Judge halts NC fracking commission from issuing drilling permits
20-05-2015 17:55
Superior Court Judge Donald Stephens issued an order enjoining the N.C. Mining and Energy Commission, which has the effect of re-establishing a moratorium on fracking. Stephens sided with a local environmental organization and a landowner who sued the commission, the Department of Environment and Natural Resources and the state.
A Wake County judge on Wednesday barred the state commission that regulates fracking from issuing drilling permits, pending the outcome of a lawsuit between the governor and legislative leaders.

The judge also granted a motion by some of the defendants to put the case on hold until the resolution of Gov. Pat McCrory’s lawsuit against General Assembly leaders challenging its authority to appoint a majority of members to commissions, specifically the Coal Ash Management Commission.
The lawsuit by the Haw River Assembly and Lee County resident Keely Wood Puricz, whose property is next to a 100-acre tract of land leased for natural gas extraction, makes the same arguments as the governor’s lawsuit. It contends the Mining and Energy Commission violates the separation of powers provision in the state Constitution, and so the rules it developed for the state’s venture into fracking are null and void.
The governor’s lawsuit is pending before the state Supreme Court. The defendants appealed a ruling in McCrory’s favor by a three-judge panel formed to hear constitutional challenges.
“The decision stopped any immediate harm to North Carolina residents from a commission formed by the state legislature in violation of the separation of powers firmly established in our state constitution pending further court deliberations,” John Suttles, senior attorney with the Southern Environmental Law Center, said of Wednesday’s ruling.
BY CRAIG JARVIS/newsobserver