For Immediate Release, March 31, 2026
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Contact: |
Victoria Bogdan Tejeda, Center for Biological Diversity, (724) 317-7029, [email protected] |
California Oil and Gas Health Protection Law Survives First-Round Trump Administration Attack
Buffer Zones Between Drilling Sites, Communities to Remain in Effect During Legal Battle
SACRAMENTO, Calif.— A federal court today denied the Trump administration’s request to pause enforcement of California’s landmark oil and gas health buffer law during its legal challenge. The court’s denial of the administration’s request for a preliminary injunction means the state’s 3,200-foot health protection zones between new oil drilling and communities, established by Senate Bill 1137, will remain in effect while the lawsuit is heard.
“Today’s decision is a win for Californians who have been saying for years that oil and gas drilling and its rampant pollution shouldn’t be anywhere near our schools, hospitals and communities,” said Tomás Rebecchi, Central Coast organizing manager at Food & Water Watch. “This is an important moment for our health and safety, which is under threat from the Trump administration, and we applaud the court for keeping this important protection in place while the lawsuit plays out.”
In January the Trump administration’s Bureau of Land Management sued California, claiming that federal laws override the state’s buffer law on federal land or leases. Enacted in 2022, S.B. 1137 prohibits new oil and gas drilling within 3,200 feet of homes, schools, hospitals, and other sensitive places where science shows increased health and safety risks. The goal of the law is to improve public health by reducing exposure to pollution.
Shortly after filing its lawsuit, the BLM asked the court to stop the state from enforcing protections against operations on federal lands while the lawsuit is pending, which would have endangered people living near thousands of acres of federal lands throughout California. A coalition of advocacy groups joined the state in opposing that request, including the Center for Biological Diversity, Food & Water Watch, Friends of the Earth, Los Padres ForestWatch, and Sierra Club. The groups are represented by counsel at Earthjustice and Center for Biological Diversity.
The court characterized S.B. 1137 as a “reasonable environmental regulation” with an “obvious and important purpose” of protecting people from adverse health effects that is backed by science. In denying the BLM’s request for a preliminary injunction, the court found that it “has not demonstrated that it is likely to succeed in showing S.B. 1137 conflicts with federal law.”
“Californians can breathe easier knowing that the state’s protections against oil and gas drilling are still in place,” said Victoria Bogdan Tejeda, an attorney at the Center for Biological Diversity’s Climate Law Institute. “We’ll continue fighting to ensure these critical safeguards aren’t ripped away by the Trump administration’s dangerous ‘drill, baby, drill’ policies.”
“This initial ruling keeps vital protections in place for our neighborhoods and the precious parks and open spaces that surround them,” said Jeff Kuyper, executive director of Los Padres ForestWatch. “The Trump administration’s desperate quest to drill next to homes, schools and open spaces knows no bounds, but today justice prevailed.”
“It’s unfortunate that the federal government would rather pander to the oil and gas industry than protect public health. Thankfully, today’s decision leaves in place for now the protections that community members and the public fought hard to secure,” said Colin O’Brien, an attorney at Earthjustice.
California’s buffer law is based on a growing body of scientific evidence showing that close proximity to oil and gas activity likely causes a host of serious health and safety harms including adverse birth outcomes, respiratory illness, and higher rates of cancer.
More than 3 million Californians live within 3,200 feet of an active well. Those neighborhoods are predominantly low-income and nearly 70% non-white, disproportionately saddling communities of color with decades of health harms and their attendant costs.
“The court made clear that S.B. 1137 is a lawful, science-based safeguard to protect people from the well-documented harms of oil drilling,” said Miguel Miguel, director of Sierra Club California. “Efforts to block these protections are nothing more than an attempt to shield the oil industry at the expense of communities that have already borne the brunt of pollution for decades. This ruling ensures that those protections stay in place while the case proceeds, and Sierra Club California will continue fighting to hold the line for public health and environmental justice.”
The Center for Biological Diversity is seeking to intervene in the case to protect SB 1137, alongside Food & Water Watch, Friends of the Earth, Los Padres ForestWatch, and Sierra Club.
The Center for Biological Diversity is a national, nonprofit conservation organization with more than 1.8 million members and online activists dedicated to the protection of endangered species and wild places.
Food & Water Watch brings together more than 2 million people nationwide to fight for safe food, clean water, and a livable climate. For over 20 years, we’ve partnered with communities to take on polluting industries and win real, meaningful protections for people and the environment.
For more than 50 years, Friends of the Earth U.S. has fought for a healthy and just world. As part of the largest international grassroots environmental network with over 70 national member groups and some 5,000 local activist groups on every continent, we speak truth to power and campaign to fundamentally transform economic and political systems away from injustice and destruction.
Los Padres ForestWatch is a community-based nonprofit organization that protects Los Padres National Forest and other public lands along California’s central coast.
Sierra Club is the largest and most influential grassroots environmental organization in the country. For more than 130 years, we’ve been working to promote clean energy, safeguard the health of our communities, protect wildlife, and preserve our remaining wild places through grassroots activism, public education, lobbying, and legal action.
Earthjustice is the premier environmental law organization in the U.S., and the legal backbone of the domestic environmental movement. For over 50 years, we have been fighting in the courts, in legislatures, and in the court of public opinion to stop the climate crisis, create healthy communities free of pollution, safeguard our precious lands and waters, and expand environmental legal frameworks to achieve these goals.