Thank you for giving me the opportunity to speak here today.
A month ago, I was an average American citizen begging my government to save my air, my drinking water, and my community from the environmental devastation wrought by the natural gas industry across the country. I wrote dozens of letters to my legislators (receiving very few responses by the way). My husband and I sent several letters to the editors of newspapers and many were printed. We started a blog to compile them and to provide information to others who might be interested in the topic. We tried to parlay the success of the Gas Drilling Awareness Coalition, a group of people just like us living in Luzerne County, into a chapter devoted to natural gas issues in Wyoming and Lackawanna Counties. I wrote, printed, and handed out informational flyers at lakeside communities near my home. And, I posted comments on Facebook and on the Susquehanna County Gas Forum. I admit it, in print, I was very loud… I have been desperate to make my case to you.
Apparently, my voice was loud enough to rouse the attention of my government, but not in the way I had hoped. Instead of my legislators paying attention to what I had to tell them, my government sicced the FBI, the Office of Homeland Security and the Institute of Terrorism Research and Response after me. My government branded me an extremist….or possibly an eco-terrorist. For WRITING a more balanced truth. For WRITING opinions that didn’t sit well with those in power. And now, for exercising my right to free speech, a dossier on me may now be secreted in the halls of Israeli Intelligence for all I know.
Now, on top of it all, I’m told that in concert with these bulletins, the FBI was compiling a list of names of “dissenters”. The FBI is a federal agency…so I ask…is the U.S. Department of Homeland Security now looking at me as a security risk?
For the first time in my life, I do not feel secure in my home. I worry that what I say on the phone is being recorded, I wonder if my emails are still being monitored. I am discomfited. Almost frightened, you might say. And not just because I’ve been spied on…..I feel this way because the very spies hired by my government have been so incompetent they saw me as a threat to the security of the state!…. On the one hand they were spying on me as an extremist; on the other they depicted me as a drilling advocate in their correspondence with Mr. Powers! .If they are so incompetent, then I wonder just how deep this incompetence goes….how many people out there have been told to watch out for me…that I’m a “person of interest?” We know that Marian Schweighofer, executive director of the Northern Wayne Property Owners Alliance, had access to the information in those intelligence bulletins… according to one newspaper report, she sent a message to her members telling them “there was reason to believe” that the Office of Homeland Security was ”tracking the anti-drillers” as terrorists. Is this why when some of us have stopped on the shoulder of a road to take a gander at the construction of or operations on a rig the security patrols have flown en masse at us to herd us back into our cars and away from the property? So the question in my mind is not just who was on the distribution list for those bulletins…..The question is: how far did the information in them travel? How many people who have real or potential control over my life…first responders, local government, state government…MY NEIGHBORS …and, of course, the gas companies ….have been put on alert about me? My small town is soon to be surrounded by gas wells….will their security patrols be alerted every time I get in my car? How are you going to erase that alert in people’s minds? This is not an Oops you can fix so easily.
When I received the email from James Powers, my heart nearly stopped. I asked myself first and foremost if I could have inadvertently done something illegal. When I collected myself and really studied that last line of the email, I was absolutely infuriated. Today I can tell you I am so outraged I don’t know what to do with my anger. Here I was, trying desperately to get my government to put some controls on the natural gas industry invasion, and my government was admitting it was in cahoots with that industry.
When I researched the Bravo Group, a lobbyist group cc’ed in the email, I found out that it lobbies for Chief Oil and Gas and several other energy companies. So not only was the Office of Homeland Security providing intelligence to the corporations about Pennsylvania citizens who might object to having their communities overrun by them….it was providing “intelligence” to the very people who lobby YOU, the legislators, on behalf of those companies. To tell you the truth, the incestuous relationship between our government, the gas industry, the Bravo Group, and the Marcellus Shale Coalition is so clear to me I can’t believe it isn’t a top story in every paper in this state. I suspect that every decision made by our government with regard to natural gas regulation is tainted by the industry’s deliberate attempts to blur the boundary line between itself and our government. In Pennsylvania, the natural gas companies think they’re in charge….and I ask my government….ARE THEY?
Senator, I don’t know whether hydraulic fracturing horizontally through the Marcellus Shale can be done safely. Nobody does. What I do know is that currently it ISN”T being done safely. There are hundreds of horror stories of water contamination, animal deaths, air pollution, people sick….many of which you as legislators have been carefully shielded from knowing about by the Bravo Group and the Marcellus Shale Coalition. Your position insulates you from “we the people” – you are making decisions about the future of Pennsylvania with only half the story in front of you. I hope to God this incident has shown you just how insulated you are…The lobbyists in question have made sure you haven’t learned the truth…just as they have tried to keep alleged “extremists” like me from telling you that truth.
I hope my legislators take a step back and ask tough questions and start reading between the lines when they’re presented with industry-spun facts. Ask just how many non-disclosure agreements Oil & Gas has with individuals in our state. Ask how many massive trucks will play chicken with Pennsylvania’s children’s school buses everyday. Ask whether hunters who come to Pennsylvania will be able to eat what they kill since the well pads aren’t fenced and wildlife will drink from the salty wastewater pits. Ask whether the citizens ….the majority of citizens…..in many parts of this state want their small town ways of life turned upside down?
Now, about James Powers. I’ve been listening to and reading about how this man should be fired. I even stood with a group on the steps of this building last week where some of the speakers were calling for that firing – I stood there because the group’s opposition to forced pooling – another assault on our constitutional rights — was more important to me than worrying about Mr. Powers’ future…..But after the rally, I took the leader of that group aside and told him I didn’t agree with him about what to do about our homeland security director. I tell you now what I tried to tell him – I honestly don’t know if firing James Powers is the right thing to do.
You see, in this country, we have an awful habit of making a fall guy out of the guy who was just doing his job. I’m reminded of what our nation did to Lt. Col. Oliver North during the Iran-Contra affair.
Mr. Powers is an Army veteran…and since he and I were both commissioned to support and defend the U.S. Constitution, I like to think that perhaps Mr. Powers fought bravely to protect our citizens’ first amendment rights and argued with the powers that be – the director of the Pennsylvania Emergency Management Agency and the Governor – about how spying on US citizens exercising their rights to free speech and assembly was not the way to go. I like to think he was simply overruled. As far as I’m concerned, he should be given some benefit of the doubt here – he wasn’t necessarily the one with the ultimate authority over hiring ITRR – and I would HATE to give the oil and gas industry another win by sacrificing the due process rights Mr. Powers deserves as an American citizen.
Then again, maybe after all this, I am still hopefully naïve.
Finally, let me conclude with this:
Throughout history we have seen countries seduced all too easily by slick persuaders who’ve played on people’s economic desperation. Nazi Germany, Soviet Russia, pre-World War II Italy. There, the hearts and minds of the people were captured by those who painted rosy pictures of the future while concealing a terrible dark side. There they smothered the people’s rights to speak and write freely to expose that dark side. There they destroyed reputations and shuffled dissenters off to where they couldn’t cause the government any trouble. Like jail. Like Siberia.
So, I am very grateful to this investigative body for its recognition of just how dangerous Pennsylvania’s attempts to suppress dissenters’ rights had become. The very fact that we are here today tells me our country has not become a fascist state….that we still live in America.
Senator Baker… I applaud your efforts to get to the bottom of this debacle. Go get ‘em.
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What a summer. Gasland. GasStock. Forums. Presentations. Coalition building. Rallies.
It’s been too busy to blog.
Apologies for the hiatus.
After some of the most pressing posts are taken care of, hope to do one that at least lists all the stories we couldn’t do justice to when they broke.
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Independent Weekender story, 6/9/2010:
Dimock looking at frack facility
Dimock Township Supervisors discussed plans for a hydraulic fracturing solution facility which will prepare hydrofracking solution for the gas well industry as well as storage for produced water awaiting shipping and/or treatment.
Somerset Regional Water Resources has submitted plans to the state Department of Environmental Resources and hopes to obtain the necessary permits for waste transfer and storage. The supervisors noted concerns with possible tank registration requirements.
The property, which is owned by Joseph and Nicole Vibbard, will include a large residual waste storage facility, as well as a structure designed for the storage and mixing of gas industry “products” with water before being taken to gas well sites. The property was formerly a veal farm.
Township secretary Paul Jennings said there is a 30-day time line if residents wish to submit comments to DEP about whether to issue the permits.
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Switzer said that there are seven driveways in a row, including hers, on the left side of SR 3023, and that with the speed of traffic on that state road passing through Dimock, “It’s there but for the grace of God we haven’t been killed” pulling out of their driveways onto the paved road.. . . . .
Norma Fiorentino asked if the supervisors knew what was in the water that Cabot Gas and Oil has been applying to the dirt roads in Dimock.Resident Catherine Probasco said that the water she has seen being applied to Baker Road last summer was oily and foamy. The supervisors said that the calcium for dust control approved at last month’s meeting has been purchased and applied.
Ellis said that Cabot should supply the supervisors with a letter specifying in writing what is in the water they are applying to township roads. “The supervisors should make Cabot give them a report of what they are putting on the road, instead of always praising them.”
Sautner said that he was wondering, “now that the gas wells are here, are we considered residential still, or commercial, or industrial?”
Paul Jennings answered, “That’s up to the assessment office.”
Sautner replied, “Our water is ruined, our property value has dropped down to nothing, but my taxes went up. We are still paying high taxes like anyone else with clean water.”
Lettie Ellis said, “Why not invite the assessment committee to come here to address this?”
Switzer said that there needs to be someone looking out for safety. “A pipeline in Texas exploded today, and there was a blowout at a gas well site in Clearfield,” she said. “Luckily, not in a school yard. Not two hundred feet from a home, like the Carters.”
She noted that there have been 50 incidents of gas migration into water in Pennsylvania. Several residents agreed that if an incident of any kind arose on Hunsinger Road, a disaster would be likely, due to the conditions of that dirt road.
For complete story, click here
Tags: Cabot, Dimock, road spreading, roads
From: Chesapeake Climate Action Network
Subject: Prison time for activist over green jobs banner? We’re not kidding
Date: Wed, 19 May 2010 16:00:26 -0400Dear Friends,
Despite the Gulf disaster, no one from BP has been arrested and sent to jail. Despite safety violations at coal mines, no one from Massey Energy has been handcuffed. But today I write to inform you that one of America’s best global warming activists is probably facing several months of jail. He’s been convicted by a D.C. jury, and now he awaits sentencing on July 6th. Why? Because he peacefully dropped two banners on Capitol Hill that said: “GREEN JOBS NOW” and “GET TO WORK.”
I’m not joking. Ted Glick of the Chesapeake Climate Action Network was convicted by a jury May 13th of peacefully dropping the banners inside the U.S. Senate Hart Office Building last September. The DC U.S. Attorney’s office clearly has decided to make an “example” of Ted because of his previous two — count ‘em, two — convictions related to peaceful acts of climate civil disobedience. Can you believe it? You can see a three-minute video of Ted’s September “crime” right here. He’s the guy toward the end simply lowering the banners. Period.
Now Ted is facing up to three years in jail. Based on the judge’s comments last week, it really does appear that he will be incarcerated for at least a month or two.
So here’s what you can do:
First, please write a respectful but firm snail-mail letter to Judge Frederick H. Weisberg telling him why you think Ted should not go to jail. The judge’s address is below. Just type something up, print it and mail it off. Explain why only a suspended sentence is fair, especially given all the real injustices out there on global warming. There is reason to believe that that a large number of thoughtful, well-reasoned letters to the judge could bring leniency.
Second, take an action right now that will help create a world where global warming is no longer such a threat and people like Ted won’t have to drop banners and get arrested in the first place! Sign the “Windmills, Not Oil Spills” petition to stop new offshore drilling in America and promote clean energy alternatives instead.
Thanks for your support, your activism, and your prayers as CCAN fights to keep a morally innocent staff member out of jail during this time of great global crisis.
Sincerely,
Mike Tidwell
Director, Chesapeake Climate Action NetworkHere’s the judge’s address:
Judge Frederick H. Weisberg
DC Superior Court
500 Indiana Ave., NW
Washington, DC 20001**Please keep in mind**
The letters should be respectful. Suggested topics include:
- If you personally know Ted and have shared experiences with him, tell the judge;
- Describe the urgency of the climate issue and the need to pressure our government to take action on it;
- Give your views on what would be a justice-based approach by the legal system toward nonviolent actions of the kind Ted took part in.
Please let other people know about this campaign. And it would be helpful if you could send us a copy of your letter to Judge Weisberg, or if you could let us know that you have sent a letter. You can email Ted at ted@chesapeakeclimate.org, or you could send by regular mail to Ted’s attention at CCAN, P.O. Box 11138, Takoma Park, Md. 20912.
–
Mike Tidwell
Director, Chesapeake Climate Action Network
www.ChesapeakeClimate.org
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Cineplex Rex
makes videos about gas drilling’s effects on communities.
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Right now, there are 57 videos on CineplexRex’s YouTube channel about drilling’s effects on communities: water issues, air quality issues, property rights issues, property values issues, dust issues, privacy issues, safety issues, noise issues, odor issues, traffic issues, livestock issues, health issues … oh, and
lots and lots of tense meetings with citizens asking gas company reps questions about how their situations will ever be put to rights, and gas company reps making assurances they won’t follow through on… hearings, meetings with lawyers and state and town officials.
Notice how it’s always the gas company reps and the officials who are
at the head of the room, like teachers, and the affected citizens are in the audience, as if they were students in a classroom?These are OUR homes. Shouldn’t it be the other way around?
When do WE tell THEM how it’s going to be?How about NOW?
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Tags: blogger
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Frack Country Blues
Frack Country Blues posts feature original cartoons with salient commentary.
Tags: Pennsylvania
An excerpt from GreenMuze.com:
Ugly Reality of Fracking
4.19.2010
After her well water was contaminated by nearby fracking in 2006, Ernst decided to go public, showing visiting reporters how she could light her tap water on fire, and speaking out about Alberta land owners’ problems with the industry, especially Calgary-based EnCana. EnCana is Canada’s second biggest energy company (after Suncor) and is now also a major player in British Columbia, with hundreds of natural-gas wells in the province.
Ernst, a biologist and environmental consultant to the oil and gas industry, says EnCana “told us ‘we would never fracture near your water.’ But the company fracked into our aquifer in that same year [2004].” By 2005, she says, “My water began dramatically changing, going bad. I was getting horrible burns and rashes from taking a shower, and then my dogs refused to drink the water. That’s when I began to pay attention.” More than fifteen water-wells had gone bad in the little community.
Tests revealed high levels of ethane, methane, and benzene in Ernst’s water. “EnCana told us they use the same gelled [fracking] fluids as in the States.” Fracking has become a huge controversy in the US, with pending legislation that would impact its regulation.
Ernst says she heard from “at least fifty other landowners the first year” she went public, and she continues to get calls. Groundwater contamination from fracking “is pretty widespread” in Alberta, “but they’re trying to keep it hidden.” Canada has no national water standards and conducts little information gathering about groundwater.
Read the complete article at GreenMuze.com: Ugly Reality of Fracking
Tip of the hat to FrackMountain for bringing this article to our attention.
Tags: Canada, contamination, EnCana, fracking, water wells
Some selections from a Pennsylvania blog
Frack Mountain
“On the broadcast, Steve Corbett related how he has been unable to get anyone from EnCana to talk with him. They are about to change our world in a very surreal, industrial, and irreversible way – yet are too arrogant to address any of these potentialities with the public.
“Even if you had the perfect company doing all the right things, fracking is still a dirty, radioactive, water wasting, toxin injecting, air polluting, community disrupting, waste producing, land damaging, infrastructure intensive, property devaluing, inefficient way to produce energy. Add on top of that a secretive and entitled corporation – you are begging for trouble.”
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2010.04.10 Here’s an admission of the possible hazards by the industry
Range Resources Corporation (hydrofrackers) filed this with the SEC in 2006 as part of their prospectus:
Our business is subject to operating hazards and environmental regulations that could result in substantial losses or liabilities Oil and natural gas operations are subject to many risks, including well blowouts, craterings, explosions, uncontrollable flows of oil, natural gas or well fluids, fires, formations with abnormal pressures, pipeline ruptures or spills, pollution, releases of toxic natural gas and other environmental hazards and risks. If any of these hazards occur, we could sustain substantial losses as a result of: • Injury or loss of life; • Severe damage to or destruction of property, natural resources and equipment; • Pollution or other environmental damage; • Clean-up responsibilities; • Regulatory investigations and penalties; or • Suspension of operations. As we begin drilling to deeper horizons and in more geologically complex areas, we could experience a greater increase in operating and financial risks due to inherent higher reservoir pressures and unknown downhole risk exposures. Source:Range Resources Prospectus
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2010.04.09 Dispatch from Dimock
It is like a war zone up here in Dimock. Helicopters hovering overhead all the time dropping their seismic testing “pods” – spooking my horses. Workers in the fields and woods stringing miles of seismic testing wire – trucks heavy equipment driving by constantly – dust – noise – skies lit up at night from the drilling rigs – constant noise from the drilling and fracking. Drillers park their chemical trucks next door here at work and I walk over sometimes and try to read the names of the chemical containers – can’t understand the names of the chemicals but they all have skull and crossbones next to them – what would one think that means! Sorry for the rant – just have to vent once in a while. Chuck.
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… our family has experienced in a very direct and personal way, the devastating impact these gas leases can have on individual property owners. Now we wonder whether anyone will want to buy my Dad’s home, and, if so, at what price? Who would have thought that the beautiful woods, meadows and ponds surrounding my Dad’s home would someday become a liability rather than an asset?
For my family, this recent experience was a wake up call. We applaud your efforts on behalf of clean water and preserving a livable environment for the residents of the Back Mountain area. These efforts serve the larger community and are clearly the more important mission of your organization. However, before it is too late, we also want to bring to the attention of Back Mountain area residents the potential impact of these leases on their property values. Like my Dad, many area residents may be unaware that a gas lease exists near their home and the activities that are allowed under the lease (testing, drilling, laying pipeline, installing lease roads, installing pumps, compressors, separators, tanks, power stations, transporting oil and gas by pipeline or otherwise, “and all other rights and privileges necessary, incident to, or convenient for the economical operation of said Leasehold Premises…” quoting from the Memorandum of Oil and Gas Lease impacting my Dad’s home). I hope that you will communicate our fears to the local area elected representatives. It is truly a scandal that at all levels – national, state and local – elected officials have failed to protect ordinary citizens with reasonable regulation of the gas industry.
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Tags: blogger, Dimock, EnCana, fracking, hazard, Pennsylvania, property values, Range Resources

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