gas explosion
Damage from a gas explosion is seen across Interstate 77 in Sissonville, West Virginia in this aerial handout photo from the West Virginia State Police, taken December 11, 2012. A natural gas pipeline exploded in flames near Charleston, West Virginia, on Tuesday, setting nearby buildings on fire and injuring several people, authorities said. Surrounding homes and buildings caught fire, and several people suffered smoke inhalation. REUTERS/West Virginia State Police/Handout

U.S. federal pipeline safety workers spend more time schmoozing at industry events and conferences than taking care of the millions of miles of pipeline laid across the U.S., according to records released Tuesday by the Public Employees for Environmental Responsibility.

“PHMSA is like the college student who does his research assignments at frat parties rather than in the library,” Kathryn Douglass, the environmental group's staff counsel, said in a statement about the Pipeline and Hazardous Materials Safety Administration.

Between 2007 and 2012 the PHMSA spent nearly a quarter of a billion dollars in travel expenses for industry events. The amount of money the agency spent on travel expenses related to pipeline incidents was about $100 million less than that.

In addition, 3,000 staff days were "wasted" when large delegations went to 850 events and conferences, said PEER, which includes local, state and federal environmental professionals.

Douglass, who collected travel logs and expenses through the Freedom of Information Act, said that PHMSA officials spend way too much time “schmoozing” than responding to pipeline spills, ruptures and blasts.

The U.S. is in the middle of an oil boom and is now one of the largest petroleum-producing countries in the world, thanks in part to the extraction of shale oil. More and more oil is being transported through pipelines to reach refineries across the U.S. In fact there is so much oil that infrastructure isn't sufficient to move the glut efficiently out of regions where oil production has skyrocketed.

PEER’s report reflects concerns about pipeline accidents in places like Mayflower, Ark., earlier this year, the explosion of the San Bruno gas pipeline in California in 2010, and the Enbridge spill in Kalamazoo, Mich., also in 2010 -- which authorities are still cleaning up.