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By arimoore, on January 13th, 2010% 
The Cortland County Soil and Water Conservation District is hosting a seminar on Natural Gas Exploration and the Geology of Cortland County. William M. Kappel, Hydrologist and Section Chief with the U.S. Geological Survey, will be on hand giving a presentation entitled “Marcellus Shale Gas 101”.
Topics to be addressed include:
- Where black shales are found in New York (their formation and properties) and the mechanics of drilling in the Marcellus and Utica formations.
- An in-depth look at the controversial technique of “slickwater” hydrofracking including the quantities of water needed and the possible
means of treatment, and quality of flowback and formation waters.
- A look into the potential impacts of gas exploration and extraction activities in relation to our regions water resources. Recognizing the concerns of habitat fragmentation and pipeline construction throughout the region.
Monday, February 1st, 2010 – 6pm to 8pm
Seminar will be held in the auditorium of the New York State Grange Headquarters building located at 100 Grange Place off of Clinton Avenue in Cortland, New York (Map)
By arimoore, on January 13th, 2010% 
Join Sustainable Tompkins for an evening to learn from local energy experts how you can reduce your energy footprint through conservation, efficiency measures, and investments in renewable energy. Then, learn about and take the Marcellus Challenge.
March 3, 2010 from 6pm to 8pm
Women’s Community Building, Seneca St., Ithaca, NY
By arimoore, on January 5th, 2010% Hope the new year finds you well. 2009 was an exciting year for activists working to protect their communities from exploitative drilling in the Marcellus Shale. Still, one thing that has come up time and again in our work is: “How can we do community organizing in rural areas?”
Continue reading Jan. 10 – Rural Organizing: Listening Project Training January Series
By arimoore, on January 5th, 2010% Hope the new year finds you well. 2009 was an exciting year for activists working to protect their communities from exploitative drilling in the Marcellus Shale. Still, one thing that has come up time and again in our work is: “How can we do community organizing in rural areas?”
Continue reading Jan. 17 – Rural Organizing: Listening Project Training January Series
By arimoore, on January 5th, 2010% Hope the new year finds you well. 2009 was an exciting year for activists working to protect their communities from exploitative drilling in the Marcellus Shale. Still, one thing that has come up time and again in our work is: “How can we do community organizing in rural areas?”
Continue reading Jan. 24 – Rural Organizing: Listening Project Training January Series
By arimoore, on January 5th, 2010% Hope the new year finds you well. 2009 was an exciting year for activists working to protect their communities from exploitative drilling in the Marcellus Shale. Still, one thing that has come up time and again in our work is: “How can we do community organizing in rural areas?”
Continue reading Jan. 31 – Rural Organizing: Listening Project Training January Series
By arimoore, on December 11th, 2009% Basically I am someone who favors energy independence. I would love someone to install an electricity-generating windmill on the hill behind my house, and I am impressed by the dedication of neighbors who have installed solar panels, though I doubt that we get enough sun here to make it economically viable. So when, a few years ago, I first heard about the local drilling for gas, my thought was “what a good idea, and how fortunate we are to be over a gas deposit”. I could not understand how anyone could be opposed: after all, sink a pipe and up comes clean, natural gas.
Thus the past few weeks of reading what is happening to our area has come as a shock and a rude awakening. As many who live in the areas surrounding Ithaca, I discover by looking at the gas lease maps available on the web that I am surrounded by land that has been leased for gas drilling. I’m sure that these neighbors thought like I used to: it is perfectly safe, you stand a chance of getting rich (I am told by more than one landowner that the leasing agents gave figures to land-owners of $40,000 per month), and the operation is perfectly benign, so what’s the harm?
WRONG! Unlike my naïve original assumptions, drilling involves more than a simple hole in the ground. And I find that many of my neighbors are unaware that it’s possible for this drilling to take place in their back yard, unaware of the dangers to which we are all likely to be exposed. So to that end I would like to list what this drilling involves.
Continue reading "On the Education of a ‘Fracking Neophyte" by Peter Davies
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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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