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	<title>un-naturalgas.org weblog &#187; compulsory integration</title>
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	<description>Your place to speak out on industrial-scale drilling for natural gas</description>
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		<title>Calvin Tillman: What happened to conservative values?</title>
		<link>http://un-naturalgas.org/weblog/2010/07/calvin-tillman-conservative-values-hurt-by-the-oil-gas-industry/</link>
		<comments>http://un-naturalgas.org/weblog/2010/07/calvin-tillman-conservative-values-hurt-by-the-oil-gas-industry/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 12 Jul 2010 05:29:24 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>clearwater</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Bad Neighbors]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Mean Energy]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Property Rights]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[The Fox is Guarding the Henhouse]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[compulsory integration]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[easement]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[eminent domain]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[forced pooling]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[pipelines]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://un-naturalgas.org/weblog/?p=2643</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[What happened to conservative values? It has been very disappointing to see our conservative values continue to dwindle under the pressure from large corporations.  In Texas our politicians talk conservative values right up to the point where they fail to follow them.  Two foundation pieces of conservatism, are property rights and the free market system.  In [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<blockquote><p><strong>What happened to conservative values?</strong> It has been very disappointing to see our conservative values continue to dwindle under the pressure from large corporations.  In Texas our politicians talk conservative values right up to the point where they fail to follow them.  Two foundation pieces of conservatism, are property rights and the free market system.  In Texas, our &#8220;conservative&#8221; politicians have taken away both from the average Texan.  You are allowed to enjoy your property, as long a corporation or someone with more money doesn&#8217;t want it.  This used to be a state where you could move out in the rural areas, buy a piece of land, and live in peace.  Now if you move to the country to have some property, you are an immediate target for a corporation to take your land, or make it unlivable.</p>
<p><span style="color: #ffffff;">.</span></p>
<p>The prime example of this is the oil and gas industry.  The State of Texas has taken away most of the rights that pertain to land ownership from the citizens and given it to these large corporations.  One glaring example is the natural gas pipeline midstream companies, which have been given the tremendous power of eminent domain.  These are private, for profit companies that have been awarded all the power of government to condemn property.  This not only takes away property rights, but it destroys the free market system that allows for a property owner to negotiate in good faith for the use of their property.  Instead the private property owners are immediately subjected to threats and intimidations.  Due to these companies being for profit, it is in their best interest to obtain the easement and install the pipeline as cheap as possible, and they use whatever tactic necessary to achieve this.  Therefore, private property owners are paid a fraction of the value of the land and not compensated for associated property damage.  This is not limited to the active drilling areas, due to pipelines being installed all over the state.</p>
<p><span style="color: #ffffff;">.</span></p>
<p>Another example is what is known as forced pooling.  It has many names and variations, but again it is another method to transfer private property rights to large corporations.  This again takes away the requirement to negotiate in good faith from the private property owner for their mineral properties.  In Texas the minerals are the dominant property right, so the surface owners have little input on what happens to their property.  However, under forced pooling, the energy companies can even take your minerals without your consent.  This again takes away private property rights and undermines the free market system.  The private property owner also has no protection if something goes wrong in the process.  Therefore, these corporations can take your property without your consent, destroy it, and the only recourse is a lawsuit that may cost the private property owner tens of thousands of dollars.</p>
<p><span style="color: #ffffff;">.</span></p>
<p>I have seen other &#8220;conservative&#8221; states like Pennsylvania following the Texas policy of destroying private property rights, and not allowing private citizens to enjoy their property investments.  I would urge the other states to not do it the &#8220;Texas Way&#8221;.  In Texas it is only worth owning property, if you are willing to concede that you have no right to enjoy that property.  So you must ask yourself if that is what you want for the citizens of your state.  Private property rights and free market system are the values that are important to the &#8220;Average Joe&#8221; trying to live the American Dream; let&#8217;s not continue to destroy this.</p>
<p><span style="color: #ffffff;">.</span><br />
Calvin Tillman<br />
Mayor, DISH, TX<br />
(940) 453-3640</p>
<p>&#8220;Those who say it can not be done, should get out of the way of those that are doing it&#8221;</p></blockquote>
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		<title>Jane Welsh Comment on Final Scope</title>
		<link>http://un-naturalgas.org/weblog/2009/06/436/</link>
		<comments>http://un-naturalgas.org/weblog/2009/06/436/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 03 Jun 2009 02:30:53 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>clearwater</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Community Effects]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Cost Externalization]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Scope Comments]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[buffer zone]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[CI]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[compulsory integration]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Marcellus]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[property values]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[scope]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[seismic testing]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[setback]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[SGEIS]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://un-naturalgas.org/weblog/?p=436</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[JANE WELSH Hamilton, NY 13346 February 13, 2009 Re: Statement Concerning Final Scope ( the “Scope”)for Draft Supplemental Generic Environmental Impact Statement on the Oil, Gas and Solution Mining Regulatory Program SENT BY REGULAR MAIL Governor David A. Paterson Attorney General Andrew M. Cuomo Commissioner Alexander B. Grannis Director Bradley J. Field Gentlemen: I am [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>JANE WELSH<br />
Hamilton, NY 13346</p>
<p>February 13, 2009<br />
Re: Statement Concerning Final Scope ( the “Scope”)for Draft Supplemental Generic<br />
Environmental Impact Statement on the Oil, Gas and Solution Mining Regulatory<br />
Program<br />
SENT BY REGULAR MAIL<br />
Governor David A. Paterson<br />
Attorney General Andrew M. Cuomo<br />
Commissioner Alexander B. Grannis<br />
Director Bradley J. Field</p>
<p>Gentlemen:<br />
I am sending this via e-mail to additional individuals who work for you for whom I have<br />
found e-mail addresses. I would very much appreciate it if you or they would forward my<br />
comments to any and all additional individuals in the Legislature, the Governor’s Office, the<br />
Attorney General’s Office and at the Department of Environmental Conservation who may<br />
have any interest in the above-referenced subject.</p>
<p>I am an attorney living in Madison County. My husband’s family has lived in this area for<br />
fifty years. I have numerous friends and clients who live in the Town of Lebanon, not far<br />
from where I live. In the Town of Lebanon alone, there are currently approximately fifty<br />
drilled wells and yet another thirty are in various stages of development, according to the<br />
Town Supervisor. I have just read all fifty-six pages of the Scope. As a constituent and a<br />
concerned citizen, I am compelled to express my point of view, a point of view that I share<br />
with others in this community, about the need for strict regulation of the gas and oil<br />
industry in Central New York.</p>
<p>While I applaud DEC for considering those issues that are addressed in the Scope, I am<br />
distressed that it is so limited. For this reason, the Scope is a disappointment. While DEC<br />
explains its rationale for limiting the Scope to such a degree, I can’t accept this rationale.<br />
The Scope states that “it is not the Department’s intention or objective to re-open the 1992<br />
Findings for any activity that was reviewed in the GEIS [the 1992 Generic Environmental<br />
Impact Statement] and which will remain consistent.” (Scope at 8). This approach fails in<br />
two respects.</p>
<p>First, it would seem that DEC made a judgment prior to preparing the Scope &#8211; without<br />
considering current evidence – not to revisit the 1992 Findings. DEC apparently assumed<br />
that drawing upon many additional years of experience was not necessary or advisable.<br />
Furthermore, the 1992 Findings are based on research and analysis that took place from<br />
1988 until 1992. Thus, the DEC has made a conscious decision to treat findings and<br />
conclusions that are based upon twenty year old data as current and not worthy of a fresh<br />
look. WHY? The internet revolution had only just begun in 1988. Certainly, no one would<br />
argue that current decisions about IT should be determined by what was state of the art in<br />
the IT world in 1988 or 1992.</p>
<p>Second, Central New York has changed substantially during the past seventeen to twenty<br />
years. Demographics are quite different as is population density. These wells are being<br />
drilled in populous residential areas. I can’t think of any land use planner or zoning board<br />
in the country that wouldn’t think long and hard before permitting an industrial use in a<br />
residential area. The Scope states that the overall well site density is not likely to be<br />
greater now than it was in 1992 (Scope at 39); yet the fact that population density and<br />
development is far greater now than in 1992 has been conveniently ignored. In short, DEC<br />
and the State have lost an important opportunity to conduct a thorough analysis and create<br />
a coherent overall policy concerning oil and gas drilling in this State that would be relevant<br />
in the twenty-first century.</p>
<p>The Scope states: “The State of New York’s official policy, enacted into law, is to ‘conserve,<br />
improve and protect its natural resources and environment…’” (Scope at 2). In addition,<br />
DEC’s job is to protect public health and ensure safety. The very nature of gas drilling in a<br />
populated developed area is incompatible with these policies. Yes, the Environmental<br />
Conservation Law requires DEC to prevent waste of New York’s oil and gas resources and<br />
provide for recovery of those resources. But at what cost and at what degree of risk?<br />
These are questions that absolutely MUST be asked and addressed by our State<br />
government. If DEC does not consider these questions to be within their purview, then it is<br />
incumbent on DEC to prohibit widespread drilling (no matter what technology is being<br />
proposed) and take serious steps to prevent the waste and destruction of our relatively<br />
unspoiled environment until our State government establishes policies and creates laws to<br />
more thoroughly regulate the oil and gas industry.</p>
<p>To be more specific, the interests and needs of the public must be addressed first. Why<br />
must the gas and oil companies (the “Companies”) hold all of the cards while the State’s<br />
people and property are put at risk. Laws need to be amended and/or enacted and<br />
regulations promulgated to accomplish the following:<br />
- The Companies must be accountable to local authorities concerning local issues<br />
and local government must be given the power and authority to enforce local laws,<br />
to which the Companies should be subject just like any other business. The<br />
Companies must be required to carry their weight like any other taxpayer. They<br />
overburden our roads, our first-responders and our resources without contributing<br />
a nickel.<br />
- A state trust fund must be established and funded with Company revenues to be<br />
used in case of damage or destruction to property, wetlands, aquifer, streams,<br />
wildlife, etc. Believe me, the inevitable will occur and our tax dollars should not be<br />
used to clean up the mess.<br />
- The Companies are spending money to influence the outcome of local elections in<br />
an attempt to unseat local officeholders who are working to educate and protect<br />
their constituents. This behavior should be criminalized. The Companies should<br />
stay out of local politics. Local officeholders should be required to disclose<br />
contributions received from the Companies.<br />
- The laws regarding compulsory integration must be revised to make it possible<br />
for a property owner to REFUSE to be forced into a spacing unit. Every property owner<br />
whose property is used to create a spacing unit should be included only<br />
voluntarily. The companies are using compulsory integration law as a weapon<br />
against the people that it was initially designed to protect.<br />
- Seismic testing must not be permitted anywhere along the road right of way<br />
without notification and prior written consent of the owner of the property<br />
adjacent to the right of way. The State should adopt the law of seismic trespass.<br />
- Well drilling within one mile of a municipal water supply or a private well should<br />
be strictly prohibited. If a one mile buffer zone excluding drilling can be created to<br />
protect New York City’s water supply, why would the State not create an equally<br />
large exclusion to protect the water supply of its citizens upstate?<br />
- The chemicals and other additives being used in the hydraulic fracturing process<br />
(or for that matter in any drilling process) must be listed on DEC’s website and<br />
otherwise be made available as a matter of public record. If laws need to be<br />
amended to make this possible, then amend them. The use of known carcinogens<br />
and other chemicals and additives that are a threat to public safety and the<br />
environment should be strictly prohibited.<br />
- State laws must be enacted to ensure that State standards and requirements are at<br />
least as stringent as, if not more stringent than, federal Clean Water Act and Safe<br />
Drinking Water Act requirements from which the oil and gas industry were<br />
exempted by the Bush administration.<br />
- Municipalities must be prohibited from leasing municipal land for drilling and oil<br />
and gas development. This practice presents a clear conflict of interest.<br />
- State lands likewise must not be leased to the Companies. These lands should be<br />
held in trust for the use and enjoyment of the people. First and foremost, the State’s<br />
goal must be the protection of State land for all of us and for future generations, not<br />
for profit. Again, it presents a conflict of interest.<br />
- The Companies are wantonly destroying timber in the process of building access<br />
roads and pipelines. This timber is irreplaceable in our lifetime. Erosion and<br />
sedimentation controls should focus on preserving our forested land, and laws must<br />
be enacted to this end restricting timbering by the Companies.<br />
- Wetlands consisting of less than 12.4 acres should be protected.<br />
- Contrary to statements (Scope at 11) in the Scope, water supplies have been<br />
contaminated, perhaps not by hydraulic fracturing, but I would argue that that<br />
qualifier is of little consequence to those affected. Brookfield is a notable example.<br />
There was a gas well fire in Smyrna at the beginning of the year. Clearly, more<br />
regulation and disclosure is required.<br />
- DEC needs only to rely on a Company’s affidavit, submitted without evidence or<br />
back-up, when considering a permit application. This is ludicrous. Appropriate<br />
measures must be taken to place the onus on the companies to demonstrate<br />
compliance at all stages of the permitting and production process. DEC needs to be<br />
funded at a level that will permit frequent inspections and oversight at the well<br />
sites. If this is not possible, then permitting and production should be slowed and<br />
regulated to the point where adequate oversight and inspection can take place with<br />
the current resources at DEC’s disposal.<br />
- Standards for leases and other legal documents need to be established. Control of<br />
the contents of these documents should not be left in the hands of the Companies<br />
and their often unscrupulous agents. It should be recognized as a matter of public<br />
policy that people with limited resources should not be forced to incur substantial<br />
legal expenses in order to protect themselves against unconscionable practices. If<br />
the State’s policy is to encourage drilling (as it appears to be) then the State first<br />
needs to protect its residents. The Companies and individual people are hardly<br />
evenly matched and State policy and law should take this obvious fact into<br />
consideration. The prices being paid for lease rights and pipeline rights of way<br />
must be a matter of public record. The State must not countenance the Companies’<br />
practice of pitting neighbor against neighbor. This is definitely not sound public<br />
policy.<br />
- The Scope cites potential positive impacts from gas development in the 1992 GEIS.<br />
I can’t say the inhabitants of Madison County have felt them. Legislation should be<br />
enacted to require the Companies to put something valuable back into the<br />
community since they are removing something valuable with little or no<br />
compensation to the community. So far, the quality of life of my friends and<br />
neighbors is being adversely affected as they sit by, without any recourse, during a<br />
time of economic uncertainty and watch their property values diminish even<br />
further.<br />
- With respect to areas of historic, architectural and archaeological significance, the<br />
State Historic Preservation Office has determined that portions of Madison County<br />
are indeed eligible for nomination to the National Register. This work was funded<br />
by Stop NYRI, a private local group dedicated to stopping the construction of<br />
proposed power lines. The PSC is the lead agency on this. DEC should interface<br />
with SHPO and take this information into consideration. It is insufficient for DEC to<br />
review only those sites that are listed on the National Register. A declaration of<br />
eligibility should be sufficient, since the only difference is the substantial cost<br />
involved in obtaining the listing, and those maps do exist.<br />
- Minimum setback requirements should be established at boundary line<br />
perimeters. All too often, the Companies are building their access roads right at the<br />
lot line, thereby hurting the adjacent landowner. At the very least, the Companies<br />
should be required to adhere to a setback policy and to mitigate the visual and noise<br />
impacts on the adjacent landowner. The Scope states that “in the absence of any<br />
evidence of environmental degradation having occurred from the lack of …<br />
setbacks…,” recommendations for setbacks are not included in the Scope. I doubt<br />
that you would feel this way if your property were the one being adversely affected.<br />
- Each of the leases being signed has the potential to last for a very long time and<br />
thus to qualify as a taxable transfer under the New York State Real Property<br />
Transfer Tax Law. This is an issue that should be looked into. Again, the landowner<br />
must be shielded from potential liability for these taxes and the Companies should<br />
be contributing something to the State’s coffers if they want the legal protections<br />
afforded by placing their document of record.</p>
<p>The Scope states that the DEC has “far-reaching enforcement authority over the activities it<br />
regulates.” It continues: “It is not, however, the purpose of an environmental impact<br />
statement to provide enforcement recommendations or policies” (Scope at 51). I tend to<br />
agree with this statement. But, then whose responsibility is it and what is being done to<br />
address the points that I, and others before me, have raised. In fact, the Scope, in its final<br />
pages, presents a list of concerns which “require legislative action” – not as comprehensive<br />
as mine, but it’s a start.</p>
<p>Where is the political will to actually address these policy issues and take the legislative<br />
action necessary to level the playing field between the gas companies and your own<br />
constituents? Where is the leadership? By the time you wake up and start thinking about<br />
these things, it will be too late for the people of Central New York. Do you care?</p>
<p>Respectfully submitted,<br />
Jane Welsh</p>
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