As Lee County residents continue their fight to keep a compost facility out of the area two state representatives are lending a helping hand by sending a letter to the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality in hopes of stopping it.
Jon Niermann expects to assist project developers with permitting at Vinson & Elkins and to defend clients in enforcement actions.
The Odessa American is the leading source of local news, information, entertainment and sports for the Permian Basin.
Twelve Texas counties have recently exceeded federal air quality standards for particulate matter, commonly known as soot. But Texas environmental regulators are proposing that only four of them be required to take action to improve their air quality.
By CorpGov Editorial Staff Vinson & Elkins has hired Jon Niermann, former chairman of the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality (TCEQ), as a partner in its Austin office. Mr. Niermann is a longstanding public servant,
The new rule modernizes some aspects of commercial oilfield waste disposal and recycling. But rules for burying oilfield waste on private property remain limited.
Fort Bend County officials and residents have won a small victory in their battle against an incoming concrete crushing plant.
This week the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality (TCEQ) is accepting final comments on pending rulemaking (Rule Project Number 2024-027-113-AI) to establish new methane requirements for oil and
Industry leaders say laws shouldn’t be “one size fits all.” But environmental advocates would like to see stricter regulations.
A federal rule designed to “crack down on loopholes” in an anti-cruelty law protecting horses has drawn the ire of Texas Agriculture Commissioner Sid Miller, who called it
Michael S. "Scott" Adkins, president and CEO of PyroCom Systems, was appointed to the Texas Alcoholic Beverage Commission (TABC) by Texas Governor Greg Abbott. The TABC oversees the alcohol beverage industry in Texas by regulating the sale,
Texas, is urging the Supreme Court to uphold a ruling holding the Nuclear Regulatory Commission lacks licensing authority, arguing that nuclear waste sites in Texas pose "an enormous threat to the country’s security and economic well-being.