Backyard Fun with Natural Gas Drilling
This graphic is from an Idea thought up by Megan Byrnes. I think it says it as well as anything else.

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This graphic is from an Idea thought up by Megan Byrnes. I think it says it as well as anything else.

How is natural gas drilling like a game? It is frequently referred to by the oil and gas companies as a “play,” only it is a game in which there is no level playing field, no clear-cut winners, and no ”do-overs” if mistakes are made.
In this game, New York State, by way of the Department of Environmental Conservation (DEC), is required to be the referee and regulate natural gas wells as they are drilled, yet there are not enough inspectors (currently there are only 19 inspectors to regulate 6,683 pre-existing vertical wells across the entire state), nor is there necessarily money to train and hire more during the state’s budget crisis. The federal government is primarily a benchwarmer, since the 2005 Energy Policy Act exempts the oil and gas companies (and horizontal drilling, by extension) from the clean water, air, and safe drinking water acts.
There are also at least two divisions, or tiers, in the game of natural gas drilling and extraction; us (i.e. the majority of New York State) and New York City. In the DEC’s draft scope document for the
Supplemental Generic Environmental Impact Statement, or dSGEIS, New York City and its drinking water are provided with a special “1,000 ft. wide protective corridor” around aqueducts and a 1-mile buffer around reservoirs. In contrast, we are expected to be content with a minimum of 50 ft. from public streams and rivers, 100 ft. from wetlands, and 100 ft. from private homes and water wells. (To give you a visual image, 100 ft. is about 1/3 the size of an average football field.) Why is the clean drinking water of New York City considered to be more important than our own?
Cities like Oneonta, and larger towns and villages should not be complacent, either. While the scoping document apparently thinks that municipal water should have more protection than private water wells
(around 1,000 ft.), the DEC and the private gas companies reserve the right to obtain special permits to drill closer if there is a lot of natural gas to be extracted. Drilling can also take place a short distance from public buildings like schools (150 feet away), and even in densely populated suburbs, as in Fort Worth, Texas. Airborne pollutants like diesel fumes, methane, and evaporated fracking chemicals from open pits, and 24-hour noise from compressors and drills, recognize no boundaries or exclusive addresses.
So, what can you do to level this “playing field?” For starters, attend the Department of Environmental Conservation’s scoping hearing on December 2 in the Hunt Union Ballroom at SUCO. (Doors open at 4:30 pm.) Learn more online and talk to your friends about the issue. Hold off on leasing your land. Attend your local village and town board meetings and remind them, the DEC, and Governor Patterson who they are working for—not private gas companies, but YOU. Only by standing up now can we prevent the “Marcellus Gas Play” from turning into a game of Russian Roulette. Or a New York State version of the movie Erin Brockovich.
Megan Byrnes, Concerned Citizens for Otego
Please leave a comment about your feelings on the fact that the gas companies are exempted from the Clean Water Act.
Pennsylvania has that covered, but NY is still behind the the eight-ball on this one. The industry is mealy-mouthed about it. They contend that they have to reveal what chemicals they use, but they are not giving them in their entirety, and none of it is made public.
What’s frequently told to the DEC is the kind of chemical, or generic names, but not the specifics. This is done to conceal what is really going on. Why on earth would anyone trust these people?
I just heard that on WSKG radio, there will be an open discussion of the Marcellus Shale Gas Drilling on Tuesday, November 18, at 7 pm.
If you know more about it, leave a comment.
I’d like to thank the webmaster at EssentialDissent for letting us embed these video’s his blog that blog.
The following 3 videos are from the meeting called “Health, Land, Law and Natural Gas Production”
Binghamton, NY; October 29, 2008
(please be patient while the videos load – they are pretty long)
The videos are “Making Sure We Get It Right”, Part 1 though 3
One of the six public hearings on environmental issues associated with natural gas drilling will be at the State University College at Oneonta on Dec. 2.
The state Department of Environmental Conservation had previously announced communities and dates for the series of hearings. Officials recently released specific times and locations.
The Oneonta hearing will be at the Hunt Union Ballroom. The site will open at 4:30 p.m., with the formal meeting beginning at 5:15 p.m. Brief remarks by DEC staff will be followed by public comments starting at 6 p.m.
The meetings were scheduled to give the public an opportunity to participate in the analysis of the potential environmental impacts of high-volume hydraulic fracturing of horizontal wells in New York’s natural gas-bearing Marcellus and Utica shale formations, according to the DEC.
Other hearings are Nov. 6 in Allegany, Nov. 12 in Bath, Nov. 13 in Elmira, Nov. 17 in Binghamton and Dec. 4 in Loch Sheldrake.
Although there is a Generic Environmental Impact Statement (GEIS) covering gas and oil drilling in the state, the DEC determined that a supplement was needed to address issues related to the large volumes of water required to ‘hydrofracture’ the shale to release the gas.
As a first step of its review, DEC recently released a draft scope that proposes issues to be covered in the analysis. The forums give the public the opportunity to review and comment.
In addition to the DEC’s website at http://www.dec.ny.gov/energy/45912.html , copies of the draft scope, a Glossary of Technical Terms and related materials are available at the following area locations:
DEC Region 4, Stamford Sub-office 65561 State Highway 10, Suite 1, Stamford, 652-3722.
Huntington Memorial Library, 62 Chestnut St., Oneonta.
William B. Ogden Free Library, 42 Gardner Place, Walton.
Rogers Education Center, 2721 State Route 80, Sherburne, 674-4017.
Guernsey Public Library, 3 Court St., Norwich.
I’d like to thank all the people who attended, as well as those who ran, the meeting about the gas lease situation tonight.
There were so many thoughtful questions, and so many intelligent responses from the panel.
It was also nice to see that even though most of us were impassioned towards a moratorium on gas drilling in our area, that all viewpoints were welcomed. Had this been the case at at the previous meetings at the school (run by the local coalition, who refused to entertain meaningful input from anyone with opposing thoughts) this meeting would not have been necessary.
It was nice to see so many thoughtful neighbors and friends from other parts of the county at the meeting, as well.
As was mentioned, we’d love your input on this blog. Feel free to leave comments (of any point of view, but remember, no flaming, and no anonymous comments, please).
And please send in any relevant links you have. I’ll put ‘em all up as soon as I can.
It’s taken us a while, but we have finally organized a presentation addressing concerns about natural gas drilling in our area. Our meeting will be held at Unatego High School on Wednesday, October 22 at 7 pm. We hope that you will be able to join us then.
Also, we have attached a flyer about the meeting to this e-mail. Please feel free to copy this for distribution and display in your area. All communities and interested individuals are welcome to attend.
Sincerely,
The Concerned Citizens for Otego group
Check out the Marcellus Shale Play: http://essentialdissent.blogspot.com/2008/10/marcellus-shale-play.html
It’s a Powerpoint presentation by Chris Burger.
Shale Shock iof Ithaca is getting a Swartout Coach bus to take anybody who wants to go to the public hearing Oct 15th in Albany of The State Assembly’s Committee on Environmental Conservation. Please contact shaleshock08@yahoo.com for more info. Cost per seat is $30. If you are able to do so, please add additional money for scholarships for those who cannot afford the entire $30. For those to whom the cost is prohibitive, please send what you can.
The bus holds 55 people. Bus leaves from Ithaca and will stop in Binghamton, but reservations are required. For reservations and more info, please contact shaleshock08@yahoo.com
Ithaca Folks: We’ll meet the bus behind the Ramada Inn (up by Pyramid Mall). We can park cars there. Bus will be there at 5:45am and will leave at 6:00am.
Binghamton Folks: The bus will stop in Binghamton, at the Cracker Barrel parking lot off Rte. 81 at 7:00am. Bus will arrive back in Binghamton at 8:00pm and Ithaca at 9:00pm
Apologies to any and all who have received this message earlier via another server. However, I think that it would be great if we could get some more representation from our area and this bus idea (below) will make it easy for many to attentd. We need to establish a presence at the upcoming Oct. 15 State Assembly meeting of the Committee on Environmental Conservation.
Not only can we mention concerns that we have about natural gas drilling, but we can urge our representatives to do their jobs and tell them that they will be held accountable if they ignore their constituents’ wishes and best interests.
For those who cannot possibly attend the meeting on Oct. 15 in Albany, I urge you to print out a copy of the Damascus Citizens’ petition to Gov. Paterson, obtain five signatures, and mail it before the 15. The Damascus group will present them en masse to the Commission on Environmental Conservation on the 15th.
http://www.damascuscitizens.org/images/Petition-NY.pdf
Thank you very much for getting involved!