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By arimoore, on December 23rd, 2009% Early this year Bo Lindsay made this useful PDF file enabling others to stay informed on the DEC’s status of pending gas well applications in NYS. Unlike PA, NYS has no single URL that displays this data. Without these instructions there is no other way to access and to stay informed on status of individual gas wells. An example of the DEC data is shown at the top of the PDF.
The file has just been revised to include a live clickable link to the DEC’s site to avoid manually typing the long URL. Thanks to Bo for this useful tool.
NYS gas well permit applications (PDF)
By arimoore, on October 12th, 2009% Binghamton Regional Sustainability Coalition presents the local premier of the film, SPLIT ESTATE: What you don’t know about natural gas production can hurt you. Discussion to follow.
7pm Tuesday, October 13, 2009
Lost Dog Café Violet Room
222 Water Street, Binghamton, NY
It sounds like a nightmare from the Twilight Zone. Picture this. Imagine discovering that you don’t own the mineral rights under your land, and that an energy company plans to drill for natural gas two hundred feet from your front door. Imagine having little recourse, other than accepting an unregulated industry in your backyard. Split Estate (2009, 76min) maps a tragedy in the making, as citizens in the path of a new drilling boom in the Rocky Mountain West struggle against the erosion of their civil liberties, their communities and their health.”
Ordinary homeowners and ranchers absorb the cost. Actually, we all pay the price in this devastating clash of interests that extends well beyond the Rockies. Aggressively seeking new leases in as many as 32 states, the industry is even making a bid to drill in the New York City watershed, which provides drinking water to millions, and throughout upstate New York and Pennsylvania. As public health concerns mount, Split Estate cracks the sugarcoating on an industry touted as a clean alternative to fossil fuels, and poignantly drives home the need for real alternatives.
This series, which runs for five Tuesdays this fall, features films and discussions on how we can work together to create a more sustainable region. The next screenings in the series are on October 27, November 10 and December 8. This series is organized by Binghamton University Environmental Studies students of “Sustainability and Social Movements” in partnership with the Binghamton Regional Sustainability Coalition.
For more information contact Gabriel Piser, Adjunct Lecturer, Environment Studies, Latin American Studies, Binghamton University, at gabrielpiser@gmail.com
Coordinating Committee: Binghamton Regional Sustainability Coalition. Press contact: flint@igc.org, 607-761-8337
By arimoore, on October 9th, 2009% Gas Drilling: Legal Issues for Landowners (with or without a lease)
A free educational forum, open to all
With increased natural gas development in the Southern Tier will come new and complex legal issues that affect both landowners and communities. Please join us on Thursday, October 29, from 7:00 to 9:30 pm to hear presentations by legal experts, followed by an opportunity to ask questions.
The forum will be held at Cornell Vet School’s James Law Auditorium on Tower Road, just a block from Rt. 366.
Topics will include
- lease terms and considerations
- “force majeure” lease extensions
- intricacies of lease extension/expiration
- compulsory integration (the legal extraction of gas from under unleased lands)
- liability issues
- protection of rights and property
All are encouraged to attend this unique event sponsored by the Cornell Cooperative Extension (CCE) South Central NY Agricultural Team, together with Shaleshock Citizens Action Coalition, Community Science Institute, Finger Lakes Bioneers, Interfaith Action for Healing Earth, NYS Assemblywoman Barbara Lifton, Sustainable Tompkins, and Tompkins County Farm Bureau.
For more information, please contact Schuyler CCE at 607-535-7161, or Tompkins CCE at 272-2292, or by email at: cab377@cornell.edu. More details will soon be posted to the CCE Natural Gas Development Resource Center website: http://gasleasing.cce.cornell.edu/ .
By arimoore, on September 15th, 2009% Shaleshock has emailed the Democratic Primary candidates for Tompkins County Legislature, District 11, Peter Stein and Michael Koplinka-Loehr, asking if they would weigh in on their opinions about gas drilling in our region. Mr. Koplinka-Loehr has responded, and his reply is pasted below. Shaleshock makes no endorsement for either candidate.
Continue reading Candidate Koplinka-Loehr's Views on Unconventional Gas Drilling
By arimoore, on August 17th, 2009% Three experts will be present at a public forum in Dryden to give taxpayers, landowners, and other residents the opportunity to ask questions about natural-gas drilling in New York’s Marcellus Shale formation, and to consider their rights in the land leasing process. The event is being held on Thursday, August 20, from 7:00 – 9:30 pm in the Dryden Fire House Community Room (26 North Street, Route 13; next to Dunkin’ Donuts). Addressing those present will be NY State Assistant Attorneys General Michael Danaher and Roberto Barbosa, from the Binghamton Regional Office; they will speak about citizens rights in the leasing process. Their fifty-minute talk will be followed by a thirty-minute presentation by Andrew Byers, a Shaleshock organization leader, who will speak about gas drilling’s potential impacts to our community and the specific drilling technique planned for Tompkins County. There will be an opportunity to ask questions after the two presentations. Admission is free and refreshments will be served.
The forum is designed to address residents’ concerns about the pros and cons of signing a lease with a gas company, what options are available to landowners who choose not to sign a lease, and how industrial-scale gas-drilling might affect the county’s water resources, farm land, property values, tax base, truck-traffic volume, and recreational activities like tourism, hunting, birding, hiking, and biking.
The Dryden public forum is sponsored by Dryden Resource Awareness Coalition (DRAC). DRAC, which was formed by a group of concerned Dryden residents in June 2009, seeks to learn the truth about the hydrofracking process, and to determine the effects it will have on local homes, roads, communities, and recreation areas, as well as the local economy. All concerned citizens are welcome to join. For additional information, contact: Marie McRae at 607-280-9250 or mmmcrae@juno.com, Martha Fischer at mf26@frontier.com, or Hilary Lambert at hilary_lambert@yahoo.com.
By shirari, on July 15th, 2009% Cornell Cooperative Extension will host a series of meetings across New York’s Southern Tier during July and August to provide opportunities for the general public to gain a basic understanding of the issues associated with the development of natural gas production in the Marcellus Shale.
The meetings, co-sponsored by CCE Association offices, will occur from 7-9 p.m. Residents should contact their local CCE Association for more details. More info: gasleasing.cce.cornell.edu
The complete tentative schedule:
- Grace United Methodist Church, Corning (Steuben County), July 16
- Chenango Town Hall (Broome County), July 22 – call 607-584-9966 to register
- Waverly (Tioga County), July 28
- Watkins Glen (Schuyler County), Aug. 5
- Liberty (Sullivan County), Aug. 17
By shirari, on July 15th, 2009% Cornell Cooperative Extension will host a series of meetings across New York’s Southern Tier during July and August to provide opportunities for the general public to gain a basic understanding of the issues associated with the development of natural gas production in the Marcellus Shale.
The meetings, co-sponsored by CCE Association offices, will occur from 7-9 p.m. Residents should contact their local CCE Association for more details. More info: gasleasing.cce.cornell.edu
The complete tentative schedule:
- Grace United Methodist Church, Corning (Steuben County), July 16
- Chenango Town Hall (Broome County), July 22 – call 607-584-9966 to register
- Waverly (Tioga County), July 28
- Watkins Glen (Schuyler County), Aug. 5
- Liberty (Sullivan County), Aug. 17
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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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