            
 
            "As the letter clearly states, Senator Menendez and his colleagues 
			are opposed to any offshore oil and gas development in the United 
			States, regardless of whether or not we are experiencing a partial 
			government shutdown," Interior Department spokeswoman Faith Vander 
			Voort said in an email. "We will be responsive to their letter in a 
			timely manner."
 In addition to tapping employees to work on the offshore drilling 
			program, the BOEM temporarily recalled some furloughed workers to 
			prepare an upcoming Gulf of Mexico oil lease sale using funds left 
			over from last year, according to a department document.
 
 House of Representatives Democrats from the Natural Resources 
			Committee will host a forum of environmentalists and former 
			policymakers on the topic on Thursday, they said in a press release.
 
 (Reporting by Nichola Groom; editing by Jonathan Oatis)
 
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