http://www.cleveland.com/sunnews/news/index.ssf?/base/news-0/123988722216420.xml&coll=4

BAINBRIDGE, Ohio -

More than 100 people crammed into an overflowing meeting room at the Federated Church Tuesday to hear what the state was going to do about problems created by oil and gas well drillers.

Sean Logan, the Ohio Department of Natural Resource’s director, had few answers to calm fears. He failed to satisfy the concerns of more than 40 residents whose water wells were damaged by an English Drive gas well drilled in December 2007 that blew one house off of its foundation.

It was for these residents that he called the meeting.

In addition to Bainbridge residents, fire chiefs, public officials and residents came from neighboring communities and as far away as Highland Heights, Broadview Heights and Twin Lakes.

They wanted to see how the state responds to gas well accidents because they face new wells in their own communities.

Logan had no answer for Niki Kakoleck of Scotland Drive.

“What is the state going to do for me and my family?” she asked point-blank.

“I tried to refinance my house today and the bank told me my house has no value,” she continued. “My husband and I paid $180,000 for it before the gas well blew up. Now it has no value. I have to pay an attorney now on top of it.
“We’re on the verge of bankruptcy. I hired a sitter to watch my nine-year-old and 11-year-old so I could come here and hear what you are going to do.”

When Logan repeated that he was ordering a new municipal water line, she cut him off.

“This sucks,” she said. “You guys dropped the ball for me and my family.

Life in a hotel
“You don’t understand what we’ve been through. I had to live in a hotel for a week before Christmas with my kids and two dogs when the gas well blew up. My electric fence I paid a couple thousand dollars for was ruined by your temporary water line.

“The water delivery trucks have ruined my driveway — it’s all cracked now. I have to leave my garage door open two days a week and let strangers come and go in my house to fill the temporary water tank. I worry about the safety of my kids.

“The temporary water line freezes in the winter right in the middle of giving my kids a shower — it stopped. I had to wash soap from them with freezing cold water. I didn’t sign up for the gas well. I’m not getting any royalties from it. What are you going to do for me?”

Lou Wagner of Scotland Drive said he is more concerned about safety than the water line, which Logan said last week that the ODNR would install because drilling has fouled water wells.

“What’s going on with the trapped gas underground?” he asked. “Is it going to seep into my basement and blow up my house? We’re living on a minefield. Even if we had good water you can’t drink it if you’re dead.”

Logan replied that the gas is venting underground.

“Yes, it is — it’s venting into the aquifer,” a woman said as the crowd roared in laughter.

‘No evidence’
Logan said he does not have evidence that the gas is continuing to flow into the aquifer.

“But, you don’t have evidence that it’s not,” said another resident.

Although Logan said, “The buck stops here with me,” he placed most of the blame on the driller, Ohio Valley Energy for not moving fast enough to install a municipal water line.

He called OVE’s actions “egregious” and repeated his pledge of last week to order OVE to install the water line to the homes considered to be affected by the faulty gas well.

Several residents asked how they could find out if their home was among those deemed affected and entitled to the proposed water line. They did not receive a clear answer.

When asked when the water line would be installed, Logan said he would give OVE 15 days to submit a plan.

Last week Jerry Morgan of Geauga County Water Resources Department told Sun News he has seen plans for the waterline from OVE’s engineering firm, but it could take months to get it approved through the county and the Ohio EPA before digging could begin.

At Tuesday night’s meeting, Logan told residents the delay was with OVE.

Who’s to blame?
An insider told Sun News that state and county officials — not OVE –may be to blame for holding up progress on the waterline.

Last week OVE’s president Charlie Masters told Sun News that his company has been trying to bring in the water line since February 2008, but has met with resistance.

Tuesday night, Logan said his technical staff would examine independent laboratory reports on the “black goo” that is showing up in well water where gas wells have been drilled and fracted [sic].

This is a change from his stance April 7 when he said, “It seems to be naturally occurring in Geauga County water.”

At that time, he further stated “It’s well documented that there are problems with well water in Geauga County.”

County officials refuted that statement.

Loud boos
Logan pledged that he would push the envelope of the law to make OVE pay for monthly water bills homeowners would face with a municipal water line.

He was booed when he said although his department issues permits, it has no authority to slow down the drilling by slowing down the number of permits it issues.

He admitted that his department is understaffed and does not have enough inspectors to inspect new wells as they are being drilled, although current rules call for the inspections.

He further said his department does not have the authority to refuse a permit to OVE or any other driller that is caught using faulty practices.

“But you’re the only one who does have control over drillers,” a woman said. “We’re the people, and it’s time you stood up for we the people and stopped standing up for the gas industry.”

“You should just step up,” a man shouted.

Logan said he is working on legislation to change current laws.

State Sen. Tim Grendell and Rep. Matt Dolan attended the meeting.

Grendell told the crowd that he is working on legislation to bring back local control of gas well drilling, while Logan is working with the oil and gas well industry on his proposed legislation.

Attorney Dale Markowitz thanked Logan for meeting with residents. Markowitz also told Logan, “You’re on your last leg.”

Markowitz is representing the 40 residents and Bainbridge Township in their lawsuit against the driller and ODNR.

Dolan declined a resident’s request to speak at the meeting.

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Community Board No. 2, Manhattan, Resolution

Environment, Public Health, and Public Safety Committee
March 18, 2009
PUBLIC HEARING

Resolution calling on the New York State Legislature, the New York State Department of Environmental Conservation, and New York State Governor David Paterson to PROHIBIT DRILLING FOR NATURAL GAS WITHIN NEW YORK STATE.

Whereas, Natural gas exploration and production companies, and mineral rights owners, are interested in developing a potentially significant gas resource in the Marcellus Shale through the use of horizontal drilling and a hydraulic fracturing technique known as “slick water fracturing” which requires large volumes of water; and

Whereas, the State Environmental Quality Review Act requires the Department of Environmental Conservation to review the methods used while accessing this natural gas that’s located deep within the Earth; and

Whereas; We heard presentations from experts on this issue, among them: James Gennaro, Chair of New York City Council Environmental Protection Committee; Dr. Stephen Corson, Policy Analyst for Manhattan Borough President and lead author of the Borough President’s report on this issue; Jared Chasow, Legislative Aide for Senator Tom Duane; Deborah Goldberg, Managing Attorney for Earth Justice’s Northeast Office; Craig Michaels, Watershed Program Director for Riverkeeper; and Joe Levine, Co-founder of NY-H2O; and

Whereas, Our committee screened a film segment by Josh Fox showing recent destructive consequences/affects of this process; and

Whereas, Siobhan Watson spoke for New York City Council Speaker Christine Quinn and said the Speaker was keenly aware of this issue and hasn’t taken a position yet; and

Whereas, Matthew Borden spoke for New York State Assembly Member Deborah Glick to say she is entirely opposed to this dangerous drilling activity and he distributed copies of her public testimony on the matter; and

Whereas, over 70 people attended this Public Hearing, including board members of Manhattan Community Boards 3, 6, & 7; and

Whereas, Hydraulic Fracturing mixes water with sand and 250+ toxic chemicals; and

Whereas, the 2005 Energy Policy Act exempts companies who employ Hydraulic Fracturing methods from having to comply with many public health laws which were specifically written to protect our natural resources and well being (e.g. Safe Drinking Water Act, Clean Water Act, Emergency Planning & Community Right-to-know Act); and

Whereas, Chapter 376 of the Laws of New York State of 2008 streamlined the permitting process for horizontal wells that use hydraulic fracturing, allowing the development of natural gas drilling sites within Marcellus Shale in New York to proceed more quickly; and

Whereas, the New York State Department of Environmental Conservation Division of Mineral Resources, Bureau of Oil & Gas Regulation held scoping hearings upstate for a Draft Supplemental Generic Environmental Impact Statement, but failed to hold any hearings within New York City despite the fact 90% of our water supply comes from the Catskill and Delaware watersheds; and

Whereas, Chemicals contained in hydraulic fracturing fluids cause a variety of irreversible and catastrophic damages to the air, water, public health, wildlife, and integrity of local communities; and

Whereas, Hydraulic fracturing presents risks of water contamination during drilling operations and during the storage and disposal of millions of gallons of the water and chemical additive mixture required for each well that is created; and

Whereas, Hydraulic fracturing has resulted in contaminated water supplies in other states, including Wyoming and New Mexico; and

Whereas, No amount of careful planning and operation can guarantee that there will be no chemical spills that could flow into reservoirs, underground migration of fracturing fluids toward the water supply, or other accidents resulting from drilling operations; and

Whereas, If the water supply should be contaminated, the City of New York would be required by the Environmental Protection Agency to build and operate a water filtration plant, the cost of which has been estimated to be approximately $10 billion, which would be borne by New York City taxpayers; and

Whereas, Absolutely no evidence has been shown by any organization that fluids used during Hydraulic Fracturing can be completely filtered out of drinking water; and

Whereas, Council Member Gennaro has introduced Resolution No.1850 in the New York City Council that calls for a ban for drilling within our Watershed Area; and

Whereas, There is no possible remedy once contamination has occurred; and

Therefore let it be resolved, this method for accessing natural gas is FAR TOO DANGEROUS to the air, water, public health, wildlife and integrity of local communities to be approved by any Federal or New York State entity; and

Therefore be it further resolved, Manhattan Community Board 2 calls on the New York State Legislature, the New York State Department of Environmental Conservation, and New York State Governor David Paterson to prohibit Hydraulic Fracturing drilling for natural gas within New York State.

Committee vote: Unanimous approval
Full board vote: Unanimous approval

Respectfully submitted,

Jason Mansfield
Chair, Environment, Public Safety, Public Health Committee

Brad Hoylman
Chair, Manhattan Community Board 2

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For Immediate Release: March 19th, 2009

For More Information:
Jennifer Goldman, Public Health & Toxics Campaign Director , 406-587-4473
Bonnie Gestring, Circuit Rider, 406-549-7361
Deb Thomas, Clark, WY, 307-645-3236

TRI highlights need for regulation of nation’s largest mercury polluter

Metal mining maintains position as nation’s #1 toxic polluter

Mar 19, Washington, D.C. — Today the Environmental Protection Agency published the most recent Toxics Release Inventory. Once again the nation’s largest polluter is the metal mining industry: of 4.09 billion pounds of toxics reported, 1.15 billion pounds were released by mining — more than 28% by just one industry.

Unfortunately, one of the most serious threats to our nation’s drinking water supply is left unknown. Oil & gas producers do not have to report under the Emergency Planning and Community Right-to- Know Act (EPCRA), the legislation authorizing TRI.

“Due to increasing energy demand, drilling for oil & gas now occurs in 34 states including New York and Pennsylvania,” said Jennifer Goldman, Public health and toxics director of EARTHWORKS’ Oil & Gas Accountability Project. She continued, “communities nationwide are impacted, yet they’re in the dark because drillers don’t have to report the toxics they release.”

“My community’s drinking water is supplied by wells, some of which are now polluted by a gas well underground explosion,” said Deb Thomas, a community organizer from Clark, Wyoming. She continued, “at least twenty-five wells are in the path of a toxic groundwater plume as a result. It’s very challenging to address the contamination without any forewarning — what TRI provides — about the drilling toxics that we now know threaten our drinking water.”

The power of the Toxics Release Inventory has revealed the extent of the threat of mercury mining pollution. According the TRI, metal mining accounted for 90% of all reported mercury releases, 6.22 million pounds.

Although the mining industry is a significant source of mercury air pollution, there are no federal regulations that require mines to reduce mercury air emissions. A recent court decision requires the EPA to initiate a rule-making by August 15, 2009.

“It makes no sense that the mining industry gets a pass, when there are federal regulations requiring the other major industries to cut emissions to deal with the nation’s mercury problem,” said Bonnie Gestring, EARTHWORKS’ Northwest Circuit Rider.

EARTHWORKS is a non-profit organization dedicated to protecting communities and the environment from the destructive impacts of mineral development, in the U.S. and worldwide.


1612 K ST. N.W. / SUITE 808 / WASHINGTON, D.C. 20006 / P 202 887 1872 F 202 887 1875 / WWW.EARTHWORKSACTION.ORG

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Bureau of Oil & Gas Regulation
NYSDEC Division of Mineral Resources
625 Broadway
Albany, NY 12233-6500

Subject: Scope Comment

To Whom It May Concern:

I am writing to submit comments to the Draft Scope for Draft Supplemental Generic Environmental Impact Statement (DSGEIS) on the Oil, Gas and Solution Mining Regulatory Program.

I would like to make it clear that I fully support, as the first option, the alternative suggested by the DEC in the draft scope of work, quoted as follows:

“7.0 ALTERNATIVE ACTIONS
Alternatives to be reviewed by the dSGEIS will include (1) the prohibition of development of Marcellus Shale and other low permeability reservoirs by horizontal drilling and high-volume hydraulic fracturing”

As a second option, I call for an entirely new GEIS to be completed by DEC.  The 1988 Draft and 1992 FGEIS are at least 16 years out of date and no longer relevant.  The new GEIS should include cumulative impacts, and the impacts from gas pipelines and greenhouse gas emissions, which were specifically omitted in the scope of work.

I live in Delaware County, on Sullivan County’s northwest boundary.  My family owns about 230 acres, for a large portion of which Chesapeake solicited a lease last spring.  We are members of the Sullivan Delaware Landowners’ Coalition.  My family has suffered from economic trends of the last decade or more, and we’ve had to learn to live on less and less.  Nonetheless, we believe that the only acceptable option is the one cited above: prohibition of development of Marcellus Shale and other low permeability reservoirs by horizontal drilling and high-volume hydraulic fracturing.  The comments I herewith submit regarding the draft scope will show why.

1. Hydraulic fracturing uses enough pressure to crack rock that in the case of the Marcellus Shale has the weight of thousands of vertical feet of material between it and the surface. While Tom Price, senior vice president of Chesapeake, is quoted as saying that this is a “surgical technique”, it is not.  Regarding a subsurface trespass case before the Supreme Court of Texas, the Fort Worth Business Press reported the following: “The problem is, however, that fracture stimulation isn’t a precise science…in some ways, cracking the shale [predictably] could be thought of as trying to hammer a dinner plate into equal pieces…’You may plan a fracture that will go 1,000 feet and it might go 2,000 feet or 400 feet, ‘ said John S. Lowe, a professor of energy law at Southern Methodist University’s Dedman School of Law.”…’How do you prove any fracing was correct or incorrect in an area that is not precise to begin with?’ asked [John] Holden [a partner at Dallas-based Jackson Walker LLP]…’Either side has to prove what’s going on down below, and that’s hard for both sides.’…Lowe said, ‘You can bring the scientific evidence, the scientific testing to see whether or not a trespass has occurred but I’m not sure you can rely on it 100 percent.’” – Fort Worth Business Press, July 7, 2008.

In light of 16 years of data gathering since ’92, it is worth examining, especially in a fractured bedrock geology, given the unpredictable nature of hydraulic fracturing and the extraordinary pressures used, whether this technology may cause disturbances in other than the target formations or exacerbate existing fractures and faults, thus creating conditions in which substances could start to communicate from one stratum to another.  I would like to know if this could be contributing to the existence of conditions that led to the following headline:  “Western PA landowners regret deep gas wells deals, gases bubbling out of the ground and into drinking wells and ponds.” http://www.riverreporter.com/issues/08-04-10/head1-drilling.html

So-called research cited on DEC’s website (http://www.dec.ny.gov/about/47291.html) as evidence that hydraulic fracturing is safe is from a source that can only be described as suspect, the Ground Water Protection Council, which is nothing more than an industry front group which seeks to maintain the current legal and permissive status of underground injection waste disposal, and to that purpose is designed to alter the dynamics of the regulator-regulated relationship.  This group lobbies and co-opts regulating bodies through a clever method which creates a peer-to-peer atmosphere in discussions about regulation, effectively castrating regulators’ power to regulate for the safety and well-being of the environment and all life dependent on it.  It is a matter of great concern to many informed citizens that regulating agencies across the US, including DEC, have allowed themselves to be so thoroughly infiltrated and domesticated by an industry group that has no higher objective than to keep its toxic and dangerous industrial processes legal in the face of a growing body of evidence that they should be prohibited.

2.  The 1992 GEIS discussed injection wells for disposal of removed fluids, and deep well injection is now being considered for disposal of frack waste water.  Again, since 1992 we have 16 years of addtional data to consider.   Pennsylvania DEP acting secretary John Hanger has said that in PA, deep well injection disposal has not been favored because of Pennsylvania’s geology – geology which does not change at the state line.  The draft scope, or preferably a new comprehensive GEIS, must consider what they know in PA that we don’t know here.

Deep well injection is implicated in a series of earthquakes that struck the city of Lake Erie, Ohio. (http://www.agiweb.org/geotimes/mar02/NN_quakes.html)  According to http://www.pollutionissues.com/Ho-Li/Injection-Well.html it is also implicated in numerous cases of water supply contamination.

There is an unwritten law more powerful than any passed by any legislative body anywhere: the law of  unintended consequences.  DEC must consider this reality: we do not know everything there is to know.  Try now, pay later is no more successful a strategy than buy now, pay later.

On page 13 of the draft scope, a sentence begins “Examination of each of the above disposal options along with others that may be suggested during scoping.”  The available evidence suggests to the uncompromised observer that there is NO acceptable disposal method at this time, and that high-volume hydraulic fracturing should be halted until there is.

3.  Spills of hazardous materials:  Page 11 of the draft scope begins with a paragraph that includes such phrases as:  “To date no spill or discharge of chemical fracturing fluid additives in their pure, undiluted liquid or solid form has ever been reported to the Department, nor has the Department documented any environmental degradation that could be attributable to such an event.”   In other places in the draft scope, (e.g. p. 20)  statements are made that adverse effects such as spills and excessive or dangerous atmospheric emissions could only happen in the case of accidents or permit violations – as if such events are impossible or unheard of.  This is a grave deficiency of the draft scope. Accidents are inevitable and New Yorkers are not so naive as to believe that permit violations never happen.  These dubious reassurances do nothing to remediate once the inevitable accident has occurred.

There is so much wrong with these collections of doublespeak that it’s difficult to know where to begin, but an attempt to itemize follows:
a)  Such statements attempt to obscure the reality that in industrial activity, accidents will happen.   They have happened.  If DEC has not documented them, that is cause for additional concern, not reassurance.
b) The fact that the inevitable spill has not been reported to the Department means nothing good, and only corroborates observations of the dishonest nature of the drilling industry.
c) The fact, if it is a fact, that the Department has not documented any environmental harms attributable to such spills means nothing, given, i. the Department’s gross understaffing issues, ii. the Department’s lack of applied intellectual rigor and regulatory zeal (as evidenced when DEC took the word of the Interstate Oil & Gas Compact Commission and incorporated the result of an informal poll of its members’ anecdotal recall in a PowerPoint presentation to municipal officials earlier this year, stating, “in over one million frack jobs, not one instance of groundwater contamination,”  when in fact, there are thousands of instances of groundwater contamination from frack jobs across the country).
d) The Department has never before regulated drilling activity at anywhere near the proposed magnitude and intensity, so even if there had never been even one spill of hazardous materials in all the decades of regulation of gas drilling to date, it is unreasonable and inapplicable to conclude or indicate that there is no reason for concern now.  Accidents are inevitable.  Increased activity mathematically computes to increased risk.

For the same reason, the assertion on page 10 that the Department has no record of any documented instance of groundwater contamination” is in no way reassuring – not only is there a lack of intellectual rigor, the will is missing too.  Numerous documented instances of groundwater exist in New York State, particularly in the western part of the state where drilling has been intensive for decades – though not even at the projected scale!  To say DEC has no record simply means DEC has not been doing its job.  Again, this lack of will, and the deliberate attempt to disarm concern by converting DEC’s wilfull neglect to document into a lack of evidence is a cause for only greater concern.

A little further down the page, one of the bulleted points reads: “information about fracturing fluid additives collected from service companies and chemical suppliers.”  This source list is inadequate.  Information from industry is only a start; this notoriously secretive and duplicitous industry should never be the exclusive source of such critical information. The phrase “independent researchers” should be added.  Dr Theo Colborn is a respected and authoritative source on the subject of fracking chemicals and no compilation of data on fracking chemicals could possibly be complete without including her work.  Two weeks ago I attended a presentation by the Independent Oil and Gas Association, where we were shown a slide that listed 4 main fracking chemical recipes.  The presenters were careful to point out the extreme dilutions of anywhere from 1/4 gallon to 5 gallons of chemical per million gallons of water.  One chemical, a biocide, is used at 1/4 gallon per million gallons. Yet during the Q&A, the presenter reviewed that slide and said, “Well, there’s nothing here that’s really toxic.”   This is not an isolated incident; active citizens have caught gas drilling industry representatives in deliberate lies over and over, and are documenting them.  DEC must not accept as a credible and self-verifying source the reporting of an industry whose representatives are so deliberately misleading.

Section 2.1.2.3 on confidential commercial status of additive formulas or constituents makes the statement that regardless of federal reporting exemptions, the Department is not prevented “from requiring that the information be submitted for review by DEC.”  “Not prevented from requiring” is far different than “will require.”  The draft scope should include information on how DEC will collect this information, from whom (including independent researchers, as mentioned above) and how DEC will verify and regularly update this information.

4.  Well spacing:  Potential of 16 wells per square mile is in and of itself a very significant and in fact unacceptable environmental impact.  The draft scope is at pains to repeat that noise and air quality issues are mostly temporary.  This may be true for each individual well, but the cumulative impact of having one well developed after another means that the noise and air quality issues continue, well after well, after well.  On page 9 of the draft scope, we find 2 curious statements.  One is that Chautauqua County has previously experienced 40-acre well spacing, that is, 16 wells per square mile.  However, this is not the reassurance that was intended.  An 81-year-old lady who lived in and traveled through Chautauqua County during that intensive phase says of it, “it STUNK” and noted that the water was undrinkable and tasted like gas.  The second curious statement is “the Department does not expect the rate of Marcellus drilling in any single county to match the peak Chautauqua County rate” – but fails to supply a justification for that perception.  DEC should be doing full buildout models for what it does anticipate, with  full cumulative impacts – not just individual site and localized impacts – detailed.

5.  Air quality and effects on human health:  Section 4.1.3 omits any mention of VOCs and ozone; again, it is essential to refer to Theo Colborn’s work on air quality on gas well sites. A new GEIS or else a revised draft scope must include consideration of findings from new research on the effects of VOCs and ozone on human and animal health as well as on crop yields.  New studies such as the very recently released, “Potential Exposure-Related Human Health Effects of Oil and Gas Development:  A Literature Review (2003-2008),” and the literature upon which it is based, must be examined thoroughly and the results reported and factored in fully and candidly.  Again, given the vast amount of data newly available in recent years, we need a new and comprehensive GEIS, not a patch that relies on foregone conclusions in a 16-year-old document based on now-outdated research.

Additionally, a phrase in section 4.1.3 reads that “concerns regarding evaporation of pit contents do not arise in New York because precipitation exceeds evaporation.”  This statement is an insult to the intelligence, and once again, it is difficult to know where to begin:
a) New York State is by no means unique in this regard; in fact, just the opposite is true:  There are probably very few places in the world in which precipitation does not exceed evaporation.  b) Of course precipitation exceeds evaporation; it is for this reason that we have surface water and ground water in abundance.
c) Any observer, even a child, understands that evaporation nonetheless happens in New York State.  Slightly more sophisticated observers understand that if water evaporates from the laundry drying (even on cloudy, misty days) on the backyard clothesline, then VOCs in drilling and fracking wastes will evaporate into the air we breathe all the more readily in almost any weather.
To imply that in this atmospheric condition,  evaporation of pit contents is of no consequence is a patent absurdity that is shocking and unsettling to see in a document prepared by the department that purports to regulate for environmental safety.

6.  Sensitive areas and water bodies: The specified setbacks mentioned in section 4.2.3 (page 28) and 4.5 (page 32) are inadequate and can only be seen as a gift to industry.  A new GEIS should study whether these setbacks are adequate, although common sense leaves no doubt that they are not.  This reader finds in the draft scope no mention of restrictions on sensitive or unsuitable topography.  Here in Delaware County, Chesapeake sought to lease our nearly 200 acres despite the fact that it’s all almost vertical.  We still have scarring from the 1996 flood.  On nearby properties, from one summer’s small -scale logging 4 years ago, there are erosion issues from soil compaction:  ditches where once were paths, streambeds that formerly were woods roads.  Here, the valleys are narrow, slopes are very steep, and soil is fragile and unstable.   The draft scope makes no mention of the potentially catastrophic effects of allowing a drilling operation to take place on sensitive topography and unstable soils.

Section 4.5 admits that drilling in wetlands is enough of a concern that it will be permitted “only when alternate locations are not available.”  In fact, if drilling in a wetland is of sufficient concern to warrant that precaution, then it should never be permitted, even when an alternate location is not available.

7. Setbacks for drinking water sources: Section 4.2.3.1, as well as numerous other locations in this document, mentions special considerations for municipal water sources.  I want the same consideration for my spring.  My springs are every bit as important to the health of my land and to my quality of life as municipal water sources are to those served by them.  If proximity to municipal water supply is “always significant” then proximity to private water supplies must also be considered “always significant.”

8. Noise impacts: Section 4.1.1 on noise impacts says that moderate to significant noise impacts may be experienced within 1000 feet of a well site.”  Anecdotal evidence suggests that number is an underestimate and that 1/2 mile is more accurate.  And the duration is understated as well, since with 40 acre spacing one location could conceivably be subjected to drilling noise for over a year.   Section 2.1.3 discusses well testing, including flaring.  It is supremely ironic that this corporate, large-scale activity is permitted – but DEC wants to ban individual citizens’ use of burn barrels.

9. Impacts from large well pads: Section 2.1.4 discusses the possibility of environmental impacts from larger well pads; the draft scope fails to mention any regulation of herbicide use; I am given to understand that “DEC exercises no control over the constant use of herbicides on 5 acre drilling sites.”

10. Impacts on communities:  Section 4.8 (pg 35) describes community impacts as temporary.  Again, with industrial scale operation, community effects are NOT temporary; intensive activity may move from one well pad to another, but is of sustained duration in the community.

For all the above reasons and more, the draft scope is inadequate.  It fails to address the issues the issues listed above and others, either adequately or at all ; for what it does superficially address it fails to meet the standard of a draft scope in that it does not state areas of interest in detail nor how and by whom each area of examination will be undertaken.

The draft scope reveals the Department’s bias in favor of natural gas extraction in many places, including mentions of the clean-burning quality of natural gas and the perceived need for additional energy sources.  This bias is unfortunate, short-sighted, and inappropriate.  Regarding the oft-repeated perceived need for further exploitation of energy resources:  Just as someone who has maxed out 10 credit cards doesn’t need another credit card, we don’t need more energy at any cost to our quality of life.  Even fossil-fuels industries admit that dependence on a finite resource is a dead-end course of action.  Instead, we need to learn to live within our energy means.  Much of the reason we have so much trouble with that is due to the close relationship between government and the energy industry, (sadly, a relationship much in evidence as we watch DEC’s interactions with the energy industry).  For the years 2002-2006 Chesapeake Energy had an average tax rate of 3/10ths of a percent.  If those taxes had been collected and put into real energy independence options, we would have some viable options each day for living within our energy means.  Other countries are much further ahead in this than we are.  If we were to emulate them, we would have solar panels along major highway rights-of-way,  as along Germany’s Autobahn.  We’d have small wind turbines on our buildings and would able to ride light rail for much of our personal transportation needs.  It’s the oil and gas and auto industries who decades ago persuaded our government to use our tax dollars to increase their control and profits, and decrease our choices; it was their lobbying that destroyed the early mass transit that was the common mode of transportation until the early years of the last century.

As the regulating body for the extractives industry, DEC must not accept the false choice that it should make concessions to industry, to sacrifice even a little bit of what environment still remains, let alone as much as this exploitation in actuality will cost us, for a few years’ worth of yet another highly polluting hydrocarbon energy source.  (Pollution is pollution, regardless of whether it happens at the extraction end or the consumption end of the process.)

Finally, perhaps outside the scope of this comment but nonetheless relevant:  many New Yorkers are not confident of the effectiveness of this comment process as a democratic exercise.  Citizens have come to expect contempt and disregard from all levels of government, including the Department of Environmental Conservation.   Nonetheless, we have invested ourselves in the process because we have a business relationship with DEC – we pay you to look after our interests.  Many of us have concluded that DEC cannot effectively do that because of the dual but conflicting responsibilities which which it has been charged:  stewardship of the enviroment and maximizing resource “recovery.”   Likely in part because of the compromising nature of that dual mission, many of us have come to feel we are not getting our money’s worth, and that if we were, the scope and scale of this proposed industrial activity would have been dismissed by DEC from the outset, instead of being promoted by it.

Many citizens have noticed that DEC is quick to pounce on private individuals doing inconsequential things that have no negative environmental consequences and in fact may be of environmental benefit. DEC has much to do to regain our trust as an enforcer of equal zeal when it comes to the activities of large corporations and the energy industry.

Sincerely,
(name removed for public posting)

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JOSEPH J. HEATH
ATTORNEY AT LAW
716 EAST WASHINGTON STREET
SUITE 104
SYRACUSE, NEW YORK 13210-1502
315-475-2559
Facsimile
315-475-2465

December 15, 2008 Electronic Mail to dmnog@gw.dec.state.ny.us
Attn: Scope Comments
Bureau of Oil & Gas Regulation
NYSDEC Division of Mineral Resources
625 Broadway, Third Floor
Albany, NY 12233-6500

Re: ONONDAGA NATION COMMENTS ON DRAFT SCOPE FOR DRAFT SUPPLEMENTAL GENERIC ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACT STATEMENT (dSGEIS) ON THE OIL, GAS AND SOLUTION MINING REGULATORY PROGRAM WELL PERMIT ISSUANCE FOR HORIZONTAL DRILLING AND HIGH-VOLUME HYDRAULIC FRACTURING TO DEVELOP THE MARCELLUS SHALE AND OTHER LOW PERMEABILITY GAS RESERVOIRS

Greetings:

I am writing to you in my capacity as General Counsel for the Onondaga Nation. The Onondaga Nation would like to present you with the following comments concerning the
above-mentioned draft scoping document on hydraulic-fracturing, or hydro-fracking. In brief, the Onondaga Nation requests that you:
(1) Consult with the Onondaga Nation and the Haudenosaunee Confederacy, pursuant to the DEC Policy for Indian Nation Consultation prior to commencing preparation of the dSGIES;
(2) Ensure that archaeological and historic sites, sacred areas, traditional cultural properties and landscapes are adequately protected from environmental impacts of horizontal drilling and high-volume hydraulic fracturing; and
(3) Adequately assess all potential environmental impacts of this dangerous mining activity.

I. The Onondaga Nation Political, Cultural, and Spiritual Interests in the Environment
The Onondaga Nation is the cental Nation of the Iroquois or Haudenosaunee Confederacy. Onondaga is a non-gambling, traditional government which is still governed, as it has been for centuries, by its Council of Chiefs, who are selected by its Clan Mothers.  The Nation is extremely active in a wide range of environmental issues. The Onondaga Nation’s currently recognized, sovereign territory is located just to the south of Syracuse, New York. However, the Nation’s Treaty Protected Territory covers an area of more than 2 million acres. Situated throughout the Nation’s more than 2 million acres of Treaty Protected Territory are specific environmental concerns, such as the Onondaga Lake watershed, and sensitive archeological sites including unmarked burials, precontact and post contact sites, sacred spaces, and traditional cultural properties and landscapes.

The Nation and its people have a unique spiritual, cultural, and historic relationship with the land, which is embodied in Gayananshogowa, the Great Law of Peace. This relationship goes far beyond federal and state legal concepts of ownership, possession, or other legal rights. The Haudenosaunee people are one with the land and consider themselves stewards of it. It is the duty of the Nation’s leaders to work for a healing of the land, to protect it, and to pass it on to future generations.

The Onondagas know that every part of the natural world is important and interrelated; when humans tinker more and more with the natural balance, we do so at the peril of our grandchildren. The Onondaga Nation engages in their extensive environmental work on behalf of its people and all people, in the hope that it may hasten the process of reconciliation and bring lasting justice, peace and respect among all who live in what is now New York State.

II. DEC Policy for Contact, Cooperation and Consultation with Indian Nations

We recognize that DEC is currently moving forward with a strong Indian Nations consultation policy, which states that DEC will consult with Indian Nations on a government-to-government basis on all environmental and cultural resource matters of mutual concern. The Policy further states that DEC is committed to working cooperatively with Indian Nations to address issues of mutual concern involving environmental resources, whether located on or outside of Indian Nation Territory; that DEC recognizes that environmental resources transcend these boundaries, and that protection and preservation of
those resources requires close cooperation between the Department and Indian Nations.

These mining activities affect Indian Nation interests. As defined by DEC’s cnsultation policy, “Affecting Indian Nation Interests” means: a proposed action or activity, whether undertaken directly by the Department or by a third party requiring a Department approval or permit, which may have a direct foreseeable, or ascertainable effect on environmental or cultural resources of significance to one or more Indian Nations, whether such resources are located on or outside of Indian Nation Territory.

This form of mining will have profound environmental effects within the aboriginal territory of the Onondaga Nation – on water, land, air, culture, spirituality – and will effect the Nations’ abilities as stewards responsible for the protection of Mother Earth. Not only does the proposed mining affect the Haudenosaunee and Onondaga Nation’s interests in the environment and cultural resources, but in addition, the Marcellus shale formation lies below Haudenosaunee lands which are protected by federal treaties of 1784, 1789 and the 1794 Treaty of Canandaigua. Because federal law recognizes and supports Indian Nation “ownership” of the minerals beneath their Treaty Protected Territories, it is critical that New York State undertake consultation immediately to ensure that the State is acting within its authority in regulating these mining activities.

At this time, the DEC has not initiated consultation with Indian Nations concerning hydraulic fracturing and other mining, though public meetings have been scheduled and are ongoing. Thus, these mining activities are an urgent and prime example of the need for Indian Nation consultation and an opportunity to put DEC’s consultation policy to work. The Onondaga Nation expects DEC to initiate consultation on these issues presented by this letter immediately, due to the speed with which DEC is moving its environmental review process forward.

III. Protection of Cultural Resources
The Haudenosaunee, including the Onondaga Nation, used to inhabit the majority of the area that will be impacted by this drilling, and there are hundreds of former pre- and postcontact sites and tens of thousands of unmarked graves of ancestors that require protection from disturbance. Federal law requires consultation with Indian Nations concerning any potential disturbance of archeological sites. Furthermore, the State Historic Preservation Office will need significant additional staff to be able to properly review each well application and its potential impact on archeological sites and resources.

Moreover, Article 14 of the New York Parks, Recreation and Historic Preservation Law requires State agencies to consult with the Commissioner of Parks prior to undertaking any project “if it appears that any aspect of the project may or will cause any change, beneficial or adverse, in the quality of any historic, architectural, archeological, or cultural property that is listed on the national register of historic places or property listed on the state register or is determined to be eligible for listing on the state register by the commissioner.”

There is no indication in the scoping documents that NYSDEC has fulfilled its consultative obligation, among other things. This oversight is particularly outrageous, insofar as it is well documented in the scholarly literature that substantial cultural resources are present throughout the geographic area underlain by the Marcellus shale formation, and are likely to be damaged or destroyed by these mining activities unless avoided by prior documentation and study.

The procedure set forth in the NYPRHP Law at §14.09.2 calls for the State Historic Preservation Office to review and comment on proposed projects which have the potential to impact any property listed or eligible for listing on the National or State registers of historic places. The environmental review process must not proceed without this consultation. In addition, Indian Nation consultation, pursuant to DEC’s consultation policy, must occur as soon as possible with the DEC and the State Historic Preservation Office to discuss proposed limits on activities to be permitted in the future in order to protect areas of cultural and historical importance.

In addition to the failure to allow consultation with Indian Nations concerning cultural resources, the original GEIS1 further:
1. Fails to protect cultural or Indian Nation sites unknown to the State Historic Preservation Office and the Office of Parks, Recreation and Historic Preservation
2. Fails to include the protection of cultural resources on state owned lands: state lands are exempted from any archaeological review;
3. Fails to afford any protection or protocol for the inadvertent disturbance
4. Fails to protect sacred sites or traditional cultural properties or landscapes;
5. Fails to take into account how visual, noise and air quality may affect archaeological sites, sacred sites or traditional cultural properties or landscapes, and ongoing cultural practices connected with these sites;
6. Fails to define “disturbance”; and
7. Fails to provide a defined and specific area of affect that is “on or near archaeological or historic sites.”
Again, Indian Nation consultation must begin immediately, considering the speed with which DEC is trying to move the environmental review process forward.

IV. Other Issues for Indian Nation Consultation

The Onondaga Nation has specific concerns with the environmental effects of this type of mining due to the ever increasing body of evidence that these mining techniques pose serious risks to ground and surface water, as well as air quality. The Nation strongly opposes this new method of natural gas exploitation. We have very fundamental concerns that this type of drilling presents extreme threats to water resources, will result in air pollution complications of a chilling magnitude and will endanger the earth, its groundwater and other components.

The fact that each of these wells will use up to 5 million gallons of water illustrates the great need for New York to pass a law regulating this and other types of massive water withdrawals from our surface and ground waters. There is no such legal protection at this time. We are also greatly concerned with the massive amounts of “produced water” that will come out of the wells, or remain in the ground. The Nation feels that “open pits,” no matter how they are lined, are simply not safe, as they have resulted in hundreds, if not thousands of instances of contaminated groundwater in western states. Therefore, these fracking fluids and produced water must be stored only in steel storage tanks. The state must also forbid the storage of fracking fluids or produced water under ground.

These massive volumes of “produced water” will not only be contaminated by the fracking fluids, but also will contain high concentrations of salt, benzene, tolulene, xylene and, in some incidents, “naturally occurring radioactive materials.” These millions of gallons of produced water will have to be de-toxified or treated before the water can be discharged into our surface waters. There simply are not enough treatment facilities available and municipal wastewater treatment plants should not be used. The gas companies must be mandated to build their own treatment plants before any such drilling takes place.

Further, the DEC needs to include in its evaluation of the environmental risks posed by this method of gas exploitation an assessment of the risk posed by every chemical that is used at every stage of this process. These dangerous chemicals are likely to impact everyone who lives in the Marcellus Shale area, and therefore, can not be kept secret by the drilling companies. These companies must reveal all of the chemicals used in this fracking process to the Department, all New York citizens and to all Haudenosaunee Nations and citizens.

Additionally, this method of drilling has also been documented to have a very negative impact on air quality, with unacceptable ozone contribution, methane releases and extremely large amounts of green house gas emissions. These drilling operations are highly industrial in nature, with large numbers of diesel engines running 24/7 to perform the drilling, pumping, and compression. When the high number of trucks which are necessary to bring the water to and from the drilling sites are added to this picture, it becomes even more unthinkable.

The drilling process is simply taking the state’s energy policy in the wrong direction and should be re-examined carefully. Instead of relying more and more on the extraction and burning of fossil fuels, our state should be developing energy policies which will move us to totally renewable sources, such as solar and wind.

The Onondaga Nation and its environmental consultants have not been able to create a scenario by which the benefits of this type of development outweigh its known dangers and risks. Moreover, the Onondaga Nation has concerns about the extent of this type of mining throughout New York State for the last 50 plus years, and requests maps and other materials that provide the location of mines throughout the State.

In conclusion, I would like to encourage the Department to look more globally at the impact of this drilling method on all Haudenosaunee Nations and their territories, by reflecting on the recently adopted United Nation Declaration of Indigenous Rights. Particularly, your attention is drawn to Article 29, which reads in part: “Indigenous peoples have the right to conservation and protection of the environment and the productive capacity of their lands or territories and resources.”

Please contact me immediately to initiate consultation with the Onondaga Nation on this important matter.

Sincerely,
/s/ Joseph J. Heath
Joseph J. Heath
cc: Onondaga Nation Council of Chiefs
Haudenosaunee Environmental Task Force

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