Thursday, May 30, 2013

Part-Time Sales Associate at Carmen Steffens (Hollywood, CA )

We offer the best opportunities to the best people including:
? Solid compensation
? Inspiring work environment
? Ability to participate in the growth of one of the fastest growing international brands of high fashion women's footwear, handbags and accessories

Carmen Steffens high quality, handcrafted products deliver a level of exclusivity, beauty and unique Brazilian flair which can be found in no other brand.

To learn more, please visit our website: www.carmensteffens.com.

Applicants: We are looking for someone with a flexible schedule to work 20-30 hours per week.

To be considered for this position, please provide the following:
1) Three reasons why you should be the one we hire;
2) History of your retail sales experience;
3) Date you would be available to begin work;
4) Preferred number of hours per week you would like to work;
5) Any work day/hour restrictions that you might have Posting ID: 3604300197

Posted: 2013-02-08, 7:14PM PST

Edited: 2013-02-08, 7:14PM PST

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GE eyes consumer finance unit IPO

Jeff Immelt says the US conglomerate is seeking to shrink the assets of its financial services division and possibly list the company publicly

Read more from Financial Times


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Processor (Mortgage) (Multiple Locations)

Essential Duties
? Review applications and input into Encompass
? Verify that disclosures are complete and accurate
? Ability to review credit reports, income, asset documentation, purchase contracts and preliminary title reports
? Run DU/LP and verify that loans meet guidelines
? Knowledge of conventional and FHA programs and guidelines
? Work with loan officer, lender, and closing agent
? Maintain pipeline with all required tasks

Qualifications
? 2 years experience in the mortgage industry
? Knowledge of the loan origination process
? Ability to interpret raw content and to write clearly and concisely
? Experience in creating and managing online repositories of information
? Ability to research and validate data for accuracy and compliance
? Detail oriented
? Ability to prioritize and to meet deadlines
? Proficient in Microsoft Office, DU and LP
? Work well under pressure in a fast paced environment

We offer medical/dental/vision, 401(k) savings plan as well as vacation and sick time off.

If interested, please submit your resume along with a cover letter indicating for which office you are applying.
Posting ID: 3604411469

Posted: 2013-02-08, 8:36PM PST

Edited: 2013-02-08, 8:36PM PST

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Curtis Burton takes Buccaneer Energy into Alaska’s Cook Inlet

Told last fall he urgently needed open-heart surgery, Curtis Burton headed instead to meet with investors in Alaska.

He returned and checked into St. Luke’s Hospital for a quintuple bypass in late November.

Two days after leaving the hospital, he was back in the office.

A week and a half after that, he and his wife, Emalee, hosted their annual Christmas party.

Burton, a friend notes, “is very success-oriented.”

That drive took Burton from a childhood in rural Mississippi, through the ranks of some of the world’s largest energy companies and a succession of start-ups and turnarounds. His work as a founder of DeepStar, a research collaborative into deep-water drilling, earned him a place in the Offshore Energy Hall of Fame.

His latest venture, Buccaneer Energy, works in Alaska’s Cook Inlet, long abandoned by bigger companies for the North Slope.

Now 57, Burton is the consummate energy entrepreneur, always chasing a challenge.

And Buccaneer, founded in 2006, has provided plenty.

Burton ticks them off: It started with no capital. No properties. And within two years, the recession had hit and natural gas prices were headed down.

Buccaneer hunts properties that bigger companies no longer want but which still have unexploited reserves. Early on, it worked in the Gulf of Mexico and onshore coastal areas.

By 2009, stung by the recession and plummeting natural gas prices, Buccaneer needed a new strategy.

But when a consultant suggested Alaska, Burton balked.

“It’s too cold. It’s too remote,” he thought. “Too many polar bears. Too many regulatory bars.”

Alaska troubles: Coast Guard to take testimony on Shell’s Arctic grounding

Federal regulations apply to Alaska’s vast federal land and waters. But Burton found properties under control of the state of Alaska, and research convinced him that its regulations were more akin to those in Texas – friendly to industry.

Burton ticks them off: It started with no capital. No properties. And within two years, the recession had hit and natural gas prices were headed down.

Buccaneer hunts properties that bigger companies no longer want but which still have unexploited reserves. Early on, it worked in the Gulf of Mexico and onshore coastal areas.

By 2009, stung by the recession and plummeting natural gas prices, Buccaneer needed a new strategy.

But when a consultant suggested Alaska, Burton balked.

“It’s too cold. It’s too remote,” he thought. “Too many polar bears. Too many regulatory bars.”

Federal regulations apply to Alaska’s vast federal land and waters. But Burton found properties under control of the state of Alaska, and research convinced him that its regulations were more akin to those in Texas – friendly to industry.

Add state incentives to spur natural gas drilling in southern Alaska, and it seemed a gamble worth taking.

The past three years haven’t been easy, but Burton insists he is happy with the results.

Buccaneer reported its highest-ever gross production revenue – $5.1 million – for the three-month period that ended in February.

Burton said it was the first company in years to drill for natural gas in Cook Inlet; Apache Corp. and Hilcorp Energy also are there now. Buccaneer also announced a deal with ConocoPhillips earlier this month, giving it access to that company’s deep oil prospects in the inlet.

The man who wanted a challenge has found a seemingly endless string of them.

“Commodity prices are up, and then they’re down,” Burton said, with just a hint of satisfaction at having another problem to deal with. “In our case, we’ve been under-capitalized from the day we started. You’re always dealing with the problems of the day.”

Always working

Burton came to Texas as a teenager — an older sister lived in Dallas and he worked construction there – then worked his way through the University of Texas at Austin, earning an engineering degree.

After a post-college stint at Otis Engineering, he went to work for Sedco, later Sedco-Hamilton, and then traveled the world with other companies and as a consultant.

By 1991, he had signed on with Texaco, where he and another engineer, Steve Wheeler, were charged with preparing the company to move into deeper water.

At the time, Texaco was working in 600 feet of water in the Gulf of Mexico but had leases in 3,000 feet.

“I told them, I need $300 million,” Burton said.

Uncertainty: Offshore operators seek clarity on regulations

Texaco offered a fraction of that. He and Wheeler devised a study and sold shares to companies willing to bear part of the cost.

Chevron took over the research collaborative known as DeepStar when it acquired Texaco in 2001.

DeepStar has changed as the industry evolved.

“Before, everything was highly proprietary, and stayed that way,” said Jim Chitwood, a technology manager at DeepStar, who has been there from the beginning.

Then most research was done in-house, and people were less willing to share information.

But with so many mergers and other belt-tightening, companies began doing less basic research.

Greg Kusinski, executive director of DeepStar, said it has avoided rivalries among members by emphasizing common needs.

With a budget of almost $8 million contributed by member companies, Kusinski said research now focuses on drilling in more than 10,000 feet of water.

Representatives from member companies discussed the project at the Offshore Technology Conference earlier this month.

They focused on the future – reducing deep-water drilling costs to compete with the shale production boom, for example – but said the industry wouldn’t be where it is without DeepStar’s work on fundamental issues including flow assurance and thermodynamics.

‘Contrarian nature’

Burton walked away from DeepStar in 1996, confident that it was well on its way.

“It’s that contrarian nature,” he said of his decision to leave rather than settling in for a lifetime sinecure. “I like challenges,” he said.

He founded Total Offshore Production Service, the first of a series of start-up and turnaround projects he has launched. Buccaneer is the latest.

Burton is a car collector and an aviation buff, and he looks to the earliest days of flight to explain his business philosophy.

“One of my favorite stories is the Wright brothers,” he said. “They just kept inventing the stuff they needed.”

That sounds familiar to people who know Burton.

“He’s like a lot of engineers,” said Frank Culberson, CEO of Rimkus Consulting Group, an early investor in Buccaneer who now sits on the board. “He likes to be successful. He comes up with good ideas, and he’s willing to take a chance.”

Federal audits: Offshore operators should focus on building safety barriers

Risk-taking played out in personal terms last fall, when Burton returned from a business trip. As managing director and CEO of Buccaneer, he has spent much of his time raising money for the company, which is listed on the Australian stock exchange.

A fitness buff, he jumped on his bicycle for a 10-mile ride. He finished but something didn’t feel right.

Same thing the next day. But he felt fine after riding the third day, and Burton figured he was simply out of shape from traveling.

Still, he mentioned the vague symptoms to a friend at church the following weekend and heard about his friend’s experiences with heart disease.

Chastened, Burton called his doctor. Within a few days, he had the diagnosis: severe blockage in several coronary arteries.

But he also had a meeting scheduled in Alaska.

The surgeon told him waiting could be fine. Or not.

He hopped on a plane.

Chitwood, who first met Burton in the 1980s and later went to work at DeepStar, said he isn’t surprised Burton chose the meeting.

“He’s goal-driven,” he said. “Success-oriented.”

And Chitwood said that’s not a bad thing. “He’s got a strong moral compass.”

A strong sense of fun, too, so Chitwood also wasn’t surprised the Christmas party went on as usual.

Burton shrugs.

“I didn’t do all the lifting I normally do,” he said.

But he dismisses any suggestion that the surgery might have caused him to slow down or become more reflective.

“I’ve always been reflective,” he said. “I told everybody, if this was the end, I’ve had a fun time. … It can continue, but it can’t get any better.”


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Hope at Home Event Specialist with ONEHOPE Wine (all CA cities )

Qualifications:
- Passion for independently sourcing, booking, and educating guests at private wine tasting events
- Detail oriented and friendly approach to managing all aspects of working with customers from prospecting events to post event follow up
- Interest in wine, people, and making a social impact
- Must be 21 years of age

Please note compensation for this position is fully commission based.

About ONEHOPE Wine and Hope at Home
ONEHOPE Wine is a subsidiary of the ONEHOPE Family, a social enterprise that integrates causes into products and services to make a social impact. Our award winning wines are produced by Rob Mondavi Jr out of Napa. Since launching into the wine industry in 2007, ONEHOPE Wine's case production has grown to 50,000 cases per year. The ONEHOPE Family is made up of ONEHOPE Wine, Hope at Home, ONEHOPE Weddings and ONEHOPE Coffee.

Casual, informative and fun! Hope at Home brings all the benefits of private wine tasting, and supporting your favorite cause directly into your home or business setting. Through our tasting events we donate 15% of sales to any cause of your choice!

We have been selected as the socially conscious wine of choice at premier events including the Grammy's, The American Red Cross Gala, the BAFTA's, Sundance Film Festival and VH1's Save the Music. We have recently been featured in People Magazine, Glamour, Entrepreneur Magazine, and highly praised in Wine Enthusiast.

To apply to this position, please send a short paragraph about yourself to join@hopeathome.com and share why you are interested in becoming a social entrepreneur with Hope at Home!

For more information visit us at www.hopeathome.com
Hiring Organization: ONEHOPE Wine Hiring Organization: ONEHOPE Wine Posting ID: 3604412399

Posted: 2013-02-08, 8:37PM PST

Edited: 2013-02-08, 9:57PM PST

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Climate change, trade policy enter debate over Keystone XL

Crewmen work a site for TransCanada's Keystone XL project in Wood County, Texas. (Cody Duty / Houston Chronicle)

Wednesday’s congressional debate on the Keystone XL pipeline will be a forum for a host of other contentious  topics, including climate change, oil spills and protectionist policy.

The debates will come as the House of Representatives takes up legislation to speed approval of the proposed Keystone XL pipeline that would carry diluted bitumen from Canadian oil sands developments to Gulf Coast refineries.

Although the bill sponsored by Rep. Lee Terry, R-Neb., probably will  pass the House, it faces a presidential veto threat, and is unlikely to advance in the Senate anyway. Nevertheless, the legislation represents a new opportunity for Keystone XL’s congressional supporters to pressure the White House into approving TransCanada Corp.’s pipeline, eight years after the company first proposed it.

And to congressional Democrats — including some who support the pipeline — Wednesday’s debate is a chance to get lawmakers on record on politically sensitive issues  surrounding the project.

For instance, Rep. Henry Waxman, D-Calif., wants the House to vote on an amendment that would add a provision stating  that using oil sands crude would boost heat-trapping greenhouse gas emissions as much as 4.3 million passenger vehicles. Waxman’s proposal also would make the streamlined approval of Keystone XL under the bill contingent on oil sands producers or TransCanda fully offsetting greenhouse gas emissions associated with the project.

Read more: Activists threaten massive protests if Obama approves Keystone XL

Other lawmakers are using amendments to highlight the risk of leaks along the pipeline’s path, after recent spills of diluted bitumen have proved more difficult to clean up than anticipated. TransCanada has acknowledged that oil sands-derived crudes can be driven to the bottom of  turbulent water, sticking to rocks and making clean up more challenging.

But the company says  the products that Keystone XL would carry are no more corrosive than other crudes. It repeatedly has pledged  to follow 57 extra conditions for design, maintenance and testing, in addition to all other  federal safety regulations.l

Rep. Hank Johnson, D-Ga., has proposed an amendment that would require a study on the health effects of air pollution in communities surrounding refineries that process crude transported by the Keystone XL pipeline.

The House also is set to vote on an amendment that would require a government analysis of the projected costs, environmental damage and health effects of a spill from the pipeline.

Another proposal seeks to revive debate over who stands to benefit from Keystone XL’s construction and whether the oil sands crude transported across the United States would actually remain in the country. The House is set to vote on an amendment by Rep. Rush Holt, D-N.J., that would require oil and refined fuels associated with the Keystone XL pipeline to be used within U.S. borders unless that prohibition is waived by the president.

The underlying bill would authorize the Keystone XL pipeline by deeming existing environmental reviews of the project sufficient and effectively authorizing other necessary permits. It also would expedite judicial review of the pipeline and require legal challenges to be filed within 60 days.

Rep. Sheila Jackson-Lee, D-Houston, has proposed an amendment that would expand the time for filing legal claims to one year. On Wednesday, she argued that the bill’s requirement for challengers to file their legal claims against Keystone XL in a Washington, D.C.-based federal court — imposing too high a burden for critics in far-flung states.

In early debate Wednesday afternoon, congressional Democrats derided the bill as a political messaging bill that would do an end-run around the formal process for evaluating border-crossing energy infrastructure first established by former President George W. Bush in 2004.

“For the eighth time in two-and-a-half years, we’re voting on another Keystone XL measure that will never become law,” said Jared Polis, D-Colo.

Rep. Raul Grijalva, D-Ariz., called the legislation “a reckless attempt to sideline environmental review.”

Republicans insisted that the measure is necessary to prod action on the pipeline, after years of environmental reviews and government study. Terry called it “paralysis by analysis.”

The administration rejected a permit for the border-crossing pipeline last year, after the State Department concluded it needed to do more environmental analysis of a new route through Nebraska. After conducting a fresh environmental study, the State Department on March 1 concluded that the project is unlikely to dramatically boost demand for Canada’s oil sands, rebutting a major concern voiced by environmentalists opposed to the pipeline.

Under a 9-year-old executive order, the State Department is tasked with determining whether the project is in the “national interest.” If any one of eight separate federal agencies disagrees with State’s decision, that would launch a process that would put the final verdict in President Barack Obama’s hands.

Now, a final decision could be many months — if not a year — away. Last month, TransCanada predicted that the project will not be completed until the second half of 2015.

In the meantime, TransCanada Corp., is already building the southern leg of the pipeline.

The backdrop for the debate over Keystone XL is a bigger fight over the Canadian oil sands development. Environmentalists contend that the proposed pipeline would spur more oil development in Alberta using more energy-intensive techniques than extraction of conventional crudes. The result, these critics say, is more greenhouse gas emissions over the entire life of the oil sands crude — from its initial extraction to its combustion.

Pipeline backers insist that blocking Keystone XL will do little to inhibit oil sands development. Trains and other pipelines will carry the product to the Gulf Coast even without Keystone XL, these supporters say, even as other projects could deliver bitumen to Canada’s west coast for export to Asian markets.

Pipeline backers also say Keystone XL would ensure a source of heavy crude from a North American ally, displacing supplies from Venezuela and declining imports from Mexico.


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SOCIAL SALON SUITES - Rental Space Available for All Beauty Pros (Glendale, Burbank, Pasadena, Sherman Oaks)

Are you looking for your own private salon without the hassle of large overhead costs, employees, and salon politics?

Join our community of EXPERT Beauty Professionals who are the leaders at what they do and look forward to growing their business in the industry's most progressive concept. Your private suite will enhance the customer experience by providing an exclusive, warm and modern environment allowing you to service your guests the way you've envisioned.

Hairstylists, Estheticians, Make-up Artists, Massage Therapists and Nail Artists who want to lease their very own salon suite for a fraction of the cost of owning a conventional salon, look no further! We provide turnkey, state-of-the-art salon suite spaces with the following amenities:

* Single or Double Suites with High Ceilings and Windows
* Fully-furnished Spaces for Hair Salons Suites, Massage Therapy Suites, Nail Artist Suites, Make-up Studios and Skin Care Suites.
* Utilities
* Towel Service
* Fast Wi-Fi
* TV/Cable
* Kitchen/Break room
* Laundry facilities
* Janitorial Service for Common Areas
* Secure 24/7 Access
* Online and On-Site Directory
* Insurance
* Business Coaching
*Ample Parking

Whether you're looking for a high-energy salon or a tranquil day spa-like vibe, Social Salon Suites gives you the freedom to choose your atmosphere. You are your own boss!

We are currently under construction which means now is your opportunity to reserve your Social Salon Suite so you can really transform your space to your preference you can select your flooring, wall colors, etc...

You can be sure that no matter what beauty service you have in mind, Social Salon Suites guarantees to deliver your vision beyond expectation.

Email us today for rental pricing and more information. Early sign-up incentives available for a limited time!

Posting ID: 3604575174

Posted: 2013-02-08, 11:23PM PST

Edited: 2013-02-08, 11:43PM PST

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Guest Commentary: Maximizing opportunity in US energy development

David Holt, president of the Consumer Energy Alliance

By David Holt

Over the past few years it’s become clear that math, science and technology education is critical to our nation’s economic success. This is especially the case in the energy sector where technological advancements – namely the combination of horizontal drilling and hydraulic fracturing, advancements in renewable energy have transformed the outlook for the U.S. economy and in turn the economic prospects for millions of Americans.

The numbers are staggering.  In 2011, the U.S. oil and natural gas industry added over 150,000 jobs bringing the total number to approximately 9.2 million.  Meanwhile, the Bureau of Labor Statistics estimates that over 3.2 million Americans are employed in the nation’s burgeoning green jobs sector. Taken together, the nation’s energy resurgence is supporting well over 12 million jobs.  To help put that in perspective, the energy industry is supporting an amount of jobs that exceeds the population of every U.S. state except California, Texas, New York, Florida, Illinois and Pennsylvania.

While there is much reason to celebrate, there is also cause for concern as the industry is facing an immediate and serious dearth of skilled workers. Due to this, the Society of Manufacturing Engineers (SME) predicts that the number of unfilled jobs in the energy and manufacturing sector could grow to 3 million by 2015. This concern was echoed by the National Research Council (NRC) which notes, “the current pipeline of STEM-capable students and workers is inadequate to meet workforce needs.”

So then, with nearly 12 million Americans currently on our nation’s unemployment roster how can we ensure that hard-working Americans are prepared to take full advantage of this growth? As the NRC notes, “industry-education partnerships, particularly at community colleges or in the first two years of higher education, have emerged as critical to the nation’s energy and mining future.”  Luckily, there are programs currently in place that only need to be emulated to ensure that Americans of all backgrounds can benefit from this economic activity.

In Pennsylvania, companies developing the Marcellus Shale have partnered with community colleges, junior colleges, technical schools and universities to ensure Pennsylvanians are benefiting from the state’s resource abundance. Universities across the Commonwealth, ranging from the Pennsylvania College of Technology to Penn State University, have expanded their offerings to prepare citizens for work in the growing natural gas industry.

In California, Chevron launched the “California Partnership”. The effort involves partnering with over 60 non-profit groups to help introduce STEM curricula into California’s public schools. Since its launch, the project has reached more than 500,000 students and provided over 13,000 scholarships to students seeking to further their science and math education.

However, expanding STEM education in higher education is only part of the equation. We must capture a student’s interest in energy and the sciences at a younger age.

In Ohio, the Ohio Oil and Natural Gas Energy Education Program (OOGEEP) is doing exactly that. OOGEEP, a unique state organization celebrating its 15th anniversary this month, is working with primary schools across the state to increase education regarding science, engineering and energy development.  OOGEEP also provided over 30 scholarships just last year to student’s interested in pursuing energy careers.  OOGEEP’s efforts are critically important as sometimes all it takes is one positive experience to change the trajectory of a student’s career.

The Consumer Energy Alliance is also committed to helping prepare America’s youth for these new opportunities. Each year we partner with the City and University of Houston to host an Energy Day Festival where students participate in demonstrations with a variety of energy companies and research institutions. More than 26,000 students and their families have attended over the past two years.

In addition to these types of programs, leaders in every state must work proactively to highlight the abundant opportunities associated with vocational education programs.  Again, a program exists that can be emulated.  In Pennsylvania, a new effort called ShaleNet, supported in part by the U.S. Department of Labor, has connected thousands of students with vocational education and jobs in the energy industry.

All of these programs, and others like them, allow our nation’s youth and adults to develop their education for employment in a burgeoning U.S. energy industry.  Now that our nation understands its energy abundance it’s imperative that leaders in the energy industry, the nation’s universities and community colleges, and governments at all levels help prepare our citizens for the opportunities ahead.  After all, employment in the energy sector generally offers higher salaries, more generous benefits, and greater job security than the average U.S. worker.

The education of our nation’s younger workforce, and re-education of those American’s currently without a job, is one of the most important issues facing our nation’s energy and manufacturing industries – and thus our continued economic growth.

Knowing these programs are in place is the first step. Implementing them on a national scale is imperative to continue to advance the energy industry and our economic success while providing increased employment opportunities for Americans nationwide. Doing so would create a 50 state jobs program which is greatly needed.

David Holt is president of the Consumer Energy Alliance.


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PR Internship (Santa Monica)

Posting ID: 3604787633

Posted: 2013-02-09, 5:10AM PST

Edited: 2013-02-09, 5:10AM PST

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FBI shoot man in new Boston probe death

A statement from the FBI’s Boston field office said officers had been interviewing ‘an individual’ when the person initiated a ‘violent confrontation’

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****** OVER 40???? OVERQUALIFIED???? UNDERAPPRECIATED???? ****** (SO.CAL/USA/INTL/ASIA)

*We are only seeking Proven Leaders with Track Records of Accomplishment in Greater Los Angeles & throughout Southern California.
*Pay will be determined by Performance, as our Country & The World enters The New Reality of a Performance Based Economy.
*High Five, $ix & $even Figure yr. potential.
*Weekly Paid Commissions, Bonuses, and MANDATORY VACATIONS.
*Candidates must demonstrate ability to work well with a team and produce results.

Job Description Duties include Marketing, Sales & Team Building within The HealthCare Industry w/ a Focus on Preventative Health & Well-Being.

Limitless Fun, Support, Training and Teamwork for The Short Term, and more importantly, for The Long Term.

Must Possess both an Entrepreneurial Spirit, as well as a Sense of Urgency to Upgrade Your Life and Lifestyle.

For consideration, please forward resume and/or an extensive bio.

After review of your resume/bio, you may be called for a phone,online and/or an in-person interview.

Unrivaled Part Time & Full Opportunities available. Hiring Organization: D.Greene Posting ID: 3604611455

Posted: 2013-02-09, 12:17AM PST

Edited: 2013-02-09, 12:17AM PST

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Republicans aim to overturn Obama’s plan for Alaskan oil

An aerial view of some wetland areas and caribou on Lake Teshekpuk, Alaska, in July 2006. The lake is inside the National Petroleum Reserve-Alaska. (AP Photo/Subhankar Banerjee via the Alaska Wilderness League, File)

House Republicans on Wednesday took one of the first steps toward overturning a new Obama administration plan for managing wildlife and oil development in the 23-million-acre National Petroleum Reserve-Alaska.

During a House subcommittee hearing on a bill to repeal the reserve management plan, Republicans insisted the administration’s blueprint tilts too heavily toward conservation by walling off energy development in roughly half of the reserve.

“The Obama administration appears determined, against the wishes of most Alaskans, to keep their energy resources off limits,” said Rep. Doc Hastings, R-Wash. who sponsored the repeal bill along with Rep. Don Young, R-Alaska.

Finalized by the Interior Department in February, the management plan would allow companies to hunt for oil and gas in 11.8 million acres. It also explicitly would allow pipelines to cross the reserve, considered crucial to connecting potential oil development in Arctic waters with the Trans-Alaska Pipeline System.

Read more: Oil and tradition try life together in far north Alaska

However oil companies have warned that the management plan could make it more difficult to place and build such pipelines, by potentially blocking the infrastructure through Teshekpuk Lake and at the most likely point for a Chukchi Sea pipeline to come ashore, Kasegaluk Lagoon. Navigating around those areas  could be difficult and more costly than going straight through them.

The Hastings-Young bill would force the Interior Department to scrap the record of decision that formalized the plan in February and go back to the drawing board.

Three other bills considered by a House Natural Resources subcommittee on Wednesday aim to open more federal territory for oil development and overhaul the way U.S. drilling leases are sold. Similar measures passed the House last year but did not advance in the Senate.

Rep. Doug Lamborn, R-Colo., said the measures “will take great steps forward to promote domestic energy security, economic development and job creation.”

But Rep. Rush Holt, D-N.J., cast the exercise as futile, predicting that they would once again die in the Senate.

“What is the justification for doing these things, other than to give the energy interests a free ride?” Holt questioned. “The Republican bills would elevate speed over safety while opening huge swaths of public land” to energy development.

The casualty, Holt said, would be hunting, fishing and other activities allowed on federal lands, which would be relegated behind drilling.

One of the bills generally would force the Interior Department to process applications for permits to drill on federal land within 60 days, effectively deeming pending applications as approved if the deadline passes without action. The measure, sponsored by Lamborn, also would prevent the government from collecting the current $6,500 fee for processing those drilling permits until a decision is issued.

And it would impose a $5,000 fee for anyone seeking to protest Bureau of Land Management permitting decisions — a proposal that supporters said was key to dissuading a rash of lawsuits.

The acting deputy director of Interior’s Bureau of Land Management, Jamie Connell, told lawmakers Wednesday the the legislation would impose “unreasonable timeframes” for processing those permits. Recent changes already have cut down on the number of permit protests, Connell said, suggesting that the $5,000 fee is not needed.

At least one measure considered Wednesday is relatively non-controversial; the bill would  allow the Interior Department to sell onshore oil and gas drilling leases via the Internet.

Sponsor Bill Johnson, R-Ohio, has said the legislation would modernize “an outdated and inefficient lease sale process that requires bidders to appear in person to purchase land leases.” The result is that some would-be buyers don’t participate, preventing prices from reaching their full potential.

Connell said the administration backs the bill and considers it a chance for the Bureau of Land Management ”to expand upon its success” with a pilot project for Internet auctions. While the measure would set a quarterly schedule for onshore lease sales, the Interior Department is asking lawmakers to provide flexibility to hold those auctions more or less often in some cases.


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SENIOR LEGAL SECRETARY/EXECUTIVE ASSISTANT (Westwood)

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