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Marcellus Shale Gas Drilling near Hickory, Pa

Marcellus Shale Gas Drilling near Hickory, Pa: “The more you learn about hydraulic fracturing in the states ahead of us in these fast moving gas ventures, the more concern you have for our local environment.” (Read more and see photos)

Artist's rendering of Ithaca, drilled for natural gas

Joe Levine Photoshopped well pads onto an image of the Ithaca area to give an idea of the drilling density natural gas companies have planned for this area. Best viewed large.

Forum: Drilling's effects on jobs and community

The Unitarian Universalist Church in Athens, PA (next to Sayre), is having its third session of a 3-part public forum on gas drilling. The topic is drilling’s effect on jobs and local community. Speaker will be Tony Ventello, Exec. Dir. of Central Bradford Authority.

Directions: Take exit 60 from Rte. 17/86 and go south on 220 for 2 miles. Follow signs into Athens which puts you onto Pine Street. Go several blocks and turn right at light onto Main Street. Go several more blocks, down a hill, and turn right onto North Street. Church is at 112 North Street on right side.

The third and last session will be held Tuesday, June 2 at 7 p.m. For more information, call the Unitarian Universalist Church of Athens and Sheshequin at 570-888-0252 or email minister@athensnuuc.org.

The New Gas Drilling: What Local Governments Can Do (Open Forum)

Women’s Community Building, 100 W. Seneca Street, Ithaca (map)

Presenters:

  • Dr. William Pammer, Commissioner, Planning and Environmental Management for Sullivan County ( Monticello ), NY
  • Dr. Stephen Penningroth, Executive Director, Community Science Institute, Ithaca, NY

Thousands of Tompkins County land owners, and thousands more in the surrounding Southern Tier, have signed leases to permit Marcellus Shale gas drilling on their property. Many expect to see drilling begin later this year, perhaps as early as summer.
While some welcome the drilling and others dread it, a common concern for all is the protection of our clean water and air, our land, and our quality of life. NY State law (Environmental Conservation Article 23) took the ability to regulate most aspects of gas drilling activity away from towns, and gave it to the New York State DEC instead. This leaves many local legislators and community members wondering just what they can do to protect our critical resources given these constraints. The Sullivan County, NY Drilling Task Force has been working for many months on answering just this question.

Dr. Pammer will describe the work of a Gas Drilling Task Force in Sullivan County and their research on possible impacts, the authority of local municipal governments, and 21 recommendations that will be presented to their County Legislature . You can find a newspaper story about the report at
www.sc-democrat.com/news/002February/20/news.htm and the full report on the Sullivan County Division of Planning website: www.scgnet.us/index.asp?orgid=610&storyTypeID=&sid=&

Dr. Penningroth, Biochemist and Toxicologist, directs the Community Science Institute’s state-certified water testing laboratory. The CSI lab monitors water quality in Cayuga Lake and its tributary streams in partnership with citizen volunteers. He believes a reasonable estimate of drinking water that will be contaminated near drilling sites is between 1% and 5%. He will describe why and how to test private water wells so that land owners discover problems and have solid scientific evidence of pre-drilling, baseline water data should contamination occur.

Co-sponsored by: Social Ventures; Ithaca Health Alliance ; Assemblywoman Barbara Lifton; Department of City & Regional Planning/ Cornell University ; Sustainable Tompkins; CRESP Center for Transformative Action; Shaleshock Citizens Action Coalition; Back to Democracy.

For copies of informational handouts from the recent forum, Gas Drilling: Health Effects, Economics and the Watershed:
www.shaleshock.org/open-educational-form-on-natural-gas-drilling-march-26th-in-ithaca/
Questions or comments? shaleshock08-at-yahoo-dot-com or 202-368-8753

"Aqua-lujah!" Green candidate Billy damns drilling

Reverend Billy and fellow activists protesting against plans to drill for natural gas in the Upstate watershed. Villager photo by Jefferson Siegel

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.

"US energy future hits snag in rural Pennsylvania" (Reuters)

The family, which is poor enough to qualify for government food stamps, began buying bottled water for drinking and cooking. Their illnesses finally ended, and Farnelli found something to blame: natural gas drilling in the township of 1,400 people. Dimock, in a former coal mining region that was economically struggling even before the recession, is one of hundreds of sites in Pennsylvania where energy companies are now racing to tap the massive Marcellus Shale natural gas formation.

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