The PressConnects.com article quoted here inadvertently reveals one way the extraction and devastation industry manufactures astroturf:  “New York landowners will receive $500 per acre when the lease is signed, and the other $5,000 per acre when the moratorium is lifted.”


Fortuna Energy agrees to pay $165 million for gas rights; 600 members of coalition to receive $5,500 per acre, plus royalties

By George Basler
September 12, 2009

“CHOCONUT, Pa. — A Horseheads-based company is willing to pay a collective $165 million for the rights to drill for natural gas in about 30,000 acres of the Marcellus Shale.

“Fortuna Energy Inc. has closed a deal with … a coalition of about 600 property owners, to lease all of the group’s acreage in Susquehanna and Bradford counties in Pennsylvania, as well as its land in Broome County, officials with the coalition said Saturday.

“Under the agreement, Fortuna Energy will pay all of the property owners in the coalition $5,500 an acre for a five-year lease on their property, with a company option to extend the lease for another three years. The company will also pay 20 percent royalties for producing wells.

. . . . .               dont_sign_full_size2

“Under the agreement, Pennsylvania landowners will receive the $5,500 per acre within 40 to 90 days of signing the lease agreement, Fortuna officials said.

“The deal will be structured differently for coalition landowners in New York, who are clustered in the towns of Binghamton and Vestal. That’s because New York currently has a moratorium on drilling [said a person who helped negotiate the lease]… New York landowners will receive $500 per acre when the lease is signed, and the other $5,000 per acre when the moratorium is lifted. The company will not be able to do any work on their land until New York begins issuing permits to drill.”

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At least two sentences in the last paragraph are untrue. There is not currently a moratorium on gas drilling in NYS, or even on horizontally-drilled, high-volume hydraulically-fractured wells in tight shales (HD/HVHF), the new extraction technique currently under review by the NYS Department of Environmental Conservation (or as we like to say, Department of Energy Corporations). At any time, companies could be drilling and completing such wells, under one condition: they would have to complete a site-specific Environmental Impact Statement EIS at their own expense for each well.  Sounds reasonable enough, even like a good idea, doesn’t it, considering the mammoth scale and environmental impact of an HD/HVHF well? Instead, these companies prefer to pretend that they can’t drill until the DEC completes a statewide Generic EIS for them. That’s right: the gas drilling industry doesn’t want to pay its own way for each well it drills.  Instead, it wants you, the New York State taxpayer, to pay for the Generic (that is, one size fits all) EIS that will open the way for it to exploit our resources – and us. The gas drilling industry is a bully.

Binghamton and Vestal landowners, show some New York smarts – don’t be the blind led by the blind – and New York moxie.  New Yorkers know better than to give in to bullies.

The way to get maximum protection through any gas lease is by not signing it. Don’t sign. You’ll be glad you didn’t.

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Complete PressConnects story here

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NewsAdvance.com, Lynchburg, VA reports:

Appomattox heals, one year after pipeline blast

By Carrie J. Sidener

Published: September 12, 2009

APPOMATTOX —  Deputy John Mattox still patrols the stretch of Virginia 26 that’s just north of town.

He passes the spot daily — right there, at the crest of the hill — where a year ago he stopped, stepped out of his cruiser and snapped a photo.

He knew what he had to do early that Sunday morning, and he thought it would kill him. The photo, he reasoned, would help investigators piece together how he died.

As he felt the air sucking away from him and into an expanding fireball just down the hill, Mattox tucked the camera under the driver’s seat. Then he ran toward the inferno fueled by a ruptured natural gas line, going door to door to move residents from their homes to safety.

A year later, new grass and weeds cover the scorched earth. The wreckage of two homes blown apart in the explosion is gone. Except for melted siding on a few homes up the road and some boarded-up windows, there is little physical evidence of the blast that rocked this tight-knit community on Sept. 14, 2008.

Even Mattox’s photo is gone. He deleted it from his camera a few months later.Details of that day, though, are seared in his memory. It is the same for many Appomattox residents who lived through the crisis — similar to the way that history-changing events are etched in the minds of those who experienced them, like President John F. Kennedy’s assassination or the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, 2001.

Greg Heath still remembers his panicked realization that morning that the pipeline he helped maintain had ruptured.

The Williams Gas Company employee was awake in his bed when the phone rang. As he answered the call, his wife went to the window. She yelled for him to come look.

“I looked at the fireball and I knew we started it,” he said. “The only thing that can burn like that is a ruptured pipeline. I thought, `Good God, we’ve set the world on fire.”

Heath has worked for Williams for 24 years and is trained in what to do in an emergency. He hopped into his truck and drove to the compressor station, a tenth of a mile from his home. The control panel there showed dangerously low pressure in one of the lines. He pushed a button to shut down the pumps that moved gas through the lines.

As he tried to report the rupture to the company’s control office, other local Williams employees called from valve locations along the pipeline demanding to know which line to shut down completely. They didn’t need to be called. They had seen, and heard, the rupture.
Heath didn’t go out to the site of the blast until four days later.

“I was devastated,” he said. “Everything was just blackened and awful. It was like a piece of hell.” Heath still doesn’t like to ride past the site, about three miles from his home, even though most evidence of the damage has been erased.

“It was hard for me to see what we had done,” he said. “Those people lost everything they own. … I felt like we did a good job of taking care of what needed to be done.”

Mattox, the deputy, was called a hero for his actions getting residents to safety. He knows it is a miracle, really, that no one died in the blast.

“This caught me off guard by its magnitude,” he said recently. “I will always remember the size of that fireball. That fireball was massive. … I believed that it would spread to adjacent residences.”

Just before Mattox took the photograph, he met Junior and Dorothy Bryant on the road as they fled from the cloud of dust and the rocks that punctured their roof and landed in their living room.

A year later, Bryant’s home — located a few hundred yards from the blast site — sits empty with a for sale sign in the front yard. Sometimes, he drives to his home of six years and sits in the driveway just to think. The Bryants never really returned to that house except to gather their belongings.

The couple lived with family members for a few months before settling with Williams. The company bought their old house and their new one, just down the street from the company’s compressor station. Some people joke about their new address, but Dorothy loves the house, Junior Bryant said.

“People look at us like, `Didn’t you get enough?’” he said. “I don’t find no fear in it. This thing was not supposed to happen.”

He’s hiked and hunted along those pipelines for most of his life. The Bryants looked at other places after the blast, but fell in love with the spacious house on Pumping Station Road.

It took a while, though, for Junior and Dorothy to be comfortable in their new home. Sounds of maintenance on the compressor station startled them. And once in a restaurant when a balloon popped, Junior almost hit the bottom of the table.

He thanks God that he and his wife are still alive.

“If it had been at night, I’m not sure we would have gotten out,” Bryant said. “If we hadn’t gotten out before the fireball, we wouldn’t have made it.”

He remembers sitting in the emergency shelter eating dinner with Dorothy that night a year ago.

“I would have thought it would never happen to me, where we live,” Bryant said. “We were sitting there eating dinner and thinking, `Wow, this is real.’ One morning things are normal and the next, the world’s upside down.”

. . . . .

The rupture brought the pipeline to the attention of many in Appomattox who had previously ignored it.

“People in the county didn’t know the pipeline was near their houses,” said Timmy Garrett, Appomattox’s fire chief. “We had people who bought their houses, and had no idea that they were 25 feet from a gas line.”

Now, strange or loud noises around the pipeline and compressor station prompt calls to emergency dispatch, said Bobby Wingfield, the county’s emergency services director.

“With the presence of the gas pipeline, any abnormality, any suspicious activity draws attention,” he said. “People, not just pipeline people, are more aware of it.

“It will take a while for people, when they hear a loud sound, to think it’s something other than the pipeline.”

http://www2.newsadvance.com/lna/news/local/article/appomattox_heals_one_year_after_pipeline_blast/19441/

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KRGV.com reports, 9/13/09

RIO GRANDE CITY – The sky in Rio Grande City was lit up Saturday night by a huge fireball. It was the result of a natural gas pipeline explosion.

. . . . .

Firefighters say it was a challenging blaze for them because they couldn’t get to it to tackle it. Fire crews waited for the gas company to turn off the gas to that location first and waited for the fire to subside a bit before battling it. The fire burned for at least two hours and then dwindled on its own.

Fire crews are meeting with the pipeline company tomorrow morning to find out what caused the explosion. They say one possibility is that the lines could be old. The lines will stay turned off for now.

Complete story at:
http://www.krgv.com/news/local/story/Gas-Pipeline-Explodes-in-Rio-Grande-City/9ZYzNbqk-kSpqAK11wFqYg.cspx

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KRGV.com in Texas, 11/26/08:

Dangers of Gas Pipelines Under Neighborhoods

Reported by: Will Ripley

MCALLEN – NEWSCHANNEL 5 uncovered the potential danger caused by natural gas pipelines under Valley neighborhoods.

Six weeks ago, a natural gas pipeline exploded in McCook. The ball of fire was 400 feet high and over 1,500 degrees. The flames melted everything around them, including the asphalt on the road.

NEWSCHANNEL 5 spent the past six weeks traveling across Texas, digging up documents, and tracing a trail of pipelines. We found the pipelines weaving under your neighborhoods, your homes, and your schools.

We also learned natural gas is being blamed for a series of house explosions in north Texas.

“We have a very volatile situation,” says Jay Marcom. The north Texas farmer was in Austin, testifying to the Railroad Commission about the danger of natural gas pipelines. He says worn-out pipelines are leaking natural gas, polluting his land, and putting lives at risk.

“They’re just sitting out there waiting and rusting, waiting to explode,” Marcom says.

He agreed to come to the Valley with special equipment used to detect natural gas leaks. It didn’t take long before we found one. It was less than three miles from the McCook explosion site.

“You can smell the natural gas in this area,” commented Marcom.

NEWSCHANNEL 5 learned there are literally hundreds of miles of natural gas pipelines, running under thousands of Hidalgo County homes. This includes houses in McAllen, Mission, Edinburg, and Pharr. In fact, Hidalgo County has more pipelines than all the other Valley counties put together.

Railroad Commission documents show some of these lines are over five decades old. Back then, the pipelines were surrounded by empty fields.

Now, new homes and businesses are going up in the area. We’re told the land is too valuable not to develop.

“You’re moving out into the oil field and you’re exposing yourself to danger when you do that,” says Marcom.

City and pipeline operators work together to keep you as safe as possible. Companies try to keep a 50-foot buffer zone around the lines. But NEWSCHANNEL 5 found out that doesn’t always happen.

We saw one pipeline running directly underneath homes. Another pipeline runs right under McAllen Memorial High School.

Gas companies insist it is safe to build over pipelines, as long as the public knows they’re there.

. . . . .

NEWSCHANNEL 5 spent two days searching for pipelines. Most of the sites looked well maintained. All of them were fenced off, keeping us and our testing equipment out.

We tried talking to the HESCO Gathering Company, which owns the pipeline that blew up in McCook. They also own gas lines that run right under Valley neighborhoods. They turned us down for an on-camera interview.

But they did agree to answer some of our questions by phone and email.

HESCO says they’re still waiting on lab reports to confirm the official cause of the McCook explosion. But they tell NEWSCHANNEL 5 it was likely a “corrosion issue.”

We asked if HESCO’s other gas lines are corroding too. They responded, “We do significant testing on our pipelines.”

But they couldn’t give us an exact date. They did say, “We are constantly inspecting and treating our pipelines.”

More than a dozen companies operate natural gas lines in the Valley. Only one company, Shell, agreed to an interview. They have three full time inspectors in the Valley. They check 600 miles of pipelines, preventing problems before they happen.

Shell spokesperson James Blanton says, “The safety of the public and the environment is of the utmost importance to us.”

We asked him if the accident in McCook could happen in McAllen.

“Yes, hypothetically, yeah it could happen,” says Blanton, “But I’m very confident it will not be a Shell line.”

The Texas Railroad Commission also has four inspectors covering more than a thousand miles of pipelines in the Valley. Their job is to make sure those pipelines are well-maintained.

But even the state admits whenever you mix pipelines and people problems are bound to happen. According to the Railroad Commission, 200 such accidents happen a week in Texas. That’s more than 28 accidents a day.

Most accidents happen when construction workers dig and hit a gas line.

Ramona Nye of the Texas Railroad Commission explains, “This is the number one cause of accidents in the state. We are working hard to reduce those accidents.”

The Railroad Commission will soon begin fining people who dig into pipelines, without calling to find out where they are.

But Marcom says with so many gas lines in such a populated area, it’s only a matter of time before the next big accident.

“You’ve got the same ticking time bomb out in the country, in McAllen, in the Valley, with these unregulated gas gathering lines that are just waiting to explode,” he says.

We should point out the local government makes millions of dollars in tax revenue from these gas gathering lines.

The official report on the McCook explosion is due out in two weeks. As soon as we get that information from the company that owns the line, we’ll share it with you.

If you’re buying a home, it’s up to you to look around and see if there are any gas pipelines in the area. If you live near a natural gas line, the Texas Railroad Commission says you should always call before you dig. You can dial 811 or call 800-545-6005.

If you see or smell gas, get away from the area immediately and don’t use your cell phone because it could spark an explosion. Once you’re in a safe area, call police to report a possible gas leak.

Complete story at:
http://www.krgv.com/content/news/investigations/story/Dangers-of-Gas-Pipelines-Under-Neighborhoods/IFdmgVrTAEqwnRvsStHctw.cspx

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An op-ed published in the New York Times:
Recovering From Wyoming’s Energy Bender

By ALEXANDRA FULLER
Published: April 20, 2008
Wilson, Wyo.

FOR all its Old West mythology, Wyoming is and always will be a mining state, more roughneck than cowboy. Frankly, in a land of long winters and high winds, there aren’t a lot of other economic choices. And a powerful oil lobby reminds us with Orwellian regularity that we owe everything to oil and gas taxes, bullying those who disagree. (In February, a committee of the Wyoming Legislature rejected a spending increase for the University of Wyoming’s Ruckelshaus Institute of Environment and Natural Resources after institute scientists dared to raise concerns about water produced in coal-bed methane wells.) Even so, the oilier side of our nature has never threatened to unhorse the cowboy entirely, not even now, when the pressure to develop every last seam of energy is end-of-administration intense.

Since 1996, oil and gas companies have leased from the federal government the mineral rights to nearly 27 million acres of land in the Rocky Mountain West, and Wyoming has shouldered the greatest share of that development. In the last decade, oil companies have leased a fifth to a quarter of the state’s land — 15.5 million acres administered by the Bureau of Land Management, as well of hundreds of thousands of acres of national forest and private land. If Wyoming were a country, it would be one of the largest coal-producing nations in the world, and its output of natural gas is among the greatest in American history. The argument has never been that we shouldn’t provide energy. But is that all we’re good for? And what, if anything, should we leave for future generations? These are global questions posed on a local level.

jonahbasin225-72dpi

Jonah Basin, WY, 40 acre spacing

During his second term, President Bill Clinton, under pressure from a Republican Congress, leased out just as much of Wyoming’s land as the current administration has to date. The difference was that the Clinton administration enforced laws encouraging the Bureau of Land Management to “manage, protect and improve” our public lands while allowing for other values like recreation, grazing and wildlife habitat. The Bush administration, on the other hand, has lifted every possible impediment to industry.

For example, oil and gas companies are exempt from provisions of the Clean Water Act that require construction activities to reduce polluted runoff as well as from provisions of the Safe Drinking Water Act that regulate underground injection of chemicals. The industry is also generously permitted to drill on critical wildlife winter range (close to 90 percent of all their requests to drill on winter range have been granted). Oil rigs are drilling for natural gas on the banks of the New Fork River (the headwaters of the Colorado) and in the foothills of the Wyoming Range. Well sites in many parts of the southern Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem are so closely spaced that, with roads, gas pipelines and compressor stations, the development is continuous.

Meantime, drug treatment centers and domestic abuse shelters across the state have declared themselves overwhelmed and, in spite of what the oil companies keep telling us, we’re far from happy. Wyoming has the uneasy distinction of having one of the country’s highest suicide rates. We top the national death toll on the job with 16.8 deaths per 100,000 workers. Wyoming is responsible for by far the highest percentage of deaths on the job in the interior West’s oil and gas industry. At public meetings organized by the Bureau of Land Management to announce the development of Wyoming’s public lands, oil company executives initially argued to a largely receptive audience that a new boom would be good for the state’s economy. Lately, executives have been telling increasingly unhappy communities that domestic drilling is our moral duty, an alternative to sending more soldiers to war. They imply that anything less than full support for the oil companies is un-American. But a bumper sticker on a pick-up truck hints at the truth: “The war is over. Halliburton won.”

Meanwhile, cattle and sheep ranchers and hunting and tourist guides have found themselves wondering what has happened to their Wyoming. Wildlife suffers as oil leases overlap with habitat: 14.1 million acres of sage grouse habitat, 3.2 million acres of pronghorn winter habitat, 2.9 million acres of mule deer winter habitat and 1.1 million acres of elk winter habitat. Even most of the state’s wild horse herd management areas (the only Wyoming lands on which wild horses may legally roam) are destined for oil development.

Eighty-five water wells in the southern Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem have recently tested positive for hydrocarbons, indicating that toxic chemicals from drilling have leaked into the water table. Air pollution in the same area was so great this winter that vulnerable residents were warned not to venture outside. Oil companies argued that strong winds would rectify the problem.

They were right to predict a wind of change, but it came in the form of an unprecedented experiment in the art of listening. In the last few months, Terry Tempest Williams, a writer in residence at the University of Wyoming, has taken her students on the road to conduct what she calls “weather reports” in small communities. Addressing packed rooms, Ms. Williams turns the microphone over to the people of Wyoming — a stoical populace whose habitual stance against something they don’t like is a tight lip. Astonishingly, they have opened up, voicing their concerns over the rapidity and scale of the oil and gas development.

“One day, I fear I will wake up and all that will be left of Wyoming is a hole in the ground,” one resident of the southern Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem said.

Oil executives have pushed back. One oilman, State Senator Kit Jennings, took the microphone in Casper and declared that Ms. Williams had demonized the oil companies. He rejected her contention in a local newspaper article that the energy boom had helped drive up the use of crystal methamphetamine in the region and announced that he had demanded that she be fired from the university for her criticism of the industry.

Oil and gas are accustomed to dominating the debate. But Ms. Williams’s forums have created an opportunity for grass-roots rebuttal. Residents, who have so far been cowed by the enormous tax contributions that energy companies make to the state’s coffers, are upholding values not counted in dollars. “My hope is that with our backs against the wall we will finally speak up,” another weather reports participant said.

Maybe Wyomingites, justifiably proud of their roughneck heritage and anxious to keep the oil field work, have realized that this boom isn’t going away soon, and they’d like a little of Wyoming left when the oil companies move back to Texas. “We’re Mother Nature’s bodyguards,” a billboard sponsored by Sportsmen for the Wyoming Range warns. “And yes, we are heavily armed.”

Alexandra Fuller is the author of the forthcoming “The Legend of Colton H. Bryant.”

http://www.nytimes.com/2008/04/20/opinion/20fuller.html

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From http://www.answers.com/topic/industrial-sand:

Fracturing Sand. Fracturing or hydraulic “frac” sand, also known as “proppant” sand, accounted for 5 percent of U.S. industrial sand production in 2003. It is comprised of washed and graded high silica-content quartz sand with a grain size of between 0.84 and 0.42 millimeters and is used in high-pressure fluids pumped into oil and gas wells to enlarge or scour out openings in oil-or gas-bearing rock or to create new fractures from which oil or gas can be recovered. Traditionally, the “fracture treatment” at an average well* uses 26,000 pounds of fracture sand, and annual demand for fracture sand increases or decreases with the level of activity in the oil and gas industry.

*un-naturalgas.org notes: the sand volume requirement for a horizontally-drilled, high-volume hydraulically fractured gas well wold be much higher than that for the “average well” cited.

Where does all that frac sand come from?

From places where people live.

Concerned Chippewa Citizens, Chippewa, Wisconsin, says:

“Canadian Sand and Proppants will construct 5 smoke stacks so they can legally distribute as much as 56 pounds per hour of really fine particulate matter over Chippewa Falls and the surrounding areas. The DNR says two will be 51 feet high and three will be 96 feet high. This will distribute the dust far and wide. This 56 pound limit includes only the smaller size of dust ~ the size you can’t see but can breathe into your lungs. There will be additional dust of a larger size ~ too big to breathe into your lungs, but capable of being a nuisance. The 56 pounds per hour does not include escaped or “fugitive” dust that will come from trucks hauling sand on Highway S, the multiple storage piles of sand on the property, and other sources that mining companies don’t have to count due to a special free pass. The company is supposed to operate and maintain filters to keep the amount of dust less than 56 pounds per hour, but they don’t want to do any monitoring of the air that will let citizens know how well the system is working.

chippewastreetflowers
“Our City Council and Planning Commission are expediting the construction of this huge processing plant. The city floated a $1.75 million bond (loan) as an incentive to lure this foreign company to build in our quiet city. Canadian Sand and Proppant Inc. doesn’t have to start paying back the $1.75 million dollar loan until 2011 and then they have ten years to do it. In addition they won’t have to start paying any taxes for 6.5 years. It’s a really good deal for them.”

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More of the story, as reported by Wisconsin Public Radio and Fox 21:

Western Wisconsin sand mining goes against the grain for some residents
03/25/2009

By Mary Jo Wagner, Wisconsin Public Radio

EAU CLAIRE (WPR) Many of the hills in western Wisconsin are turning out to be valuable to oil and gas drilling companies.  But some in Chippewa County are fighting plans to mine the sand there.

As the country looks for ways to become less dependent on oil from the Middle East, companies drilling for natural gas and oil in the U.S and Canada need ways to squeeze the most out of underground reserves.  That’s where “frac” sand comes in.  It’s pumped underground during drilling to keep rock fractures from closing up.

Canadian Sand and Proppant has an agreement with two farmers in Chippewa County to mine frac sand for more than 40 years.   Sand would be trucked to a new processing plant near a rail line in Chippewa Falls.

. . . . .

What is it about the sand in western Wisconsin that’s getting attention?  UW-Eau Claire geology professor Kent Syverson has studied the land features of Chippewa County

“The reason why we have these sand deposits here in western Wisconsin is because we used to have mountains. And over millions of years those mountains disappeared and what was left behind was quartz sand.”

Professor Syverson says valuable frac sand is medium sized and rounded.  It’s also much stronger than the fine sand used to make glass.   In some parts of western Wisconsin he says it’s very deep in the ground.

“But in Chippewa, Dunn and Jackson County, there we have these sandstones right at the surface making them easy to mine.”

Too easy, according to mining opponents like Ken Schmitt.  He claims that air quality, ground water, and property values will be hurt by mining and the increased truck traffic.   His beef farm is next to the first mine sites and possibly competing ones.

”Between Barron and Chippewa, there’s three other companies with thirteen attached mines that were looking before the price of oil dropped…and doesn’t count the three or four mines associated with Canadian Sand here…and it’s going to eat up a lot of farmland,” says Schmitt.

Beth Walton objects to the proposed processing plant in Chippewa Falls because of health concerns and how it will affect tenants in her nearby apartment building.  She’s part of the group, Concerned Chippewa Citizens, that’s filed a lawsuit

“The decision to grant a conditional land use permit to Canadian sand was not handled through the proper procedures or with the proper amount of due diligence, fact finding,” says Walton.

Concerned Chippewa Citizen’s lawsuit goes to court in April.

Two years ago, a group of nearby Dunn County citizens stopped a Texas company from leveling Hoffman Hills. That was in part because the town’s Smart Growth — or comprehensive long range plan — spelled out that mining didn’t fit with the landscape.  However in Chippewa County, Ken Schmitt says state mandated plans have not been finished.

“Up until last June, the people in the town of Howard had no idea that what we had was desirable anywhere on this scale,” says Schmitt.

Professor Syverson says this is an example of the trade-offs that’ll be required if the country wants to be energy independent.   Plant manager Stone says financing for the project is still up in the air and lower prices for foreign oil are complicating things, but he hopes to start mining within the year and put more than 50 people to work.

“Why do our kids grow up and move away? Because they can’t find jobs – well, if industry’s and jobs aren’t being brought into the area, there’s nothing for them to do.”

But in the rural areas, Ken Schmitt says only the mine site land owners will benefit financially.

Noted by Fox21: Information from Wisconsin Public Radio, www.wpr.org

http://www.fox21online.com/news/western-wisconsin-sand-mining-goes-against-grain-some-residents

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The gas drilling industry is known for the repetition of its mantra that hydraulic fracturing fluids are composed mostly of water and sand; if pressed hard enough, they’ll admit there’s a few staggeringly toxic chemicals in there, too.  And because so much water is used, and the chemicals are so toxic, and therefore so much toxic waste is created, the focus of the opposition has been on water and toxins.

Sand seems so harmless, so inert, that frequently it’s not given a second thought.  But sand has repercussions of its own, particularly on the communities near where it’s mined and processed.

Chippewa Falls, in Wisconsin, is one of those communities.  In its own voice:
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“Chippewa Falls is a city of 13,054 in Northwestern Wisconsin. It is historically a technology town, the birthplace of Seymour Cray and the development of Cray computers. Unfortunately, this area also has an abundance of the kind of specialized sand (called “frac”sand) used in the fracturing process by oil and gas companies to increase production. CSP will need four sand mines in surrounding areas, bringing the sand into Chippewa Falls for processing, in order to run their plant at full capacity. The town of Howard is fighting plans for the first mine.

“Background: In May of 2008 the The Chippewa Herald writes about the “new industry” for Chippewa Falls. This is the first public announcement of a planning process that had been going on behind the scenes for approximately a year. The 90 acres of land within the city limits (a first in Wisconsin) had already been annexed and zoned heavy industrial. An interesting sideline here is how city and county government can blindside the citizens.

“So what are the advantages? None. 20 jobs at the plant site, truckers that live in other towns, and with a TIF designation, it will be 6 or 7 years before the city and county see a tax benefit. What are the problems? A lot. The proposed plant will be ¼ of a mile to a mile from housing projects, schools, a 318-acre park and zoo, a hospital, a day care center, and light industry – some utilizing “clean rooms” may have to relocate.

chippewafallsaerial2

“Damaged and lost wetlands, toxic runoff at the plant and mine site, damage to the aquifer from blasting are all possibilities, and have been reported at other sites. Some economic concerns: the costs of road/rail maintenance, the loss of other safe, clean and green industry, decreased property values, increased health care costs, and of vital importance, loss of land for family farms. Once this plant is built it cannot be “unbuilt”. In the end, the mined agricultural land cannot be returned to productive agricultural use.

“We have been told that 560 trucks and 70 train cars a day will use our roads and tracks. Health concerns center around crystalline silica dust inhalation (a carcinogen), diesel particulates, congested truck traffic, as well as emissions from both the sand plant and a future resin plan. We do not have information on how far these particulates can travel. Wildlife will be displaced by a plant that runs 24 hours a day, 7 days a week with continuous noise and flashing lights. Many of our tree lined hillsides and scenic waterways will be gone.

“This is not a done deal. Anyone can help.”

From http://ccc-wis.com/page112/page112.html
Learn much more surfing  http://ccc-wis.com/index.html

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Does any of this sound familiar? In fact, does any of it NOT sound familiar? It seems that the same problems intended for us, here at the sand’s destination, are to be imposed on those who live at its source. Turns out that you don’t have to live over natural gas deposits to have your life ruined by hydraulic fracturing.

How, you wonder, do its advocates (most of whom have a financial interest in promoting it) get away with the claim that natural gas is a “clean fuel” when so much stuff – water, chemicals, sand – has to be hauled by diesel-powered trains and semis from as far as halfway across the country in order to get the gas out of the ground. Natural gas is a dirty fuel, mined through the combined efforts of many dirty enterprises.

Help these folks in Chippewa Falls, by helping ourselves. It’s time to ban horizontal drilling with high-volume hydraulic fracturing for natural gas in New York State, the USA, the world.

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Report from Seneca Daily Journal, Seneca, South Carolina:
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By Andrew Moore (Contact / Staff Bio)
July 8, 2009

ANDERSON — “United States District Judge G. Ross Anderson Jr. has instructed Schlumberger Technology Corporation attorney John Hanson to formally submit a design plan for removing two dams on Twelve Mile River by the end of August, putting a serious alteration on the company’s own timelines of providing the final design by November.

“A public hearing on Tuesday at the federal courthouse in Anderson highlighted Judge Anderson’s disdain for Schlumberger’s failure to remove the dams along with polychlorinated biphenyl-contaminated sediment more than three years after he instructed the company to do so in a 2006 consent decree.

“For more than two decades, a manufacturing facility on the river pumped hundreds of thousands of pounds of PCBs into the river’s tributaries. The river feeds into Lake Hartwell, the bottom of which is covered by PCB-contaminated sediment from the river’s toxic flow. Removing hundreds of yards of sediment from the river, coupled with eliminating two of the three old dams there, would allow fresh sediment to naturally flow and settle on top of the toxic sediments at the bottom of Hartwell, which has a ban on eating fish caught there.

“Anderson has given Schlumberger until July 2010 to remove the dams, and is also demanding the company turn over all quarterly progress reports on the project to him so that he may in turn immediately release them to the media and general public.

“Anderson said he would assume full control of the project after Schlumberger’s apparent circumventing of his 2006 order.

“’I’m not an engineer,’ he said. ‘But this is what you get into when you stoop to fooling a federal court.’

“Brad Wyche, executive director of conservation group Upstate Forever, told Anderson he also believed the delays in the project were intentional.

“’I think it’s clear what’s been going on,’ Wyche said.

“At the heart of the delays were a series of changes in project managers as well as contractors for the job. Joe Carroll of Restoration Systems, the contractor initially tapped for the project, told Anderson the contract was terminated when he was reluctant to sign an 85-page amendment to an originally 15-page agreement.

“’They may live to regret that,’ Anderson said of Schlumberger’s departure from the plan consistent with his consent decree.

“Lawrence Dyck, a retired Clemson University science professor and Twelve Mile River resident, said he was skeptical about the supposed progress Schlumberger had made.

“’We’re no closer to removing those dams than when you signed those decrees in 2006,’ Dyck said.  ‘We’re maybe farther away.’

“Anderson emphasized at the end of the hearing that there was no more time to “fool around” with his order, and that he was taking the reins of the project himself.

“’Frankly, I don’t trust you,’ he said, as he looked toward Schlumberger’s legal team.”

Source:
http://www.upstateforever.org/newsviews_ufnews.html
http://www.upstateforever.org/newsviews_ufnews/UFN_2009/ufn090708SDJ_JudgeTakesReinsInRiverPollutionSaga.pdf
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