2:04
Why are the Oklahoma Corporation Commission Cops in Blanchard?
There's a state agency that can stop trucks on the highways for a variety of violations--a...
published: 14 Jun 2010
author: okiecampaigns
Why are the Oklahoma Corporation Commission Cops in Blanchard?
Why are the Oklahoma Corporation Commission Cops in Blanchard?
There's a state agency that can stop trucks on the highways for a variety of violations--and it isn't the Highway Patrol. And the agency paid a visit to Blan...- published: 14 Jun 2010
- views: 704
- author: okiecampaigns
0:39
Law Book Review: Oklahoma Corporation Commission General Rules, Oil & Gas Conservation by Oklahom...
http://www.LawBookMix.com This is the summary of Oklahoma Corporation Commission General R...
published: 21 Oct 2012
author: LawBookMix
Law Book Review: Oklahoma Corporation Commission General Rules, Oil & Gas Conservation by Oklahom...
Law Book Review: Oklahoma Corporation Commission General Rules, Oil & Gas Conservation by Oklahom...
http://www.LawBookMix.com This is the summary of Oklahoma Corporation Commission General Rules, Oil & Gas Conservation by Oklahoma Corporation Commision, Oil...- published: 21 Oct 2012
- views: 10
- author: LawBookMix
4:16
AARP Oklahoma 2014 Corporation Commission Video Voter Guide
AARP Oklahoma asked the two Republican candidates running for the Oklahoma Corporation Com...
published: 17 Jun 2014
AARP Oklahoma 2014 Corporation Commission Video Voter Guide
AARP Oklahoma 2014 Corporation Commission Video Voter Guide
AARP Oklahoma asked the two Republican candidates running for the Oklahoma Corporation Commission to answer three questions about utilities. This video voter guide was filmed in advance of the 2014 primary election that will be held on June 24th. AARP does not endorse candidates, make campaign contributions or have a political action committee. The purpose of this video voter guide is to inform AARP members and the general public on candidate positions on issues of importance to 50+ Oklahomans. For more information on AARP Oklahoma, visit: www.aarp.org/ok- published: 17 Jun 2014
- views: 46
12:21
Oklahoma Corporation Commission Filling (ShortTerm) 2008
Oklahoma Corporation Commission Filling (ShortTerm) 2008. Rob Johnson, Jim Roth, Dana Murp...
published: 06 May 2012
author: okiecampaigns
Oklahoma Corporation Commission Filling (ShortTerm) 2008
Oklahoma Corporation Commission Filling (ShortTerm) 2008
Oklahoma Corporation Commission Filling (ShortTerm) 2008. Rob Johnson, Jim Roth, Dana Murphy filling Ok1 News.- published: 06 May 2012
- views: 17
- author: okiecampaigns
2:39
Oklahoma Corp. Comm. Bob Anthony (R) - Commission is Overloaded w/Work
Bob Anthony (R-OK) is seeking re-election as Oklahoma Corporation Commissioner in 2012. An...
published: 21 Jun 2012
author: arlenearmy
Oklahoma Corp. Comm. Bob Anthony (R) - Commission is Overloaded w/Work
Oklahoma Corp. Comm. Bob Anthony (R) - Commission is Overloaded w/Work
Bob Anthony (R-OK) is seeking re-election as Oklahoma Corporation Commissioner in 2012. Another republican Brooks Mitchell is running against him. Both of th...- published: 21 Jun 2012
- views: 62
- author: arlenearmy
5:36
AARP Oklahoma Applauds Corporation Commission for Approving Rate Case Settlement
AARP Oklahoma today applauded Oklahoma Corporation Commissioners Dana Murphy, Bob Anthony ...
published: 09 Jul 2012
author: AARPOklahoma
AARP Oklahoma Applauds Corporation Commission for Approving Rate Case Settlement
AARP Oklahoma Applauds Corporation Commission for Approving Rate Case Settlement
AARP Oklahoma today applauded Oklahoma Corporation Commissioners Dana Murphy, Bob Anthony & Patrice Douglas for approving a settlement in the OG&E; rate case ...- published: 09 Jul 2012
- views: 79
- author: AARPOklahoma
2:08
PSO Asks Oklahoma Corporation Commission For Large Rate Hike
PSO Asks Oklahoma Corporation Commission For Large Rate Hike....
published: 20 Oct 2010
author: TheNewsOn6
PSO Asks Oklahoma Corporation Commission For Large Rate Hike
PSO Asks Oklahoma Corporation Commission For Large Rate Hike
PSO Asks Oklahoma Corporation Commission For Large Rate Hike.- published: 20 Oct 2010
- views: 21
- author: TheNewsOn6
0:54
Todd Hiett for Corporation Commissioner
Meet Todd Hiett, former Oklahoma Speaker of the House and candidate for Oklahoma Corporati...
published: 21 May 2014
Todd Hiett for Corporation Commissioner
Todd Hiett for Corporation Commissioner
Meet Todd Hiett, former Oklahoma Speaker of the House and candidate for Oklahoma Corporation Commissioner.- published: 21 May 2014
- views: 24
2:21
Corporation Commission keeping us legal
We visit with Dana Murphy, Oklahoma's Corporation Commissioner, about regulating the oil a...
published: 03 Oct 2009
author: OklahomaHorizonTV
Corporation Commission keeping us legal
Corporation Commission keeping us legal
We visit with Dana Murphy, Oklahoma's Corporation Commissioner, about regulating the oil and gas industry.- published: 03 Oct 2009
- views: 33
- author: OklahomaHorizonTV
31:36
Oklahoma Regulations Regarding Drilling Mud Application; Mike Moore
Mike Moore, Hydrologist for the Oklahoma Corporation Commission speaks about "Regulations ...
published: 20 Jun 2013
author: thenoblefoundation
Oklahoma Regulations Regarding Drilling Mud Application; Mike Moore
Oklahoma Regulations Regarding Drilling Mud Application; Mike Moore
Mike Moore, Hydrologist for the Oklahoma Corporation Commission speaks about "Regulations Regarding Drill Mud Application" Mr. Moore discusses statutes and r...- published: 20 Jun 2013
- views: 49
- author: thenoblefoundation
3:29
The Hot Seat: Dana Murphy
On this week's The Hot Seat, Dana Murphy with the Oklahoma Corporation Commission visits w...
published: 28 Jun 2014
The Hot Seat: Dana Murphy
The Hot Seat: Dana Murphy
On this week's The Hot Seat, Dana Murphy with the Oklahoma Corporation Commission visits with Scott about hydraulic fracturing and earthquakes. On this week's The Hot Seat, Dana Murphy with the Oklahoma Corporation Commission visits with Scott about hydraulic fracturing and earthquakes. On this week's The Hot Seat, Dana Murphy with the Oklahoma Corporation Commission visits with Scott about hydraulic fracturing and earthquakes. The Hot Seat: Dana Murphy The Hot Seat: Dana Murphy The Hot Seat: Dana Murphy- published: 28 Jun 2014
- views: 0
2:57
OETA Week in Review, May 23, 2014
Journal Record Editor Ted Streuli talks about business headlines in Oklahoma, including a ...
published: 23 May 2014
OETA Week in Review, May 23, 2014
OETA Week in Review, May 23, 2014
Journal Record Editor Ted Streuli talks about business headlines in Oklahoma, including a business owner suing the Oklahoma Corporation Commission, a safety review after accidents at the Williams Cos, the use of lawn fertilizers in Oklahoma City, the rise in sod prices, and a professional soccer team helping to rebuild 44 athletic fields.- published: 23 May 2014
- views: 6
2:27
Commission Approves OG&E; 'Smart Meters'
The Oklahoma Corporation Commission has approved a proposal by Oklahoma Gas and Electric C...
published: 01 Jul 2010
Commission Approves OG&E; 'Smart Meters'
Commission Approves OG&E; 'Smart Meters'
The Oklahoma Corporation Commission has approved a proposal by Oklahoma Gas and Electric Co. to install new digital electric meters.- published: 01 Jul 2010
- views: 63
- author: News9.com Oklahoma City, Oklahoma
85:57
Government Overreach - Todd Hiett - 05/16/2014
Government overreach was the topic as rancher and Oklahoma Corporation Commission candidat...
published: 17 May 2014
Government Overreach - Todd Hiett - 05/16/2014
Government Overreach - Todd Hiett - 05/16/2014
Government overreach was the topic as rancher and Oklahoma Corporation Commission candidate Todd Hiett spoke Friday, May 16, 2014 at the High Noon Club. The OCC is a very important job, dealing not only with issues of oil and gas production, but also public utilities and the rates they may charge consumers. Some have said, considering the role of the commission in everyday state life, it may be a more powerful job than that of governor. And yes, Mr. Hiatt's opponent was invited, but has other commitments on his time. A question and answer period followed Hiatt's address in the banquet room at H&H; Shooting Sports, 400 S. Vermont, Oklahoma City. TIMECODE: 00:00:00 Welcome 00:00:54 Prayer 00:01:58 National Anthem 00:03:52 Pledge 00:11:35 Candidate Steve Ellison 00:15:37 Candidate Scott Esk 00:17:52 Candidate Harvey Sparks 00:20:50 Candidate Richard Prawdzienski 00:22:09 Speaker Todd Hiett Video by Maggie Abel.- published: 17 May 2014
- views: 27
Youtube results:
0:32
Jeff Cloud "Our Dad"
Jeff Cloud Oklahoma Corporation Commissioner....
published: 14 Oct 2008
author: tulsaschoolboard
Jeff Cloud "Our Dad"
Jeff Cloud "Our Dad"
Jeff Cloud Oklahoma Corporation Commissioner.- published: 14 Oct 2008
- views: 617
- author: tulsaschoolboard
7:32
OETA Story on the Osage County Cattlemen aired 3-1-13
A sole county in Oklahoma does not have its oil and natural gas operations regulated by th...
published: 04 Mar 2013
author: oklahomanews
OETA Story on the Osage County Cattlemen aired 3-1-13
OETA Story on the Osage County Cattlemen aired 3-1-13
A sole county in Oklahoma does not have its oil and natural gas operations regulated by the Oklahoma Corporation Commission. Mineral rights in Osage county a...- published: 04 Mar 2013
- views: 355
- author: oklahomanews
4:52
Why so Many Earthquakes in Oklahoma?
Oklahoma has experienced a major increase in earthquakes in recent years, including one bi...
published: 16 Jun 2014
Why so Many Earthquakes in Oklahoma?
Why so Many Earthquakes in Oklahoma?
Oklahoma has experienced a major increase in earthquakes in recent years, including one biggie that damaged 200 buildings — and measured 5.6 magnitude — in November 2011. Swarms of quakes have continued in 2014. ARE THE EARTHQUAKES RELATED TO OIL AND GAS DRILLING? Several scientists have suggested that disposal wells, used to dispose of waste from some oil and gas drilling operations — including hydraulic fracturing, or "fracking" — could be the cause of the recent spike. More than 10,000 underground injection wells were active in Oklahoma as of January 2013, data from the state Corporation Commission show. About 6,000 of these wells are a type of injection well used for enhanced oil recovery, says the commission's injection well manager Charles Lord. The remaining 4,400 are disposal wells used to store drilling waste, Lord says. Most of these disposal wells store waste between 10,000 and 20,000 feet underground. WHO ARE THESE SCIENTISTS AND WHAT HAVE THEY FOUND? A report issued last year by the U.S. Geological Survey found that most of these new earthquakes have taken place near active injection wells. Geophysicist William Ellsworth, the lead author of the report, wrote that it is completely plausible that the high water pressure often used in wastewater injections could nudge previously dormant faults out of their "locked" positions. The quakes, he wrote, are "almost certainly manmade." Scientists at Columbia University came to a similar conclusion after studying a rare 4.0 earthquake that took place in Ohio in 2011. The findings prompted state officials to enact broad new regulations and halt the use of any injection wells near faults. Regulators also shut down injection wells in Arkansas that same year following a cluster of quakes there, including one that measured 4.7 on the Richter scale. University of Oklahoma seismologist Katie Keranen, who has studied a 5.6 earthquake that hit Oklahoma in November 2011, found the link between the "zone of injection" and the seismic activity "compelling." There are three deep injection wells within two-and-a-half miles of that quake's epicenter, according to Energy Wire. None of these reports have claimed to have absolute proof that the two are linked. In other words, there is no scientific certainty surrounding the phenomenon. The Oklahoma Corporation Commission, which regulates oil and gas activity in the state, points to that fact to explain its current "wait-and-see" approach. To date, Oklahoma does not have any regulations regarding injection wells and fault lines. Spokesman Matt Skinner says the commission is "keeping an open mind" about the recent and ongoing research. IF THERE IS A CONNECTION, WHAT CAN BE DONE? The National Research Council's list of best practices for drillers and disposal well operators includes investigating any potential disposal site's history of earthquakes and its proximity to fault lines. Some states, like Ohio, are doing just that, and are forbidding any deep injection wells near fault lines. Cliff Frolich, the Associate Director of the University of Texas Institute for Geophysics, says such moves are smart policy. He also suggests that companies look for new ways of disposing of wastewater altogether. "If disposal is causing earthquakes you can find a different way of dispose of it," he said. "You can dispose of the stuff in a different well, or you can even take it to a fluid treatment plant." Of course, he added, such processes are costly and therefore companies' willingness to do that will depend largely on what states require of them. Music by Lee Martin- published: 16 Jun 2014
- views: 17
2:01
In Oklahoma earthquake on 29 June 2014
By TIM TALLEY
Associated Press
EDMOND, Okla. (AP) - Central Oklahoma residents are demandi...
published: 29 Jun 2014
In Oklahoma earthquake on 29 June 2014
In Oklahoma earthquake on 29 June 2014
By TIM TALLEY Associated Press EDMOND, Okla. (AP) - Central Oklahoma residents are demanding to know whether earthquake swarms that have shaken their homes and their nerves in recent months are caused by oil and gas drilling operations in the area. About 500 people attended a meeting with regulators and research geologists Thursday night in Edmond. Many urged the Oklahoma Corporation Commission, which regulates the oil and gas industry, to ban or severely restrict the wells that are used to dispose of wastewater from drilling and that some scientists say could be linked to the quakes. "We're going to have people hurt and damaged," said Angela Spotts of Stillwater, who has collected names for a petition calling for a ban on deep-well injections of wastewater. Edmond resident Mary Fleming said she has experienced dozens, "maybe 100," earthquakes and said they shake her house several times a week, causing cracks inside the home. "The house rocks. The bed lurches," Fleming said. Earthquakes used to be almost unheard of on the vast stretches of prairie that unfold across Texas, Kansas and Oklahoma, but they've become common in recent years. Oklahoma has recorded 230 so far this year, including a magnitude 3.6 earthquake southwest of Guthrie recorded by the U.S. Geological Survey early Thursday. Though most have been too weak to cause serious damage or endanger lives, they have raised suspicions that the shaking might be connected to the oil and gas drilling method known as hydraulic fracturing, especially the wells in which the industry disposes of its wastewater. "There have been lots of little shakings," said Nancy Vandeveire, who said the movement feels like waves of water beneath her house. "It can go pretty much all night long," Vandeveire said. Now after years of being harangued by anxious residents, governments in all three states are confronting the issue, reviewing scientific data, holding public discussions and considering new regulations. The states are trying to reconcile the scientific data with the interests of their citizens and the oil and gas industry. "How many people here woke up at 12:30 this morning?" Corporation Commission spokesman Matt Skinner asked the crowd as he recalled the time of the early morning temblor. Almost everyone raised their hand. "Yeah, me too," Skinner said. "What is happening is frightening. It's worrisome. The search for answers is very, very real, and very personal." Austin Holland, a research seismologist with the Oklahoma Geological Survey, said the state is experiencing unprecedented earthquake activity and that his agency is closely monitoring it to determine whether the earthquakes are a natural phenomenon or are man-made. "We're having more magnitude 3 and greater earthquakes than the western U.S.," Holland said. Seismologists already know that hydraulic fracturing - which involves blasting water, sand and chemicals deep into underground rock formations to free oil and gas - can cause microquakes that are rarely strong enough to register on monitoring equipment. However, fracking also generates vast amounts of wastewater, far more than traditional drilling methods. The water is pumped into so-called injection wells, which send the waste thousands of feet underground. No one knows for certain exactly what happens to the liquids after that. Scientists wonder whether they could trigger quakes by increasing underground pressures and lubricating faults. Another concern is whether injection well operators could be pumping either too much water into the ground or pumping it at exceedingly high pressures. Holland said the same drilling methods have been used in the state for years but that frequent earthquakes did not become a problem until after 2009. "Why now? We've been using these same technologies for 60 years," he said. Some residents suggested that disposal wells be barred in seismically active areas. Skinner said the Corporation Commission has recently incorporated seismicity into the permitting process for wastewater wells. In Texas, residents from Azle, a town northwest of Fort Worth, who have endured hundreds of small quakes, went to the state Capitol earlier this year to demand action by the state's chief oil and gas regulator, known as the Railroad Commission. The commission hired the first state seismologist, and lawmakers formed the House Subcommittee on Seismic Activity. After Kansas recorded 56 earthquakes between last October and April, the governor appointed a three-member task force to address the issue. ___Subcribe on my channel- published: 29 Jun 2014
- views: 33