Develop any well for oil or gas
shall include the erection and dismantling of derricks; the
installation and operation of drilling equipment; the drilling of
the well; the installation and cementing of casing; the drilling of
the cement plug; the installation of tubing; making of connections;
laying of flow lines, mud lines and water lines; the installation
of a separator and tanks; the draining and filling of reserve or drilling
mud pits; and incidental operations in connections with such enumerated
operations.
Lease
shall mean any tract of land subject to an oil, gas, and
mineral lease or other oil and gas development contract, or any unit
composed of several tracts and leases but operated as one lease, and
any tract of land in which the minerals are owned by an operator or
someone holding under it or him, but which, due to the fee royalty
ownership, is developed and operated as a separate tract.
Operate oil or gas leases or wells
shall include incidental cementing; cleaning out wells and
tubing; repairing equipment; putting raw products into containers
or pipelines for transmission; transmitting raw products from the
wells to the pipeline; operating pumping equipment; and operations
incidental to such enumerated operations.
Permittee
shall mean the person or company to whom is issued a permit
for the drilling of a well under this chapter, and includes his administrators,
executors, heirs, successors, and assigns.
Person
shall include both the singular and the plural; and shall
mean and include any person, individual, agent, employee, firm, representative,
partnership, association, corporation, cooperative, or trust.
Well
shall include and mean any hole or holes, bore or bores,
to any sand, formation, strata or depth for the purpose of producing
and recovering any oil, gas, liquid hydrocarbon, or any of them.
All technical or oil and gas industry words or phrases used
in this chapter and not specifically defined herein shall have that
meaning customarily attributable thereto by prudent operators in the
oil and gas industry.
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(Ordinance 1492 adopted 2/9/11; Ordinance 1577 adopted 5/14/13)
It shall be unlawful for any person to develop any well for
oil or gas or operate, commence to drill or operate, or cause or permit
to be drilled or operated, any oil or gas well within the city without
first complying with the provisions of this chapter, obtaining a special
use permit pursuant to the provisions of the zoning code of the City
of Kilgore, and obtaining a permit therefor as provided in this chapter.
(Ordinance 1492 adopted 2/9/11; Ordinance 1577 adopted 5/14/13)
(a) It shall be unlawful for any person to use any part of the property or land of the city or any part of any street, alley, park, avenue, lane, or highway within the city in connection with the development of a well for oil or gas, as that term is defined in section
157, or in connection with the operation of oil or gas leases or wells as that term is defined in section
157, unless such person has entered into a contract with the city agreeing to indemnify the city for liability imposed by law on the city for damage or loss to property and for personal injuries or death arising out of such operations on such property, lands, streets, alleys, parks, avenues, lanes or highways.
(b) It shall
be unlawful for any person to use any part of the property or land
of the city or any part of any street, alley, park, avenue, lane or
highway of the city in connection with such property, land, street,
alley, park, avenue, lane or highway without a policy of public liability
insurance and property damage insurance to be issued by a solvent
insurance company authorized to do business in the state, and to be
approved by the city clerk.
The amount of such insurance policy for liability for bodily
injury or death of one (1) person shall not be less than one million
dollars ($1,000,000.00) and for any one (1) accident not less than
one million dollars ($1,000,000.00) and for damage to property of
others shall not be less than one million dollars ($1,000,000.00).
The terms and conditions of such policy shall be such as to
insure such person against loss by liability imposed by law by reason
of any accidental personal injury or death to any person other than
the insured or his employees, or by reason of any loss or damage to
property of any person other than the insured or his employees. Such
policy shall provide for coverage of the assumed risk of the city
provided for in this section.
(Ordinance 1492 adopted 2/9/11; Ordinance 1577 adopted 5/14/13)
The following requirements shall apply to developing any well
for oil and gas within the city limits of Kilgore, Texas.
(Ordinance 1492 adopted 2/9/11; Ordinance 1577 adopted 5/14/13)
The development of any well for oil and gas for the purpose
of exploring for and producing oil and gas is prohibited within the
city boundaries within four hundred (400) feet of:
(1) Any
building that is residential, commercial, or industrial; occupied
or unoccupied; or owned by the city, by Gregg or Rusk County, or by
the State of Texas;
(2) Any
public or private school, and;
(3) A public-owned
park, a public-owned playground, or a public-owned ball park.
A permit for the development of any well for oil and gas within four hundred (400) feet of any of the above (subsections
(1)–
(3)) may be issued by the city if the application for such drilling permit shall include waivers by the owners of all such properties and/or buildings within the prohibited area.
(Ordinance 1492 adopted 2/9/11; Ordinance 1577 adopted 5/14/13)
Any form used to obtain written permission of the owner of any
building as required herein shall contain, as a minimum, the following
information:
(1) The
name and address of the owner;
(2) A clear
and unequivocal statement that the owner agrees to the application
for the permitting to develop any well for oil or gas as reflected
by the duly acknowledged signature of the owner appearing on said
form;
(3) A clear
and unequivocal statement that the owner may refuse to agree to the
permitting of the well;
(4) A statement
of notice to the owner that a permit to develop any well for oil or
gas will not be granted until such time as the applicant complies
with all the terms and provisions of this Chapter.
(Ordinance 1492 adopted 2/9/11; Ordinance 1577 adopted 5/14/13)
Any person desiring to develop any well for oil or gas within
the city shall first make application for a permit therefore to the
city clerk, which application shall set forth in writing the following
facts:
(1) The
date of such application;
(2) The
name of the applicant;
(3) The
address of the applicant;
(4) The
proposed site of the well, including the name of the fee owner; the
name of the lease owner; and a brief description of the land;
(5) The
type of derrick desired to be used (API recommended standards for
depth to be drilled);
(6) The
name of the operator;
(7) An oil
spill emergency plan, a copy of which will be placed in the office
of the emergency management coordinator;
(8) A materials
safety data sheet (that includes any chemical at the location) to
be placed in the office of the fire chief;
(9) Application
to, or permit from, the Texas Railroad Commission;
(10) Any
waiver shall be supported by a scaled drawing of the proposed distance
and an explanation of the need for such waiver.
(11) A
statement of the type of steel and/or lined, earthen reserve/drilling
mud pit(s) to be used and any request for additional capacity.
(Ordinance 1492 adopted 2/9/11; Ordinance 1577 adopted 5/14/13)
The application for a permit required by this chapter shall
be placed and kept on record by the city clerk as a part of the public
records of the city.
The city clerk shall provide copies of the permit application
to the fire chief (who is responsible for all sections of this chapter,
unless otherwise specified), to the chief building official, and to
the director of planning (who will assure compliance with the special
use permit regulations in this code).
(Ordinance 1492 adopted 2/9/11; Ordinance 1577 adopted 5/14/13)
Any applicant for a permit required by the chapter shall pay to the city the sum as provided in appendix
B to this code in advance for a permit to develop any well for oil and gas or redrilling for each well to be developed or redrilled, and any drilling permit granted in violation of this section shall be void.
(Ordinance 1492 adopted 2/9/11; Ordinance 1577 adopted 5/14/13)
When the applicant for a permit to develop any well for oil
and gas has complied with the provisions of this chapter, the city
clerk shall furnish a printed form of the permit which shall be in
the nature of a contract or franchise from the city to the applicant.
Such permit shall state therein the substantial regulative provisions
of this chapter and that the applicant agrees to comply with such
contract or franchise. Such instrument shall be signed by the applicant
and the mayor or the mayor pro tem in the name of the city, and shall
be executed in duplicate, one (1) copy to be retained by the city
and the other copy delivered to the applicant which shall constitute
his drilling permit, when so signed and executed, shall be binding
upon the applicant in every respect.
(Ordinance 1492 adopted 2/9/11; Ordinance 1577 adopted 5/14/13)
Full power and authority for the granting or refusal of a permit
to develop any well for oil and gas shall be vested in the city council,
and if the city council is of the opinion that the applicant has not
fully complied with the requirements of this chapter, it shall decline
to issue a permit.
(Ordinance 1492 adopted 2/9/11; Ordinance 1577 adopted 5/14/13)
If the permit for the well be refused, or if the applicant notifies the city council in writing that he does not elect to accept the permit as tendered and wishes to withdraw his application, or if the security of the applicant be not approved and the applicant notifies the city council in writing that he wishes to withdraw his application, then upon the happening of said events the fee filed with the application shall be returned to the applicant, except that there shall be retained therefrom by the City of Kilgore an amount as provided in appendix
B to this code as a processing fee.
(Ordinance 1492 adopted 2/9/11; Ordinance 1577 adopted 5/14/13)
If the development of any oil or gas well operations are not
begun within one hundred eighty (180) days after the granting of a
permit as required by this article, the permit shall become null and
void; provided, such permit may be extended by the city clerk by a
written extension before the termination of such one-hundred-eighty-day
period, upon a proper written excuse for delay in commencing the drilling
operations.
(Ordinance 1492 adopted 2/9/11; Ordinance 1577 adopted 5/14/13)
The city council may revoke any permit issued pursuant to this
article, upon proof and evidence that any provision of this chapter
is being violated by the permittee. If a permit is revoked, the permittee
may make direct application to the city council for a reissuance of
such permit at a regular meeting or at any special or called meeting
thereof, and the action of the commission thereon shall be final.
(Ordinance 1492 adopted 2/9/11; Ordinance 1577 adopted 5/14/13)
(a) In the
event a permit is issued by the city council under the terms of this
chapter for the development of any oil or gas well or redrilling of
a well, earth/dirt work may be commenced but no oilfield/drilling/rig
equipment may be moved onto the site until the permittee shall file
with the city clerk sufficient security in the form of cash, certificate
of deposit, a bond, or a letter of credit in such principal sum as
determined by the commission, but not to be less than two hundred
thousand dollars ($200,000.00).
(b) New
security.
If at any time the city council shall deem
any permittee’s security to be insufficient for any reason,
it may require the permittee to file a new security.
(c) Any
security required under the provisions of this section will be conditioned
on the penalty of forfeiture to the City of Kilgore on the following:
(1) That
permittee will comply with all the terms and conditions of this chapter.
(2) That
permittee will promptly pay all fines, penalties, or other assessments
imposed upon permittee by reason of his breach of any of the terms,
provisions, and conditions of this chapter.
(3) That
permittee will remedy any and all damage to streets, curbs, gutters,
water lines, fire hydrants, and other property of the city, occasioned
in any manner by permittee.
(4) Maintenance of the drill site shall be according to the provisions of Article II [sic], section
173.
(5) That
permittee will indemnify and hold harmless the city from any and all
liability growing out of or attributable to the granting of this permit
or any of permittee’s actions with respect to the development
of any well for oil and gas.
(d) Reduction
in principal amount.
If after completion of a well, the
permittee has complied with all of the provisions of this chapter,
such as to removing derrick, clearing premises, etc., he may apply
to the city council to have the security reduced to a sum of not less
than ten thousand dollars ($10,000.00) for the remainder of the time
the well produces without reworking. During reworking operations,
the amount of the security shall be increased to the original amount
of not less than two hundred thousand [dollars] ($200,000.00)[.]
(e) Violations
of conditions.
It shall be unlawful for the principal
of any security filed in accord with this section to violate any condition
of such security.
(Ordinance 1492 adopted 2/9/11; Ordinance 1577 adopted 5/14/13)
(a) In addition
to the security required by this division, each permittee, prior to
the issuance of the permit and commencement of actual development
of any well for oil and gas operations shall file with the city clerk
a certificate or certificates of insurance showing that the permittee
has, in full force and effect, a policy or policies of standard comprehensive
public liability covering bodily injuries and property damage by an
insurance company authorized to do business within the State of Texas,
naming the permittee and the city. Such policy or policies, in the
aggregate, shall provide for the following minimum coverage:
(1) For
bodily injury or death, one million dollars ($1,000,000.00) as to
any one (1) person and three million dollars ($3,000,000.00) as to
any one (1) accident.
(2) For
public liability for damage to property of others, one million dollars
($1,000,000.00).
In addition, prior to the issuance of the permit, permittee
shall file with the city clerk a certificate or certificates of insurance
showing that the permittee has in full force and effect a policy or
policies of blow-out or cost of well control insurance in an amount
not less than one million dollars ($1,000,000.00) for each well, subject
to a deductible amount of not more than one hundred thousand dollars
($100,000.00).
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(b) Cancellation.
Such insurance policy or policies shall not be materially altered,
modified, or canceled without written notice from the insurance carrier
to the city clerk at least thirty (30) days prior to the effective
date of such cancellation.
The city shall be named as “an additional named insured”.
In the event the insurance policy or policies are materially altered,
modified, or canceled, the permit granted shall be terminated and
the permittee’s rights to operate under the permit shall cease
until the permittee files the appropriate insurance required herein.
(c) It shall
be unlawful for any person to develop any well for oil and gas within
the city unless such person has entered into a contract agreeing to
defend and hold harmless the city and its officers, agents and employees,
from and against all damages, claims, losses, demands, suits, judgments
and costs, including reasonable attorneys’ fees and expenses,
arising out of, or resulting from, the drilling operations caused
in whole or in part by any negligent act or omission of such person,
or his contractor or subcontractor, or anyone directly or indirectly
employed by any one of them or anyone for whose acts any of them may
be liable, regardless of whether or not it is caused in part by the
party hereby indemnified.
(Ordinance 1492 adopted 2/9/11; Ordinance 1577 adopted 5/14/13)
(a) That
permittee will promptly clear the premises of all litter, trash, waste,
and other substances used, allowed or occurring in the drilling operations
and shall grade, level, and restore said property to the reasonably
same surface condition, as nearly as practicable, as existing when
operations for developing any well for oil and gas were first commenced,
or as otherwise directed by the chief building inspector.
(b) That
prior to commencing drilling operations, the fire chief and/or the
fire marshal shall notify the chief building inspector, who shall
photograph the drilling site, streets surrounding the site, and any
public utilities appurtenances for “before” photographs.
In the case of the completion of a producing well or a nonproducing
well, or exploration, the chief building inspector shall be responsible
for photographing the site, surrounding streets, and nearby utilities
appurtenances for “after” pictures to assess any changes,
as far as damages, in public property or the area of the well site.
The permittee shall be responsible for any damages to the above
during any drilling operations and shall begin to make the repairs
prescribed by the chief building inspector within thirty (30) days
of the completion of a producing or nonproducing well. Repairs shall
be completed by the end of an additional thirty (30) days. All street
repairs shall be made to the satisfaction of the street superintendent.
(c) The
drill site and all roads and drives providing vehicular ingress and
egress to the well site shall be maintained in such a manner as to
prevent dirt, dust, or other similar materials from such roads and
well site from being carried in or deposited by the elements into
the air or upon any public street, sidewalk, or other public property
or upon the property of another party.
(d) If said
well is completed as a producing well and actual production commences,
permittee shall construct and maintain a private road or roads (at
either the same location as the original access road or at a new location)
sufficient to provide vehicular ingress and egress to the well site
from a location along a public road, the entrance to such public road
to be approved by the chief building inspector and the street superintendent.
Said private road, at a minimum, shall be constructed of an
all-weather, oil-base material, maintained free of dust, dirt, or
mud, and in such a manner as to prevent the deposit therefrom of dirt,
dust, or other similar materials on, along, or upon any public street,
sidewalk, or other public property, or upon the property of a third
party. That portion of the private roadway located within the rights-of-way
of a public street of the City of Kilgore shall comply in every respect
to the construction standards for driveways of the City of Kilgore.
Such roadway shall be so maintained until said well is plugged and
abandoned.
(e) If said well is completed as a producing well, but no actual production commences within a ninety-day period of the completion, permittee will grade, level, and restore said property to the reasonable same surface condition (weather permitting), as nearly as practicable as existing when operations for the drilling of the well were first commenced, or as otherwise directed by the chief building inspector. Upon written notice by the permittee to the building inspector, the permittee may present good cause as to why the well had not been put in production. If good cause is shown, the city council, at its next regularly scheduled meeting may grant a thirty-day extension. After production is commenced, said private road shall be constructed and maintained in the manner set forth in subsection
(d) of this section.
(Ordinance 1492 adopted 2/9/11; Ordinance 1577 adopted 5/14/13)
The following regulations shall apply to operating oil and gas
wells.
(Ordinance 1492 adopted 2/9/11; Ordinance 1577 adopted 5/14/13)
(a) For
the purpose of this section, the term “operate oil or gas leases
or wells” shall include incidental cementing, cleaning out wells
and tubing, repairing equipment, putting raw products into containers
or pipelines for transmission, transmitting raw products from the
wells to the pipeline, operating pumping equipment, and operations
incidental to such enumerated operations.
(b) Insurance.
It shall be unlawful for any person to operate oil or gas leases
or wells within the city, unless such operation is covered by a policy
of public liability insurance and property damage insurance issued
by a solvent insurance company authorized to do business in the state,
and to be approved by the city clerk. The amount of such insurance
policy for liability for bodily injury or death of one (1) person
shall not be less than five hundred thousand dollars ($500,000.00)
and for any one (1) accident not less than one million dollars ($1,000,000.00)
and for damage to property of others shall not be less than five hundred
thousand dollars ($500,000.00). The terms and conditions of such policy
shall be such as to insure such person against loss by liability imposed
by law by reason of any accidental personal injury or death to any
person other than the insured or his employees, or by reason of loss
or damage to property of any person other than the insured or his
employees.
(c) For
a completed well, the permittee shall furnish a Texas Railroad Commission
P-4.
(d) It shall
be unlawful for any person to operate any well for oil and gas within
the city unless such person has entered into a contract agreeing to
defend and hold harmless the city and its officers, agents and employees,
from and against all damages, claims, losses, demands, suits, judgments
and costs, including reasonable attorneys’ fees and expenses,
arising out of or resulting from the operator’s operations caused
in whole or in part by any negligent act or omission of such person,
or his contractor or subcontractor, or anyone directly or indirectly
employed by any one (1) of them or anyone for whose acts any of them
may be liable, regardless of whether or not it is caused in part by
the party hereby indemnified.
(e) An operator
within the city will remedy any and all damage to streets, curbs,
gutters, water lines, fire hydrants, and other property of the city,
occasioned in any manner by the operator.
(f)
(1) The
premises of any oil or gas well, storage tanks, tank batteries or
related appurtenances, shall be kept in a clean and sanitary condition,
free from rubbish of every character, to the satisfaction of the city
health officer, at all times during the drilling operation and as
long thereafter as oil and gas is being produced therefrom. An operator
will promptly clear all premises of all litter, trash, waste, and
other substances used, allowed or occurring in the operations. Any
operator within the city shall keep the well site, including storage
tanks, tank batteries and related appurtenances, clear of all weeds/grass
over twelve (12) inches in compliance with the City of Kilgore Texas
adopted International Property Maintenance Code.
(2) All
above ground equipment (storage tanks, dog houses, separators, pumpjacks,
etc) are required to be painted. The color of paint and/or design
on the pumpjack or tanks is hereby left to the discretion of the lease
operator or owner.
(A) Anytime that the majority (approx 50%) of the paint on the equipment
has become damaged due to rust, flaking, peeling or discoloration,
the equipment must be repainted.
(B) The use of murals, themes or other designs are highly encouraged,
but not required.
All painting of above ground equipment must follow the City
of Kilgore Development Code, [Article IV.], Division B "Sign Regulations."
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The City of Kilgore Fire Marshal or his designee shall have
authority to enforce this subsection of the Oil and Gas Ordinance.
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(Ordinance 1492 adopted 2/9/11; Ordinance 1577 adopted 5/14/13)
Motive power for all operations after completion of drilling
operations shall be by electricity or properly muffled, treated, odorized
gas; gasoline; or diesel engines. The mufflers shall be approved by
the chief building inspector prior to their use.
(Ordinance 1492 adopted 2/9/11)
The following shall apply to reworking and redrilling wells.
(Ordinance 1492 adopted 2/9/11)
In case of any wells that have previously been developed for any oil and gas or as injection wells within the city which the operator desires to redrill, deepen, rework, recomplete, or plug back, or convert from or to an injection well or from or to a production well in any manner, and for which the Texas Railroad Commission requires a permit, before commencing such redrilling, deepening, reworking, recompleting, or back operation, the operator shall obtain a permit from the city in accordance with the provisions of this chapter and shall pay to the city, in advance, the sum as provided in appendix
B to this code for a permit for each well. The operator shall furnish a materials safety data sheet (that includes any chemical at the location) to be filed with the fire chief. This shall include chemicals used by any subcontractor who will be working on the well. In case of any well already drilled for which the Texas Railroad Commission does not require a permit, no permit fee for such work will be charged by the city.
(Ordinance 1492 adopted 2/9/11)
When the applicant for a redrilling or reworking permit has
complied with the provisions of this chapter, the city clerk shall
furnish a printed form of the permit which shall be in the nature
of a contract or franchise from the city to the applicant. Such permit
shall state therein the substantial regulative provisions of this
chapter and that the applicant agrees to comply with such contract
or franchise. Such instrument shall be signed by the applicant and
the mayor or the mayor pro tem in the name of the city, and shall
be executed in duplicate, one (1) copy to be retained by the city
and the other copy delivered to the applicant which shall constitute
his drilling permit.
The provisions of such redrilling or reworking permit, when so signed and executed, shall be binding upon the applicant in every respect. The provisions of this section (Security required) section
171 shall apply to an applicant granted a redrilling or reworking permit.
(Ordinance 1492 adopted 2/9/11)
Full power and authority for the granting or refusal of a redrilling
or reworking permit shall be vested in the city council and if the
city council is of the opinion that the applicant has not fully complied
with the requirements of this chapter, it shall decline to issue a
permit.
(Ordinance 1492 adopted 2/9/11)
If the permit for the redrilling or reworking of a well be refused, or if the applicant notifies the city council in writing that he does not elect to accept the permit as tendered and wishes to withdraw his application, or if the security of the applicant be not approved and the applicant notifies the city council in writing that he wishes to withdraw his application, then upon the happening of said events, the fee filed with the application shall be returned to the applicant, except that there shall be retained therefrom by the City of Kilgore as provided in appendix
B to this code as a processing fee.
(Ordinance 1492 adopted 2/9/11)
The following shall apply to plugging and abandoning oil and
gas wells.
(Ordinance 1492 adopted 2/9/11)
(a) Plugging
of wells shall be according to the specifications of the Texas Railroad
Commission, Texas Water Commission, and any other state or federal
regulatory body or agency having jurisdiction over the operations
and the plugging of oil and gas production wells.
(b) No producing oil or gas well shall be permanently plugged unless a permit is first obtained from the fire chief or fire marshal. The application for such permit shall give the name and address of the applicant, the location of the well to be plugged, and the time and place of such plugging and be accompanied by an application fee as provided in appendix
B to this code. The plugging shall be done in the presence of the fire marshal or some person designated by him, and notice of intention to do such plugging shall be given to the fire marshal not less than three (3) days prior to such plugging.
(Ordinance 1492 adopted 2/9/11)
The abandonment of wells shall be according to the regulations
of the Texas Railroad Commission.
(Ordinance 1492 adopted 2/9/11)
The owner or operator of any oil and gas lease, upon abandonment
of any well, shall within ninety (90) days from the date of such well
abandonment remove all concrete pumping unit foundations; unburied
flow lines; and all machinery, equipment and tanks or other apparatus
used in connection with the production of oil and gas or the operation
of such lease. Additionally, belowground flow lines shall be flushed
with fresh water. This requirement also shall apply to temporary abandonments.
The operator shall remedy any and all damage to streets, curbs,
gutters, water lines, fire hydrants, and other property of the city,
occasioned in any manner by the operator in the abandonment of said
well.
The operator will clear the premises of all litter, trash, waste,
and other substances used, allowed, or occurring in the abandonment
operations and shall after abandonment, grade, level, and restore
said property to the reasonably same surface condition, as nearly
as practicable, as existing when operations for the drilling of the
well were first commenced, or as otherwise directed by the chief building
inspector.
(Ordinance 1492 adopted 2/9/11)
The following safety measure shall apply to development of any
well for oil and gas.
(Ordinance 1492 adopted 2/9/11)
All well locations shall bear a sign with a local emergency
telephone number, which shall also be current and filed at the fire
department. The sign shall also include the name of the current operator
of the lease or well and the lease name. Any storage tanks, tank batteries
and related appurtenances not enclosed by the same fence as the well
site, must also contain a separate sign with the above-mentioned information.
All buried flow lines shall have identification signs. The City of
Kilgore Fire Marshal or his designee shall have the authority to enforce
this section of this division.
(Ordinance 1520 adopted 10/25/11)
From the start of the erection of a derrick, mast, or gin-pole
until the well is abandoned and plugged or completed as a producer
and enclosed with a fence, as provided in this chapter, the permittee
shall keep a watchman on duty on the premises at all times. It shall
not be necessary to keep an extra watchman on duty on the premises
when other workmen of permittee are on the premises.
(Ordinance 1492 adopted 2/9/11)
No person engaged in developing any well for oil and gas or
operating a well for oil or gas shall permit or allow any surface
equipment or property to extend into the streets, alleys, or rights-of-way
of the city so that it will, in reason, interfere with the regular
flow of traffic.
When excessive trucking is required, the City of Kilgore Chief
of Police shall be notified.
(Ordinance 1492 adopted 2/9/11)
No person shall make any excavation or construct any line for
the conveyance of fuel, water, or minerals, on, under, and through
the streets without the express permission of the city, in writing,
and then only in strict compliance with the ordinances of the city.
(Ordinance 1492 adopted 2/9/11)
No person engaged in developing any well for oil and gas and
operation of an oil or gas well within the city shall permit unburned
gas to escape into the air or maintain a flare for the burning of
such gas at a lesser distance than forty (40) feet above the surface
of the ground. Said flare shall be permitted only for one (1) forty-five
(45) consecutive calendar day period.
Any such flare or vent line shall be equipped with an automatic
leak detection system connected to a site alarm, an automatic shutdown
device, a flame arrester, an automatic flare lighter, flare stream
fluid removal equipment, and a vapor recovery unit.
(Ordinance 1492 adopted 2/9/11)
Any storage tank shall be in compliance with the NPFA-30 (Tank
Storage) although no storage tank may be constructed within fifty
(50) feet of any building or street.
(Ordinance 1492 adopted 2/9/11)
It shall be unlawful to develop any well for oil and gas or
to operate a well for oil or gas without, at all times, keeping on
the premises and maintaining fire extinguishers of a type suitable
for the fighting of oil and gas fires. Such equipment shall meet with
the approval of the fire chief and/or fire marshal of the city.
(Ordinance 1492 adopted 2/9/11)
It shall be unlawful for any person developing any well for
oil and gas operating, drilling, cleaning, repairing, or equipping
any oil well within the city to allow the escape, spilling, overflow,
or accumulation, in any manner whatsoever, of any surplus of surface
oil in any amount. Wells being swabbed or unloaded to the atmosphere
shall be unloaded through a vessel capable of holding the fluids.
(Ordinance 1492 adopted 2/9/11)
It shall be unlawful for any person engaged in the operation
of a railway loading rack through which crude oil or petroleum products
are transferred from a pipeline, tank, or other receptacle to railway
cars, trucks, or other receptacles, or any person making use of such
loading rack facilities, to allow the spilling, overflow, leakage,
or accumulation of any crude oil or other flammable/inflammable petroleum
products in or about any part of such loading rack equipment or about
the premises thereof, in such any amount,.
(Ordinance 1492 adopted 2/9/11)
It shall be unlawful for any person to allow the accumulation,
leakage, or deposit, in any manner whatsoever, of crude oil or other
flammable/inflammable petroleum products in or about any lease tank,
storage tank, fire wall, or other place used in the storage or transportation
of oil, in such any amount.
(Ordinance 1492 adopted 2/9/11)
It shall be unlawful for any person owning or operating any
oil well, oil lease, oil tank, or storage facility, oil loading rack,
or other facility used in the production, storage, transportation,
sale or shipment of crude oil or petroleum products to allow crude
oil, fuel oil, salt water, or other flammable/inflammable products
to drain out of or pass through any open surface ditch, trough, or
other exposed surface conduit.
(Ordinance 1492 adopted 2/9/11)
It shall be unlawful for any person owning or operating any
oil well, oil lease, oil tank, or storage facility or loading rack
facility, to maintain, use, or continue to use or operate, in any
manner whatsoever, such oil well, oil lease, oil tank, or storage
facility or loading rack facility, in, on, or about which there may
be an accumulation or deposit of surface oil or any other flammable/inflammable
petroleum products in any amount.
(Ordinance 1492 adopted 2/9/11)
(a) If any
oil well, oil tank, or storage facility, oil loading rack, or other
facility mentioned in this chapter is located within four hundred
(400) feet of any building or within such distance of a producing
oil well, the accumulation, spillage, leakage, or deposit of any amount
of crude oil or other flammable petroleum products shall be deemed
the creation and maintenance of a “fire hazard” as referred
to in this section.
(b) The fire chief, fire marshal, or any other authorized officer of the city, shall be authorized to enter upon the premises of any person drilling or operating an oil well within the city, or maintaining or using any oil tank, pipeline, loading rack, or other facility named in this section through to make a thorough inspection of such premises and property with reference to the accumulation or deposit of crude oil or flammable/inflammable petroleum products, and the fire chief, the fire marshal, or his authorized officer or representative shall be directed and instructed to make such inspection at reasonable times for such purpose. If the fire chief, fire marshal, or his authorized representative finds an accumulation or deposit of crude oil or flammable/inflammable petroleum or other facility mentioned in this chapter in such an amount as to create a fire hazard as defined in subsection
(a), he shall notify the person so owning, maintaining, or in any manner using such facilities to thoroughly remove the surplus accumulation or deposit of crude oil or flammable/inflammable petroleum products within three (3) days after such inspection. For the purpose of this section, it shall be sufficient for the fire chief, fire marshal, or his authorized representative to give such notice to any person employed or working on or about the affected well, lease, storage tank, pipeline, loading racks, or other facility, or the person in charge of or supervising the same at the time such inspection is made.
(Ordinance 1492 adopted 2/9/11)
The derrick used shall be API recommended standards for the
depth to be drilled. A derrick of standard quality and/or proportion
shall be used. Industry and OSHA standards shall be adhered to in
the use of any such derrick.
(Ordinance 1492 adopted 2/9/11)
(a) It shall
be unlawful for any person to operate or permit to be operated in
connection with the development of any well for oil and gas, completing,
equipping, operating, producing, maintaining, or abandoning of a well,
any engine, compressor, or motor-driven machinery of any type which
creates a sound level greater than seventy-five (75) dB when measured
at a distance of four hundred (400) feet from the engine.
Sound level measurement shall be made with a sound level meter
conforming as a minimum to the requirement of American National Standards
Institute S1.4-1971 Type 2 or its successor publication and be set
to an A-weighted response. However, the restriction of maximum sound
level shall not apply to fracturing operations in connection with
a well when such operations are conducted during the hours of 7:00
a.m. and 7:00 p.m.
(b) No drilling
rig or derrick except a regulation production pumping unit shall be
permitted to stand or remain on the premises of any well for a period
longer than thirty (30) days after the completion of the well in connection
with which the rig is used. Upon written notice by the permittee to
the city clerk, the permittee may present good cause as to why a production
unit could not be removed within thirty (30) days of completion of
the well. The city council at its next regularly scheduled meeting
shall consider such request and may grant thirty (30) days extension.
(c) No timbers,
planks or other wooden objects shall be allowed to remain on or in
a derrick, except for such time as such wooden objects are actually
in use for working on a well or derrick, for a continuous period of
time; and on the cessation of the use of such wooden objects for any
period of time, they shall be immediately removed. The owner and operator
of any oil well shall be responsible for seeing that this section
is strictly complied with, and the persons who actually place such
objects on or in a derrick, as well as their employers, shall likewise
be equally responsible for seeing that this section is strictly complied
with.
(Ordinance 1492 adopted 2/9/11)
(a) All
casing, including surface protection and production strings, shall
be either seamless steel or equivalent quality oil well casing. Each
production string of casing must comply with at least the minimum
internal pressure yield strength, computed in accordance with API
specifications for casing and tubing #5C-T. Each joint and length
of each particular production casing string shall, prior to setting,
unconditionally pass a hydrostatic pressure test to API specifications.
(b) Oil
shall be prevented from being sprayed around such derrick and the
premises, and from being blown through the air from such well into
such premises and any adjoining property by use of safety valves,
blow-out preventers, or oil savers.
(Ordinance 1492 adopted 2/9/11)
It shall be unlawful to drill a well for oil or gas without:
(1) Setting
and cementing a string of casing to a depth from the surface of the
earth as specified by the Texas Water Commission, or any other state
or federal agency, provided any cementing process approved by the
Texas Railroad Commission may be used.
(2) Notifying
the fire chief and/or fire marshal of the reaching of these depths
and giving him an opportunity to inspect such activity and to determine
that a proper amount of casing is set out and cemented.
(Ordinance 1492 adopted 2/9/11)
All oil and gas wells hereafter drilled, upon completion, shall
be equipped with an adequate wellhead to be maintained with proper
fittings and valves as permanent equipment upon such well, which shall
remain during the life and operation of the well.
(Ordinance 1492 adopted 2/9/11)
No well shall be developed for oil and gas within the city limits
without proper equipment on surface casing with a B.O.P. with one
(1) blind ram and one (1) pipe ram with one (1) hydrill bag preventer
on top of B.O.P. stack with minimum test pressure of six thousand
(6,000) pounds and minimum working pressure of three thousand (3,000)
pounds. If any such well is drilled to the Cotton Valley or Smackover,
then B.O.P. equipment shall be of minimum test pressure of ten thousand
(10,000) pounds and have a working pressure of five thousand (5,000)
pounds with one (1) hydrill bag preventer on top of the B.O.P. stack.
A blow-out preventer (B.O.P.) shall either be hydraulic or manually
operated. When a hydraulic operated blow-out preventer is used, it
also must be capable of being operated manually. The B.O.P. shall
be tested at least once in every twenty-four-hour period, and all
control equipment shall be in good working condition and order at
all times. The fire chief and/or the fire marshal shall periodically
witness such test of the blow-out preventer stack.
(Ordinance 1492 adopted 2/9/11)
All tubing used in any well within the city limits shall be
steel tubing and meet API standards and specifications for such depth
as required for the well.
(Ordinance 1492 adopted 2/9/11)
No well shall be developed for oil and gas within the city limits
without using mud as the drilling fluid after the setting of surface
casing as provided in this section. Prior to the time the well reaches
a total depth of five thousand (5,000) feet or the depth of the first
known or encountered oil or gas bearing horizon, whichever is the
lesser depth, the weight of the mud-laden drilling fluid shall be
at all times maintained at not less than nine (9) pounds per gallon.
After the well reaches a total depth of five thousand (5,000)
feet or the depth of the first known or encountered oil or gas bearing
horizon, whichever is the lesser depth, the weight of the mud-laden
drilling fluid shall be at all times maintained at such weight as
will provide an adequate hydrostatic head needed to control any formation
pressure anticipated to be penetrated by the well bore. In reworking
a well, a drilling fluid shall be at all times maintained at such
weight as will provide hydrostatic head equal to formation pressure.
(Ordinance 1492 adopted 2/9/11)
It shall be unlawful for any person connected with the development
of any well for oil and gas or reworking operations of any well within
the city limits to take and to complete any drill stem test or tests
except during the daylight hours and then only if the well effluent
during the test is produced through an adequate oil and gas separator
to storage tanks for oil (or flared over the reserve tank for gas),
and the effluent remaining in the drill pipe at the time the tool
is closed is flushed to the surface by circulating drilling fluid
down the annulus and up the drill pipe.
(Ordinance 1492 adopted 2/9/11)
Any well developed for oil or gas within the city limits shall
be equipped with a bradenhead with a working pressure of not less
than three thousand (3,000) pounds per square inch. The bradenhead
installed on the surface casing shall be equipped with a fitting having
a working pressure rating of not less than three thousand (3,000)
pounds per square inch. The bradenhead pressure shall be checked at
least once each calendar month and, if pressure is found to exist,
proper remedial measures shall be taken immediately to eliminate the
source and the existence of the pressure.
(Ordinance 1492 adopted 2/9/11)
A pumping well tree shall include the installation of blind
rams below the pumping tee and a stuffing box that can be repacked
under pressure. The pumping unit shall have a flow line high pressure
shutdown device and a stuffing box leak detection and shutdown.
The wellhead shall include the equipment used to maintain surface
control of a well including the casing head, tubing head, and the
Christmas tree pertaining to the wellhead.
The Christmas tree shall include two (2) master valves and one
(1) wing valve, control valves, pressure gauges and the choke assembly
at the top of a well to control the flow of oil and gas after the
well has been drilled and completed.
All Christmas trees, valves, and vessels shall be of new construction
or tested. The Christmas tree and all wellhead connections on each
well drilled within the city limits shall follow API standards and
specifications for a given depth.
All piping and fittings connecting the wellhead to an oil/gas
separator shall have at least the same minimum working pressure and
minimum test pressure as hereinabove specified for Christmas trees
and wellhead connections. In the event the surface shut-in pressure
of any well in the city limits exceeds two hundred (200) pounds per
square inch, the flow wing of the Christmas tree shall be equipped
with a fail-safe high-low safety valve in addition to wing valve.
The safety valve shall be maintained in accordance with manufacturer’s
specifications.
(Ordinance 1492 adopted 2/9/11)
If any person desires to pull or remove the tubing now in place in any present producing well within the city, before doing so such person shall give notice to the fire chief or fire marshal of such intention, in which event sections
204,
205, and
206 shall apply to all present wells from and after the time the tubing may be pulled or removed therefrom. When such tubing is pulled, the operator shall install a dual blow-out preventer on the wellhead as provided in sections
204,
205, and
206 and such rods and tubes shall be pulled through an adequate blow-out preventer of standard manufacture. The operator shall use a customary approved method of preventing the oil from flowing through the tubing in the withdrawal or installation of the same.
(Ordinance 1492 adopted 2/9/11)
All pumping wells shall be equipped with a removable standing
valve or tubing bleeder in order than that the oil contained in the
tubing above the standing valve can drain back into the hole rather
than be brought to the surface. All rods shall be pulled through a
rod stripper with new rubbers in order that the flow of oil through
the tubing and around the rods may be restricted and prevented from
spilling, overflowing, or escaping and thus forming a fire hazard.
Such rod stripper shall be in the nature of a blow-out preventer
for the rods on such equipment of standard manufacture as will prevent
oil from flowing between the rods and the tubing and maintaining control
of the well at all times.
All reasonable and practicable efforts should be made to avoid
pulling a wet tubing string (one containing well fluids), including,
but not limited to, perforating tubing for drainage. If a tubing string
must be pulled wet, then the fire department shall be notified so
that equipment necessary to prevent spillage or fire hazards can be
provided at the well location.
(Ordinance 1492 adopted 2/9/11)
(a) All
wells, tanks, or tank batteries located within the city shall be enclosed
in a heavy steel fence of chain-link construction and of standard
manufacture. Such fence shall be a six (6) feet industrial chain-link
with three (3) strands of barbed wire for an overall height of seven
(7) feet.
The corner metal posts used for such fence shall have an inside
dimension of two and one-half (2-1/2) inches and the metal posts used
as line posts shall have a two-inch inside dimension, and the gate
frames for such fence shall have a one-inch inside dimension. Where
desired, a good grade line pipe may be used for such posts; provided,
such pipe shall be finished with at least one (1) undercoat of rust
preventive primer and at least one (1) outer coat of aluminum paint,
to be applied at the time of construction. Each fence shall be constructed
with a tubular, galvanized iron railing, having a one-inch inside
dimension, which shall be attached with the posts and shall be two
(2) inches below the exposed upper edges of the posts.
(b) The
galvanized fencing material used in such fence shall be of two-inch
mesh and shall be constructed of not less than eleven-gauge wire.
(c) Such
fence shall be completed with a gate of the same design and manufacture,
which gate shall be kept locked with a substantial locking device
except where access is made under the direction and authority of the
owner.
All pumping wells drilled and completed in the future, tank,
or tank battery, within the city shall likewise be enclosed with a
fence as above specified. This provision shall also apply to any equipment
in operation at or in connection with any pumping well or any tank
battery within the city where such pumping equipment or tanks are
not actually located at the well.
(d) At the
time the zoning special use permit is considered by the planning and
zoning board and/or the city council, varying and/or different fencing
requirements may be stipulated as a special condition to the special
use permit to conform to existing deed restrictions or to allow materials
requested by the residents within two hundred (200) feet of the drill
site tract. Regardless of the type of fencing, the minimum height
shall be six (6) feet with three (3) strands of barbed wire for an
overall height of seven (7) feet.
(e) The
fence around the location shall be maintained in good repair and shall
be kept free of weeds, trees and vines.
(f) The
City of Kilgore Fire Marshal or his designee shall have authority
to enforce this section of this division.
(Ordinance 1492 adopted 2/9/11)
(a) Adequate
provision of disposal.
Any person drilling or operating
an oil or gas well shall make adequate provision for the disposal
of salt water, frac fluid or other impurities which may be brought
to the surface of the earth in such manner as not to contaminate the
water supply of the city or destroy vegetation.
(b) Escape
prohibited.
It shall be unlawful for any person to store
salt water or frac fluid in or allow salt water or frac fluid to flow
or escape into any earthen pit within the city, and it shall be unlawful
to dig or cause any such pits for such purposes. It shall also be
unlawful to allow any salt water or frac fluid to flow or escape onto
the surface or under the ground within the city.
(c) Injection
wells prohibited.
It shall be unlawful for any person
to dig, bore, drill, or cause to be dug, bored, or drilled, any well
within the city for the purpose of using such well as a salt water
injection well or pumping salt water or frac fluid into the same,
and no well within the city shall be used as a salt water injection
well, nor shall salt water be pumped into such well or allowed to
flow or escape into the well.
(d) Disposal
outside city.
Any person drilling or operating any well
for the production of oil or gas shall make adequate provision for
the disposal of salt water, frac fluid or other impurities produced
from such well, which disposal shall be outside the city at a Texas
Railroad Commission approved site.
(Ordinance 1492 adopted 2/9/11)
(a) It shall
be unlawful for any person to permit to escape within the city any
mud, water, waste oil, slush, or other waste matter from any reserve
pit, storage tank, or oil well located within the city, or from any
premises within the city developed or being developed for oil or gas
purposes, into the alleys, streets, gutters, or sewers of the city,
or onto adjoining lots, lands, or leases within the city.
(b) Steel
or lined, earthen reserve or drilling mud pits shall be permitted
in connection with drilling operations. Pits may not exceed a total
capacity of one thousand (1,000) barrels per drill site.
At the time an application for an oil/gas drilling permit is
made, the operator shall state the use of steel and/or lined, earthen
pits, and include any request for additional site pit capacity not
to exceed two thousand (2,000) barrels. Prior to the city council
issuance of a drilling permit, the fire marshal shall make a visual
site assessment and give a written recommendation on the operator’s
request to the city council on the use of the type and capacity of
pit(s) to be used.
A steel pit and its contents shall be removed from the premises
and drilling site within thirty (30) days after the completion of
the well. Lined, earthen pits shall be emptied of contents, filled,
and leveled within thirty (30) days, unless pits are fenced as described
in Section 17-87 [213], or an extension is requested of, and granted
by, the city council.
(c) In removing
such reserve or drilling mud pits, it shall be unlawful to permit
the contents thereof to escape onto adjacent lands, lots, or property
or into the streets, alleys, gutters, or sewers in the city. The premises
shall be cleaned and restored to a smooth even state.
(Ordinance 1492 adopted 2/9/11)
(a) Maximum
capacity of single tanks.
It shall be unlawful for any
person to construct, build, maintain, or operate, or cause to be constructed,
built, maintained, or operated, within the city, any tank or receptacle
of steel or any other material having a capacity of more than one
thousand (1,000) barrels. Such prohibition shall include, and is intended
to include, all tanks or receptacles used for the collection, storing
or distribution of oil having a capacity of more than one thousand
(1,000) barrels. Gasoline must be stored according to the City of
Kilgore Fire Code.
(b) Maximum
capacity of battery of tanks.
It shall be unlawful for
any person to construct, build, or maintain any battery of tanks within
the city where such battery or collection of tanks shall exceed a
total capacity of one thousand five hundred (1,500) barrels, or such
tanks shall be constructed or built in close proximity of each other,
or in such a manner and location as to constitute an unusual fire
hazard.
(c) Permit
to construct; safety measures; inspection.
(1) Before any tank, as defined in this chapter, for the collection, storage or distribution of oil or its products shall be built, constructed, moved, or replaced within the city, an application shall be made to the fire chief or fire marshal for a permit to allow the construction, moving, or replacing of such tank, and there shall be deposited with such application the sum as provided in appendix
B to this code as a permit fee for each tank. Upon such application being made to the city, the fire chief or fire marshal shall make an inspection of the premises and location at which such tanks are desired to be constructed by such applicant, and the applicant shall furnish with such application a diagram showing the proposed location of the tanks, giving the capacity of them and the specifications to be constructed, and also showing the approximate distance of such tank locations from all adjacent wells, houses, barns, or other structures.
(2) Any
tank hereafter constructed within the city, whether it is a replacement
or otherwise, shall be a welded tank with vent stack valves and with
flame arresters, pressure vacuum vent valves with flame arresters,
and pressure vacuum thief covers, and all tanks shall be grounded.
The operators and their authorized agents shall be responsible for
keeping the thief hatch covers closed. No tank battery shall have
over one thousand five hundred (1,500) barrels of storage, and no
tank shall be built closer than one hundred (100) feet to any other
structure, nor closer than fifty (50) feet to any property or street
right-of-way line.
A steel conventional separator and such other steel tanks and
appurtenances as are necessary for treating oil, with each of such
facilities to be vapor-tight, may be constructed and operated. Each
oil/gas separator shall be equipped with a regulation pressure relief
safety valve. A heater treater may not be placed closer than one hundred
fifty (150) feet to any tank, nor closer than fifty (50) feet to any
property or street right-of-way line.
(3) After
the application required in subparagraph (1) of this subsection shall
have been made and the plat or diagram furnished, the fire chief or
fire marshal or his authorized representative shall make an inspection
of such premises and proposed location and after such inspection shall
make a report either approving or disapproving the construction of
such tanks at the location proposed, as well as the type of tanks
proposed to be erected. If such application should be approved, a
permit for the construction of such tanks shall be issued, but if
such application should not be approved by the fire chief or fire
marshal, or his authorized representative, a report in writing setting
objections, if any, to the construction of such tanks at the location
proposed in such application, shall be made a part of the fire department’s
records.
(4) If
such application should be refused, the opinion and judgment of the
fire chief or fire marshal shall be final and conclusive; provided,
however, any applicant whose application may be refused may appeal
to the city council at any regular meeting thereof.
(d) Fire
walls.
Any person receiving a permit provided for in
this section shall be required to construct a fire wall around each
tank battery erected within the city, which fire wall shall be constructed
to such a height as may be necessary to hold and restrain one hundred
fifty (150) percent of the fluid capacity of the tanks enclosed by
such fire wall if such oil or oil products should escape from such
tanks and so as to prevent the oil and/or oil products from escaping
to and spreading upon any adjacent land or property.
The fire wall shall be constructed of earth or metal. If a metal
fire wall is used it shall:
(1) Be
of a factory-manufactured galvanized, corrugated steel of not less
than 10 gauge;
(2) Have
the base of the steel imbedded in the ground not less than five (5)
inches;
(3) Have
support posts equivalent to three-inch Schedule 40 steel pipe, ASTM
A 53 Type F, have a section modulus of not less than 1.72 and be sufficiently
anchored in concrete; and
(4) Have
seam sealant on all seamed surfaces between all bolts for the full
height of all overlapping sheets.
Round metal fire walls shall have support posts at each seam.
Square metal fire walls shall have support posts on each side of the
corner seam. There also will be a support post midpoint between the
two (2) seams. Oblong metal fire walls shall have a support post at
each seam. There also will be a support post midpoint between each
seam.
|
(Ordinance 1492 adopted 2/9/11)
Any violation of the laws of the state in reference to fire
walls, fire protection and locations shall be a violation of this
chapter.
(Ordinance 1492 adopted 2/9/11)
The following shall apply to administration of oil and gas wells
and developing any well for oil and gas.
(Ordinance 1492 adopted 2/9/11)
In every instance under this chapter where discretion is vested
in any individual official or officer of the city to determine the
compliance or noncompliance with the provisions of this chapter by
the person drilling or operating for oil or gas, such person shall,
in the case of an adverse finding, on the part of such official or
officer with regard to such fact of the compliance or noncompliance
with the provisions in this chapter, have the right, whether or not
such express right is elsewhere given, of appeal to the city council
and such appeal shall be heard at the next regular meeting, or at
a special or called meeting of the city council, whose determination
thereon shall be final.
(Ordinance 1492 adopted 2/9/11)
This chapter shall not be construed as repealing, altering or
otherwise affecting the validity and binding force of any ordinance
pertaining to fire protection, health or sanitation, heretofore or
hereafter passed by the city.
(Ordinance 1492 adopted 2/9/11)
Any violation of the standards of the industry, including, but
not limited to, API and OSHA; the laws of the state; or any rules,
regulations, or requirements of any state or federal regulatory body
having jurisdiction in reference to drilling, completing, equipping,
operating, producing, maintaining, or abandoning an oil or gas well
or related appurtenances, equipment, or facilities, or in reference
to fire walls, fire protection, blow-out protection, safety protection,
or convenience of persons or property, shall also be a violation of
this chapter and punishable as such.
(Ordinance 1492 adopted 2/9/11)