Guest post by MB regarding a Town of Lebanon meeting at which citizens were vocal in their opposition to road bore permits for Nornew pipelines:
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This is yet another instance of concerned citizens turning out to
publicly state their objections once they know the specifics of what
is proposed for their own neighborhood. While I’m sure that some of
the people who were yelling about the gathering line are
altruistically concerned about a lot more than just their own
neighborhood, I think we have to recognize that it is human nature to
be somewhat worried about a dragon that is ten miles away, but to be
in mortal terror of a dragon that is ten feet away. This is why the
Forces Of Evil (i.e. the gas industry and its minions) have enacted
laws that allow huge, industrial, horizontal well pads to be
constructed in residential areas without prior notice or public
hearings: the FOEs know full well that, given the opportunity, a lot
of people would object to having a gas well sited in their
neighborhood, so the FOEs have deprived the people of their
opportunity to object.

Someone who broke into my house and stole a pad of notepaper could be
prosecuted, but the gas industry can come into my neighborhood without
my consent, devalue my home, steal my clean water and my clean air,
destroy my sense of well-being, and ruin my health, and I would have
little or no legal recourse. This is legalized lawlessness. It is
legalized chaos. You cannot have a stable, healthy, productive,
thriving community if its citizens must live in the midst of
lawlessness and chaos: supposedly, we figured this out a long time
ago–it’s one of the major reasons for having laws in the first
place.

A compilation of gas leases in Tompkins County (see http://www.tcgasmap.org)
has revealed that the decision to completely alter the nature of the
county and endanger everyone’s health has been made by just 6% of the
adult, non-student population of the county. Needless to say, the
personal and financial costs of trying to repair the damage to the
environment, pay the health care bills, etc. will NOT be borne by just
6% of the county. This gas nightmare is frightening not just because
of the dangers of chemicals and well fires and air pollution: it is
also frightening because of its profoundly undemocratic nature. There
is a radical revolution in progress here and we are not the radicals.

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In response to:

“Town of Lebanon requests delay in proposed 16 inch steel gas pipeline and public statement hearing – Comments on PSC Case No. 09-T-0499: Those who are discouraged by the response of the general public and local governments to our concerns should have been at this meeting. People were yelling. When Town Supervisor Goldstein asked at the end of the meeting for a show of hands from the attending Town of Lebanon residents, as to whether the town should issue the road bore permits tonight as requested by Nornew, no one was so inclined. Nothing like a couple of gas well fires and obviously-inadequate containment/run-off mitigations to focus people’s minds.”

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Another example of gas company drilling PR damage control.  Read between the lines:

Gas well explodes in nearby Lebanon

031909-gas-fire

Tyler Murphy, Sun Staff Writer
Published: March 20th, 2009

LEBANON – A gas well in the Town of Lebanon exploded early Thursday morning, less than five and a half miles from Chenango’s border with Madison County. The explosion injured two workers and jolted nearby residents from their beds.

“Two well operators that were on site were both treated for burns, one to his face and arms and one with burns to his face. They were treated for the burns and released within hours of the incident,” said Norse Energy spokesman Dennis Holbrook.

Norse Energy is the parent company of Nornew, which has an office located in The Eaton Center in Norwich.

The incident began at 5 a.m. Thursday when a fire was somehow ignited at the site, causing an explosion. The company flew in a response team and had the fire put out using foam and water by 2 p.m., explained Holbrook.

The cause of the fire is still being investigated, but the company said it ignited while operators were in the process of removing drill piping.

The closest residence to the explosion was a home along Lebanon Hill Road, approximately 300 to 400 yards away.

Don Johnson lives there with his family and was awakened by the sound Thursday morning.

“I was sleeping and the sound woke me up,” said Johnson, who described the noise as a loud concussion.

“It was one of those things you wake up and think ‘what the heck was that? Was I dreaming?’ I went back to bed and the next thing I hear is someone knocking on my door and that’s when you start to wonder ‘What is going on?’”

“They came knocking on the door, maybe 20 minutes after five (a.m.) and we were told by them that there was an ‘incident’ and to ‘pleased stay in your home and away from your windows for the time being,’” said Johnson, quoting Norse Energy personnel he recognized from the gas rigs down the road.

Lebanon Hill Road has three gas wells along it and two of them are within sight of the family’s farmhouse home.

Johnson said he’s used to having Norse Energy as a neighbor. “Nothing surprises me up here anymore,” said Johnson. “It’s just constant traffic,” he added.

Norse Energy flew in a response team to review the fire as it burned to evaluate how to terminate the blaze safely.

“We flew in our senior operations people. Vice President of Operations Daniel Steffy, who is located in Norwich most of the week but was in Pittsburgh for a meeting – and we flew in his boss, Senior Vice President Mark Williams, who works in Pittsburgh,” said Holbrook.

The company’s head of safety operations, Doug Stebbins, was also on site. “He was already in the area since most our activities right now are focused right here,” said Holbrook.

While the company scrambled a response, Madison County fire departments responded to the blaze within minutes of the initial explosion.

“We had a fire at a gas well and we’re standing by waiting for the company to decide how it want to extinguish the fire,” said Eaton Fire Chief Rick Stoddard Thursday morning.

“We’re not specifically trained to put out these kinds of gas fires and the company is bringing in its own response team. We are here to give them a hand if they need it,” he added.

“The property damage was limited to the rig and the property around it. We try to locate these wells a sufficient distance away from people and we anticipate the possibility of these sorts of things happening and have a plan in place,” said Holbrook.

He said that part of that plan was working closely with emergency services and notifying them whenever an incident took place.

The company is also in the process of trying to inform appropriate public officials in the region to help educate elected leaders and the public, explained Holbrook.

The Department of Environmental Conservation was also on site to address environmental concerns, which Holbrook said was contained to a diesel spill from one of the vehicles there.

“We have a contract with an environment cleanup agency for these things,” he said.

In a statement released Thursday, the company wrote that “minimal environmental impact is anticipated.”

“Obviously when anything like this occurs, we want to step back and make sure we are operating in the safest manner possible,” said Holbrook. The company also closed a nearby rig for inspection as a precaution.

“The most important is thing is the people, making sure we address public safety and then the environment and securing the location and putting out the fire. After that, we look at the cause – what occurred, why it occurred, and minimizing it from occurring again,” he said.

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If any of that last paragraph was true, they just wouldn’t drill in the first place.

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http://www.syracuse.com/news/index.ssf/2009/03/lebanon_gas_well_explodes_inju.html

by Aaron Gifford

Thursday March 19, 2009, 3:39 PM

LEBANON, NY – Two people were injured Wednesday after a natural gas well explosion on Soule Road in the town of Lebanon, the second such incident in the area this year, authorities said.

The well, owned by Nornew Inc., was reported ablaze at around 5 a.m. The two workers had finished drilling at the site and were pulling out pipe when something ignited the gas, said Dennis Holbrook, speaking for Nornew.

DRILLCO LLC, a Nornew subsidiary, employs the workers. Holbrook said one sustained first-degree burns and the other first- and second-degree burns. Both were treated at a local hospital and released. Neither was identified.

…..

Chris Lloyd, Eaton Fire Department’s deputy first assistant chief, said the flames and black smoke could be seen two miles away.

Firefighters from Georgetown and Smithfield also responded to the scene. Firefighters applied foam and then water to the blaze, which was contained to the well. It burned for about 10 hours and was extinguished by 3 p.m., Holbrook said.

“It’s not surprising that you could have something burning there, but we’re not sure what ignited it,” Holbrook said.

There are residents within a half-mile of the site but an evacuation was not required, firefighters said. The state Department of Environmental Conservation is currently investigating the incident and overseeing any clean-up work, along with Nornew’s insurance company and a third-party environmental company hired by Nornew, Holbrook said.

The drilling rig and other equipment was damaged in the fire, but company officials have not estimated the damage yet. Holbrook said the well would probably still be operational.

A Nornew well in nearby Smyrna, Chenango County, caught fire on Jan. 1. In that incident, investigators believe, a shard of rock broke a fluorescent light bulb, igniting the fire that burned for about an hour.

Nornew began drilling wells in Lebanon in the late 1990s and has accelerated its activity in neighboring towns in recent years.

Holbrook said Nornew has not had any well fires yet on other properties it owns in Erie County and in Oklahoma. He said employees are very careful to safeguard against accidents when they use new techniques and adjust to new landscapes.

“There are new challenges in each new region we explore,” he said.

According to DEC spokeswoman Lori Severino, such incidents are infrequent; the last rig fire occurred in March at a liquid propane gas storage facility in Steuben County.

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