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"Talk to your town!" – Send a letter, and hold your local officials accountable – UPDATE

*** UPDATE: SCROLL DOWN FOR SHORT LETTER OPTION ***

Autumn Stoscheck wrote a letter to her Van Etten Town Board members and Chemung County Legislator, asking if they’re going to attend the Regional Legislative Conference on Natural Gas Development at Morrisville State College on June 20th. She and other citizens have been sending letters and giving in-person invitations, and following up with phone calls to ask public officials if they’re going to attend, and if not, why not.

She writes, “These public officials need to be put on notice. Energy development impacts are not speculative. They are studied and known. If elected officials continue to sit on their hands when information and resources are available to them (such as this conference) they must be held publicly accountable. I urge you to let your officials know this as well… PLEASE TALK TO YOUR TOWN!”

Below is Autumn’s letter – feel free to copy it, edit, and change it as you see fit. For added impact, follow Autumn’s excellent example and send your letter to several papers as well.

[Your name and address]
[Today's date]

[Name and address of public official]

Dear [Name of public official],

By now I am sure you are aware that Van Etten sits a top the largest known natural gas reserve in the United States and that when the NYSDEC issues its revised SGEIS some time this year, it intends to begin issuing some 2,000 drilling permits per year, and that multi-national energy corporations such as Fortuna, Epsilon and Chesapeake intend to apply for permits to drill in this town.

I am writing to urge you to attend the Regional Legislative Conference on Natural Gas Development at Morrisville State College on June 20th. NYSAC, ATOSNY, NYCOM, as well as Madison and Chenango Counties sponsor the conference.

Many experts agree that drilling for natural gas in the Marcellus Shale and other unconventional gas bearing layers, will constitute the largest land use change in New York State since the virgin forests were clear cut for agriculture. The preparation required for this magnitude of change will require a level of planning such as the current board has not experienced.

To put this into perspective, Marcellus Shale wells can be drilled on a forty-acre spacing. That means up to 1,500 wells could be drilled in Van Etten alone. In Pennsylvania, the DEP estimates that one horizontal Marcellus well requires 1,000 truck trips during drilling and fracking. That’s a lot of road use.

While gas drilling has economic benefits such as an increase in property tax and royalty payments to some landowners, studies show that the costs of energy development are often greater than the benefits. Energy development impacts range from damage to infrastructure such as roads and bridges, increased use of services such as police, fire and EMT, increased attendance in public schools by non-taxpayers, loss of property values, and water contamination to name a few. These impacts are not speculation: Communities in energy extraction states have been dealing with them for decades and many studies have been done. I urge you to read Energy and the West: Informing Choices About Energy Development a study done by Headwaters Economics which can be downloaded for free at www.headwaterseconomics.org

Just over the boarder in Bradford County, PA communities are already dealing with the impacts of Marcellus Shale development. One thing is clear: the level of preparedness is a determining factor in which towns win and which towns lose in energy development. At a time when the energy industry is making record breaking profits, and ordinary Americans are struggling to pay the bills, Van Etten can not afford to lose. On its own, failing to bond our roads could cost taxpayers hundreds of thousands of dollars. As an elected representative, it is your responsibility to be educated, informed and take action to protect the citizens of Van Etten.

Thank you for making this a priority.
Sincerely,
[Your name]
c.c.
[List names of papers and other media outlets here, if you are sending copies to the media]

This is a shorter-form letter you can send, if you prefer.

Subject: Morrisville State College to Host Regional Legislative Conference on Natural Gas Development June 20

Hello, Town Representative,

Please see the attached information about an upcoming summit on gas drilling at Morrisville State College on Saturday, June 20th from 9am to noon.

I would like to ask that you attend this informative summit in which town board members and municipal leaders in this state will engage in a serious discussion about the very real impacts of gas drilling in our region. The gas drilling here in the Ithaca region may well be a few months away. The host of this summit has first hand experience with dealing with the gas companies and this is just the kind of information we need at this time.

Pre-registration is preferred, but not required, by contacting Town of Lebanon Supervisor Jim Goldstein at Lebanon@citlink.net or 315-837-4152.

Sincerely,

Your Constituent,
Your Town

ACTION ALERT on gas drilling legislation

*** 6.8.09 UPDATE – URGENT ACTION ALERT ***

Now is the time to let Congress know that they must repeal the oil and gas industry’s expemtions from the Safe Drinking Water Act, and that they must include protections for private drinking wells. Call or fax your congressperson soon (there may be a vote as early as Tuesday 6/9/09). Industry is pressuring Congress now – so must we!!

* HOUSE COMMITTEE ON ENERGY & COMMERCE-NY MEMBERS:

Eliot L. Engel
Tel:(202)225-2464 Fax: (202)225-5513

Anthony D. Weiner
Tel:(202)225-6616

Committee Chair: Henry A. Waxman
Tel: (202)225-3976 Fax: (202)225-4099

*CONGRESSMEN:

Maurice Hinchey (22nd District) – Hinchey is a co-sponsor, but tell him to INCLUDE protection for private water wells too
Tel: (202)225-6335 Fax: (202)226-0774

Michael Arcuri (24th District)
Tel: (202)225-3665 Fax: (202)756-2472

Eric Massa (29th District)
Tel: (202)225-3161 Fax: (202)226-6599

The following letter was written by Susan Multer to send to friends across the country, many of whom know nothing about gas drilling. She welcomes our using it or revising it to send to our friends as well.

Dear Friends,

Very soon a bill will be introduced in the U.S. House of Representatives that is critical to our health. It will repeal the exemption given to the oil and gas industry in 2005 from the Safe Drinking Water Act of 1974 (see below). Although the bill doesn’t have a number yet, the industry is already lobbying hard against it, saying any further regulation will cost jobs and make us more dependent on foreign oil. They fail to note that without this regulation our health is at stake.

The bill will be referred to the U.S. House Committee on Energy and Commerce, members of which are listed below. If your state has one or more Representatives on that committee, your help is first needed to get the bill moved favorably out of committee and onto the floor of the House for a vote. Please fax a short letter to each committee member from your state as well as to your own Congressman/woman, urging co-sponsorship of the bill and pushing for its passage.

Those of you whose state has no one serving on the committee can go ahead and write your Representative now, asking for co-sponsorship of the pending bill to repeal the exemption. Letters sent by US mail take too long because they have to be checked for anthrax; emails may not get recorded or counted, plus they look like they are organization-generated. So please send a fax or make a phone call. A fact sheet from four major environmental organizations working on this issue is attached.

Please understand that unlike traditional vertical drilling, the high-pressure, horizontal hydraulic fracturing (aka hydrofracking) of shale, sandstone or coal beds requires, per well, hundreds of heavy trucks to carry millions of gallons of fresh water (never to be returned to its source) across county and town roads to a 3- to 5-acre well pad. Then chemicals (some toxic, including endocrine disruptors) are added to the fresh water and forced under very high pressure down the well to break up the formation to free the gas.

After the fracking is finished, much of the toxic waste stays underground where it can travel. Much comes up in even more toxic form because heavy metals and radon are picked up in the process. This “produced water” has often been pumped into open, plastic-lined evaporation pits which pollute the air 24/7 and pollute the soil and water when the plastic leaks or the pond floods. An alternative is to transport (with the risk of leaks and spills) the toxic waste to a dry well and inject it back into the ground for storage (and possible leaks). Traditional water treatment facilities cannot handle this industrial waste because the energy companies won’t reveal its contents. (The chemicals we know about are from samples taken after above-ground accidents out west).

Since the gas released from these formations is not under much pressure, diesel pumps may be run at the surface day and night, sounding like an idling semi-truck. Since hydrofracking can be repeated several times, the life of the well may be more than twenty years. While risk of air and water pollution increases, quality of life and resale value of property decrease, sometimes down to zero. Just ask a realtor in an area where leases have been signed.

If hydrofracking were as safe as the industry claims it is, there would be no need for an exemption, and repeal of it would not be of concern. What we are not being told is that there have been unacceptable levels of hydrogen sulfide in Alabama, ground-level ozone in the open spaces of Colorado, cattle dropping dead in Louisiana, industrialization of the landscape in Wyoming, a house blown off its foundation in Ohio, contamination of water wells in Pennsylvania and cases of fires in faucets, fish kills, goats and mares being unable to reproduce, people losing their hearing and some developing brain lesions. What links these tragedies together is that all have occurred on properties near hydraulic fracturing.

You can learn more from www.ogap.org, www.endocrinedisruption.org, and www.propublica.org/feature/natural-gas-politics-526. You can see interviews with people negatively affected at www.damascuscitizens.org. But you don’t have to in order to speak up on this subject. The bottom line is simply this: to not regulate the oil and gas industry the way all others are regulated with respect to the Safe Drinking Water Act is unconscionable. For the health and safety of everyone, please take action to repeal the exemption now.

ENERGY POLICY ACT OF 2005

Public Law 109-58
109th Congress

Title III — Oil and Gas

Subtitle C — Production

SEC. 322. HYDRAULIC FRACTURING.

Paragraph (1) of section 1421(d) of the Safe Drinking Water Act (42 U.S.C. 300h(d)) is amended to read as follows:

“(1) Underground injection.–The term ‘underground injection’–

“(A) means the subsurface emplacement of fluids by well injection; and

“(B) excludes–

“(i) the underground injection of natural gas for purposes of storage; and

“(ii) the underground injection of fluids or propping agents (other than diesel fuels) pursuant to hydraulic fracturing operations related to oil, gas, or geothermal production activities.

US House Committee on Energy and Commerce

AR Mike Ross

AZ John B. Shadegg

CA Lois Capps
Anna G. Eshoo
Jane Harman
Mary Bono Mack
Doris O. Matsui
Jerry McNerney
George Radanovich
Henry A. Waxman, Chair

CO Diana DeGette

CT Christopher S. Murphy

FL Kathy Castor
Cliff Stearns

GA John Barrow
Nathan Deal
Phil Gingrey

IA Bruce L. Braley

IL Bobby L. Rush
Jan Shakowsky
John Shimkus

IN Steve Buyer
Baron P. Hill

KY Ed Whitfield

LA Charlie Melancon
Steve Scalise
MA Edward J. Markey

MD John P. Sarbanes

MI John D. Dingell, Chair Emeritus
Mike Rogers
Bart Stupak
Fred Upton

MO Roy Blunt

NC G. K. Butterfield
Sue Wilkins Myrick

NE Lee Terry

NJ Frank Pallone, Jr.

NY Eliot L. Engel
Anthony D. Weiner

OH Zachary T. Space
Betty Sutton

OK John Sullivan

OR Greg Walden

PA Mike Doyle
Tim Murphy
Joseph R. Pitts

TN Marsha Blackburn
Bart Gordon

TX Joe Barton, Ranking Member
Michael C. Burgess
Charles Gonzalez
Gene Green
Ralph M. Hall

UT Jim Matheson

VA Rick Boucher

VI Donna M. Christensen

VT Peter Welch

WA Jay Inslee

WI Tammy Baldwin

Safe Drinking Water Act PDF

Noise and health

Statement to DEC, Scoping session for dSGEIS, Oneonta, NY, Dec. 2, 2008
From Kristina Turechek, Laurens Township, Otsego Co., NY

Attn: Scope Comments
Bureau of Oil and Gas Regulation
NYSDEC Div. of Mineral Resources
625 Broadway, 3rd Floor
Albany, NY 12233-6500
dmnog@gw.dec.state.ny.us

To Whom It May Concern,

Thank you for this opportunity to add these remarks during your public comment period for the Draft Scope for the Supplemental Generic Environmental Impact Statement (dSGEIS).

Summary:

A.) Since long-term use of compressors will be needed to push the gas from the Marcellus Shale along the pipelines, and long-term exposure to the low-frequency noise (LFN) of compressors is injurious to health (Vibroacoustic Disease,VAD), the DEC will need to coordinate with the Public Service Commission (PSC) at the earliest stages of siting and permitting of horizontal drilling for gas in the Marcellus Shale in order to assure adequate set-back from homes and schools, etc. The DEC may even need to take over the PSC’s regulation of the post-drilling production and transmission phase.
B.) The DEC will need to coordinate with health departments at all levels of government to research, regulate and monitor the health impacts of noise as well as those of water and air pollution.
C.) The DEC will need to consult with expert acousticians regarding effective mitigation of noise, in particular, low frequency noise (LFN). Solutions might include setbacks, housings and dampers, plus any other mitigation available.

Three short stories that have brought me to make this statement about the noise impacts from drilling for gas in the Marcellus Shale:

1.) Voom! Voom! Voom! At 3 AM on a Sunday morning about a year ago this startling racket woke our relatives in Madison County, NY. Shortly after being scared out of their wits they located a gas drilling rig just beginning work about a half mile up the hill from their home. “You can’t do this! It’s the middle of the night!” “Yes, we can”, said the drillers, and, indeed, people on the local Town board investigated and told our relatives “Yes, they can.”

***Local citizens must be NOTIFIED.
***If neither the DEC nor the State will do so, local governments must figure out how to regulate noise while allowing farmers the freedom to work.

2.) A friend told me about a “successful” gas well in Spencer, NY; her friends wished they had never signed a lease for a Trenton Black River (TBR) well 10 years ago. The drillers never cleaned up the area as they had promised, the family’s well became disturbed and the water undrinkable, and the noise of two compressors run by two generators became unbearable during the six months they were used to push the gas along the pipeline when the pressure from the TBR well began to peter out. The well was 1,500 feet from their home and the noise was 90 decibels. The family felt they would have had to move if it continued.

***People who sign gas leases need to know what they are getting into. This family had not anticipated this type of ongoing noise. I assume they did expect the initial noise of drilling activities (as described in the GEIS), but were uninformed about what could happen in the production stage, oversight of which is delegated to the PSC. Perhaps this is not your purview, but a lot of people have signed leases which either did not disclose the full effects of drilling or were broken later by the gas companies when they did not fulfill promises of clean-up or remediation.
(Also, here is another “undocumented” case of undrinkable water, unacknowledged by the DEC; maybe a special study of all “Undocumented” well contaminations should be done.)

and
3.) There was an article titled “Un-Well” in the Fort Worth Weekly which told a story about Charles Morgan, a retired Air Force Major, whose ear drum was ruptured by the low frequency noise of 11 gas compressors a mile away from his home. I had no idea such a thing could happen. As it turns out, that is the least of his problems. He suffers from terrible headaches, “sky-high” blood pressure, jumpy legs, and, to get a good night’s sleep and quiet his nerves, he sometimes takes a hotel room far from noise.
(“Un-Well”, Peter Gorman, Fort Worth Weekly, Wed., Oct.29, 2008) http://www.fwweekly.com/content.asp?article=7262

What Charles Morgan suffers from is Vibroacoustic Disease, VAD, which affects the whole body and is cumulative. The study of this disease is relatively recent because many of its effects are internal, previously not associated with noise at all. Many of the studies are European and were done in conjunction with studies about noise produced by jet engines, wind turbines, industrial sites and rail lines. Several, relating to the effects of living near the noise of jets taking off from nearby airports, have shown that residents’ blood pressure spikes even when they are sleeping (indicating that it’s not just an annoyance factor), and also have shown children’s learning problems that correlate to living in such noisy neighborhoods.
(“Vibroacoustic disease: the need for a new attitude towards noise”, Public Participation and Information Technologies 1999, pub. CITIDEP, 2000.) http://www.citidep.pt/papers/articles/alvesper.htm
(“Acute effects of night-time noise exposure on blood pressure in populations living near airports”, European Heart Journal, Feb. 12, 2008.)
http://eurheartj.oxfordjournals.org/cgi/content/full/ehn013v1?maxtoshow=&HITS=10&hits=10&RESULTFORMAT=&fulltext=airport&searchid=1&FIRSTINDEX=0&resourcetype=HWCIT
(“Noise Pollution Takes a Toll on Health and Happiness”, Washington Post, June 4, 2006.)
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/06/04/AR2007060401430.html

Health Impacts

“Vibroacoustic disease (VAD) is a whole-body, systemic pathology, characterized by abnormal proliferation of extra-cellular matrices, and caused by excessive exposure to low frequency noise (LFN). VAD has been observed in LFN-exposed professionals, such as, aircraft technicians, commercial and military pilots and cabin crewmembers, ship machinists, restaurant workers, and disk-jockeys.”
(“Vibroacoustic disease”, N. Castelo Branco and Mariana Alves-Pereira, (Portugal), Noise & Health Journal, 2004;6:3-20)
http://www.noiseandhealth.org/article.asp?issn=1463-1741;year=2004;volume=6;issue=23;spage=3;epage=20;aulast=Castelo;type=0

Branco and Alves-Pereira, et al, have done numerous studies about VAD, principally among aircraft workers in Portugal, and here are some of the health effects which I have culled from their papers:

Increased morbidity

Heart:
Thickening of cardiovascular structures, extra tissue around pericardium and valves
High blood pressure
Strokes

Psycho-Neurological:
Depression
Increased irritability and aggressiveness
Rage reactions
Suicidal tendencies
Over-sensitivity to sound
Tendency for isolation
Decreased cognitive skills
Dizziness, severe vertigo, balance disturbances
Early ageing
Palmo-mental archaic reflex
Late onset epilepsy
Seizures
Brain lesions

Respiratory problems:
Difficulty breathing
Coughing
Lung tumors

Digestive problems:
Gastro-intestinal complaints
Stomach cramps, nausea, diarrhea, heartburn
Ulcers
(“Noise-Induced Gastric Lesions”, Cent. Eur. J. Public Health 2006; 14 (1): p. 35-38) [includes rat studies]
http://www1.szu.cz/svi/cejph/archiv/2006-1-09-full.pdf

LFN is a genotoxic agent – mutagenic – causing:
Malignancies
Tumors in kidneys and brain

LFN affects the baby in the womb:
(“Vibroacoustic Disease in a Ten Year Old Male”, Branco et al, Inter-Noise 2004, Prague, Czech Republic, August. 22- 25, 2004, 33rd International Congress and Exposition on Noise Control Engineering.)
http://www.ninapierpont.com/pdf/Alves-Pereira_grain_elevator_VAD.pdf

Also:
Stress (all frequencies)
Headaches
Body aches

The health effects of VAD are cumulative, with symptoms showing up in Stage I (Mild, 1- 4 years), worse in Stage II (Moderate, 4 – 10 years), and devastating after 10+ years (Stage III, Severe).
(See chart in, “Monitoring Vibroacoustic Disease”, Branco et al, paper, Nov. 2002.)
http://www.lowertheboom.org/links/h13Monitoring%20Vibroacoustic%20Disease.pdf

Well, I could go on, or you could research further.

Since, as I understand it, the gas in the Marcellus Shale does not have the natural pressure, which is found in the “conventional” gas wells of other deposits such as the TBR, there will be a perpetual need for compressors and their (usually diesel-powered) generators for the life of these new wells. Such unremitting noise for years on end will have a devastating effect on all creatures living close by – including humans of all ages. In her paper, Pierpont has recommended a setback of 1.5 miles from the LFN noise of wind turbines.
(“Health, hazard and quality of life near wind power installations – How close is too close?”, Nina Pierpont, MD, PhD, March 1, 2005. Archives & Collections Society, Ontario, Canada) http://www.aandc.org/research/wind_noise_pierpoint.html

***Coordination and consultation with County and State Health Departments would seem to make sense, not only regarding noise, but also regarding possible air pollutants and, most of all, about identifying the health effects of toxins in fracking-water which could end up in our fresh water as a result of the huge amounts of water which will be used in horizontal drilling in the Marcellus Shale.

In the dSGEIS, on p. 8, 1.5, Pipeline Regulation, it is stated,
“as explained in Chapter 3 of the GEIS, project review for natural gas wells does not include gas gathering or transmission lines (and ancillary facilities such as compression stations)”.
Contrary to what is stated on p.18, Draft SGEIS, 4.1.1 Noise Impacts,
“Longer-Term Noise Impacts – Gas well production sites are described by the GEIS as very quiet”,
these naturally unpressured Marcellus Shale gas wells will require very noisy compressors to push the gas along the pipelines the whole time they are producing, perhaps for 10, 20, 30, even 40 or 50 years. In view of this fact the DEC needs to consider the noise aspect of the well sites before permitting. Therefore,

***Coordination with the Public Service Commission should begin at the time of siting BEFORE permitting in order to be sure that the setback will be far enough from residences since compressor noise will ensue for years on end. Or perhaps the DEC will need to take over the regulation of production and transmission.

Mitigation
Online there are websites advertising housings for compressors. Would these mitigate only the audible higher frequency noise and not the lower frequencies, which often are felt rather than heard and have much, much longer wavelengths and not only travel much farther but can go underground and through walls? I have consulted two of my colleagues in the SUNY Oneonta Music Department who are experts in recording engineering. They both suggested some type of damper might possibly be placed beneath compressors.
Also, online I have seen compressors with “whisperizers” advertised, but don’t know what that means. Perhaps there would be a way to consolidate compressors serving multiple wells into an isolated spot, but it is hard for me to imagine a spot in our region such that there is no habitation within a 1.5-mile radius.
(Washington State, EFSEC- Energy Facility Site Evaluation Council, Sumas Energy 2 Generation Facility, Application No. 99-1, FSEIS-Final Supplemental Environmental Impact Statement, Section 3.4 LFN, plus Contents page.)
http://www.efsec.wa.gov/Sumas2/eis/seis/fseisch3-4.pdf
http://www.efsec.wa.gov/Sumas2/fseis.shtml#contents
(“Gas Compressor Station Noise”, Mueller Environmental Designs, Inc.)
http://www.muellerenvironmental.com/Documents/DOCUMENT/200-032.pdf

***Expert acousticians should be consulted.
***Research should be done about noise regulation of the gas industry in other states, (Colorado, Washington, Fort Worth, Grand Prairie and Flower Mound, Texas).

————————————————————————————————-
Some additional sources:

Earthworks/OGAP (Oil & Gas Accountability Project):
Noise Resources

http://earthworksaction.org/noiseresources.cfm

Types of Noise, Health effects of LFN
http://earthworksaction.org/typesofnoise.cfm#LFNHEALTHEFFECTS

OSHA – European Agency for Safety and Health at Work, Danish study on hearing loss and other effects of noise.
http://osha.europa.eu/en/riskobservatory/hearingloss/denmark/source_description.htm

“Guidelines for Community Noise”, World Health Organization,WHO, Ed. Berglund, Lindvall, Schwela,1999. http://whqlibdoc.who.int/hq/1999/a68672.pdf

“Transport noise and health”, European Federation for Transport and Environment,
http://www.transportenvironment.org/module-htmlpages-display-pid-16.html#references

“The Stacks”, Health/Noise links: http://www.lowertheboom.org/stacks.htm#health

“Effects of Low Frequency Noise up to 100 Hz”, M. Schust, Federal Institute for Occupational Safety and Health, Berlin, Germany. 02/06,2004.
http://www.noiseandhealth.org/article.asp?issn=1463-1741;year=2004;volume=6;issue=23;spage=73;epage=85;aulast=Schust

All around where we live people are either signing gas leases, or joining landowners’ groups to negotiate gas leases, or, as with the farmer whose land adjoins our back property line, have four years to go on a 30-year lease. Years ago there was no inkling of the possible massive industrial effect and change to community character that the current Marcellus gas “play” could produce. I speak partly as a musician, (certainly not as a scientist or an MD), as the wife of a musician, neighbor of another musician couple and relative to the entire family of musicians in Madison Co., NY, mentioned in story #1, (at least 5 of us are composers), and I speak partly as a very concerned citizen of a beautiful rural area. You have to know by now that there are a great number of us who are extremely worried about the impending gas development in our state. Most people I talk to are trusting you to regulate the coming drilling so we all can remain healthy and stay here to continue to enjoy the place where we have settled – some of us for many generations. Others I talk to don’t think there’s a chance in hell that you can manage to do the job right. As many have said, please get it right – and honor the people’s faith in you!

Again, thank you for this opportunity to give input during your Scoping for the dSGEIS.

Kristina W. Turechek
392 Hathaway Road
Otego, NY 13825

turechkw-at-oneonta-dot-edu