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For Two Colorado Residents, Economics, Emotions Drive Prop 112 Vote

Erika Deakin, above, points to one of the well pads that sits within a half-mile of her Erie home. Roy Ramirez, below, stands outside the maintenance bay for his company, RAM-CO Services, in Platteville.
Matt Bloom/KUNC
Erika Deakin, above, points to one of the well pads that sits within a half-mile of her Erie home. Roy Ramirez, below, stands outside the maintenance bay for his company, RAM-CO Services, in Platteville.

He owns a small business that does contract work for some of Colorado’s largest oil and gas companies. She runs a marketing firm from home and lives within a half-mile of three well pads.

She’s voting yes on Proposition 112. He’s voting no.

Platteville resident Roy Ramirez and Erie resident Erika Deakin both want good futures for their families. Both want safe development of oil and natural gas. But both sit on opposite ends of the statewide 112 debate.Matt Bloom reports on how two voters settled on different stances on proposition 112.

The measure seeks to dramatically increase the minimum setback distance for new wells from homes, schools, waterways and other areas a municipality deems “vulnerable.”

If passed, Proposition 112 wouldn’t impact existing wells, only new ones, nor would it influence how close new home developments can be built to established well pads.

Colorado’s number of new drilling permits has hit record highs in the past year. Activists say larger setbacks are necessary to safeguard the state’s growing population as the industry expands. Opponents argue it would kill thousands of jobs and decimate the economy.

Neither Deakin nor Ramirez work for the campaigns for or against the measure. These are the stories behind their votes.

‘It’s like sticking a knife in us’

Growing up, Roy Ramirez always worked.

When he was young, he topped onions. After high school, he pursued a career in construction, operating a concrete company for several years before coming to work with his father.

In 2013, he took over RAM-CO Services, a maintenance contractor for the oil and gas industry started by his father, a first-generation Mexican immigrant.

“My father taught us to, you know, the same old saying, if you're going to do something, you got to do it right,” he said, pouring a cup of coffee. “Otherwise, don't do it at all. I instill that in my guys.”

His wife also took a job helping with RAM-CO’s growing amount of administrative work. Today, the company employs about 40 workers, and he says they’re hiring more.

Proposition 112 would increase the setback distance by up to five times its current distance in some areas. Ramirez said he sees that as a major threat to his livelihood.

“It’s just, it's like sticking a knife in us,” he said. “A lot of my work is, I'm helping out in the beginning process and then at the end of the new builds. If they're not going to build anymore, there's really no reason to keep some of these smaller companies on their locations.”

Last month, some industry reps came by his office with a warning. They said a setback increase would slow production and lessen the need for contractors. They left behind dozens of campaign brochures.

“Por Favor Vote NO a la Propuesta 112,” the brochure’s bold red text states in Spanish. “ES UNA PROHIBICION DE ENERGIA.”

Below the warning, a state map colored almost completely in red shows all the non-federal land that would be off limits to drilling. Ramirez included one in each of his employees’ paychecks in September to motivate them to vote no.

“When you look at it that way in color like that it is very, very scary. When I say it will put me out of business - that's the reason why.”

A map from a July 2018 Colorado Oil and Gas Conservation Commission study shows the effects of a statewide 2,500 ft. setback.
Credit Colorado OIl and Gas Conservation Commission
A map from a July 2018 Colorado Oil and Gas Conservation Commission study shows the effects of a statewide 2,500 ft. setback.

The tweet

Erika Deakin shudders when she thinks about the tweet.

One night in 2009, she was fast asleep at her Erie home. Out of the dark at 4 a.m., a dull roaring sound burst into her bedroom.

She jumped out of bed, unsure of what was happening and waking her husband and two young daughters in the process. Turns out, it was a well pad being drilled about 2,000 feet from her house.

Tired and upset, she said she called and left a message with the town. Then, the next day, she took to Twitter to voice her frustrations with the company that owned the drill.

“On ZERO sleep today,” she wrote. “as EnCana fires up their gas drill right behind my home. AT FOUR A.M. Colorado’s laws on this stink.”

There was nothing she could do to make it stop.

After moving to her current home in 2013, also in Erie, she figured she’d escaped the noise and acrid chemical smell that wafted through the open windows. But she hadn’t.

Three well pads have been drilled within 2,500 feet of her current home.

“When I look at the year 2009 to now and — this is one of my kid's entire lifetimes so far,” she said. “That’s crazy.”

Deakin and her husband have purchased decibel readers and made multiple recordings of drilling noises as loud as 80 dB inside their home. Despite filing multiple complaints with the state, she said the periodic noise and smells have continued to plague her life.

“You lose your mind,” she said. “You cannot focus on your children. You cannot focus at work. You’re just kind of stepping through life as if you’re in a fog.”

That’s why, when she heard about a ballot measure aimed at increasing setbacks, she decided to vote. She said it wouldn’t stop the activity across the street from her house, but it might stop drilling near another neighborhood someday.

“There’s no perfect solution to this but this is one start,” she said. “Right now, the oil and gas industry has all the cards and the rest of us are suffering.”

Campaigns respond

Anne Lee Foster, one of the organizers of Colorado Rising, the campaign in favor of 112, said the measure is really “about protecting these same people’s long-term health and safety.”

Their aim, Foster said, is not to hurt small business owners.

“Roy lives in a community that has 24,000 active wells that are putting toxic benzene emissions into the air, that are explosive, and we want a high quality of life and clean air for his children as well,” she said.

Karen Crummy, a spokeswoman with Protect Colorado, an industry-backed campaign that’s raised more than $30 million this year to combat 112 and other ballot measures, said thousands of jobs are on the line.

“It’s everything from healthcare to retail to construction, truck drivers, real estate, hotel and food service,” she said.

Crummy wouldn’t comment on the health concerns brought up by Deakin. She said the current setback distances are safe, but the industry is open to discussion.

“But the discussion should be centered on the science,” she said. “Not people’s view of oil and gas.”

But it’s clear that both sides of this issue, like Roy Ramirez and Erika Deakin, are passionate about the debate.

Mail-in ballots have been sent out to voters. The midterm election will be held Nov. 6.

Capitol Coverage is a collaborative public policy reporting project, providing news and analysis to communities across Colorado for more than a decade. Fifteen public radio stations participate in Capitol Coverage from throughout Colorado.

Copyright 2018 KUNC

Matt is a passionate journalist who loves nothing more than good reporting, music and comedy. At KUNC, he covers breaking news stories and the economy. He’s also reported for KPCC and KCRW in Los Angeles. As NPR’s National Desk intern in Culver City during the summer of 2015, he produced one of the first episodes of Embedded, the NPR podcast hosted by Kelly McEvers where reporters take a story from the headlines and “go deep.”
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