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By shirari, on July 15th, 2009%
Ithaca Journal Covers Ithaca Town Board Meeting/Shaleshock Presentation by Krisy Gashler:
Hydraulic fracturing in the Marcellus Shale will require much more water and chemicals than used in the conventional natural gas drilling that has occurred in New York for decades, members of Shaleshock told the Town Board.
That will mean more trucks carrying water to wastewater treatment plants, which aren’t equipped to handle the waste, and the trucks will increase noise and dust, while damaging small country roads, they said.
The gas industry highlights the potential for $22 billion in gas revenues, but they don’t account for the potential loss in revenue from things like hunting and fishing, farming, and tourism, Shaleshock member Lisa Ann Wright said.
Read the rest…
By shirari, on May 29th, 2009%
Wilma Subra is Coming to Ithaca!! Presented by Catskill Mountainkeeper. As the search for natural gas in the Catskill region progresses and new regulations are looming, Catskill Mountainkeeper announces the next forum on gas drilling.
The event will be held on June 23rd at the Museum of the Earth, 1259 Trumansburg Rd, Ithaca, NY (map). Wilma Subra, a recipient of the MacArthur Fellowship Genius Award for her work as a community organizer, will be the keynote speaker at the event. Dan Lamb, District Representative for Congressman Hinchey, and Kate Sinding, Senior Attorney for the Natural Resources Defense Council (NRDC), will also be in attendance.
As space is limited, we are suggesting people pre-register for this FREE event at ?845-482-5400 or info@catskillmountainkeeper.org.
By shirari, on March 28th, 2009%
 Reverend Billy and fellow activists protesting against plans to drill for natural gas in the Upstate watershed. Villager photo by Jefferson Siegel
“Aqua-lujah!” Green candidate Billy damns drilling (The Villager):
Performance-artist preacher Reverend Billy “baptized” 3-month-old Noah Salinger, held by his mother, Tracy Gary, on the Christopher St. Pier on Sunday, World Water Day. The baptism was part of the ceremony of the Blessing of the Water, as well as a protest against plans to drill for natural gas in the Upstate watershed. Billy, real name Bill Talen, is the Green Party candidate for New York City mayor. “If you poison the ground water, you’ve lost the ability to drink,” said Christabel Gough, a longtime Christopher St. resident. Gough sat on the pier’s grass with dozens of others, many holding signs, each bearing the name of a New York neighborhood whose water would be affected by the drilling. “We have the purest water here in the city,” Ellen Peterson Lewis said, holding a “West Village” sign with her husband, Lewis. “We owe it to future generations to keep the water pure,” she said. “Water is not a profit center,” Reverend Billy proclaimed as the crowd chanted, “Aqua-lujah!” Billy said that, if elected, he would advocate for the city’s takeover of the watershed by eminent domain.
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About Us Shaleshock is an information hub connecting people to regional groups and projects working to stop exploitative drilling in the Marcellus Shale.(more)

2009 Signs of Sustainability
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