The Marcellus Effect: Frack Democracy! Full Speed Ahead
June 10, 2011 2 Comments
The Marcellus Effect: Frack Democracy! Full Speed Ahead.
Friday, June 10, 2011
Frack Democracy! Full Speed Ahead
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| Town of Caroline, Tompkins County NY |
Drive south of Ithaca just a few miles and you come to the Town of Caroline. It’s a lovely mix of rolling hills, farms and several small communities. People move here to raise their vegetables and children in a quiet rural environment. They stay because of the community.
But that sense of community may be fracturing. About 55% of the land in the Town of Caroline is leased to gas companies and some residents worry that a minority will rake in economic benefits at the expense of the majority. They are concerned that industrialized drilling could contaminate their water, pollute their air, affect soil and food production, drastically change land use and damage publicly-funded infrastructure.
So over the past few weeks a few of these folks have been walking through their neighborhoods carrying a petition. It’s a simple petition, only 55 words long: We, the undersigned residents of the Town of Caroline, urge the Town Board to ban gas extraction using high-volume, slickwater, hydraulic fracturing in the Town of Caroline. The methods used and the intensity of industrial development threaten our clean air, clean water, soil, rural landscapes, and health, as well as our social and economic well-being.
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| Caroline in the fall |
More than 900 Caroline residents have already signed the petition – more than three times as many signatures as any other petition drive in the Town has ever gathered, says Bill Podulka. He coordinates the local activist group ROUSE (Residents Opposing Unsafe Shale-Gas Extraction) which is spearheading the petition.
“Momentum to ban gas drilling by local rule has been building across Tompkins County,” says Podulka. “This week the city of Oneonta voted to ban all forms of gas drilling within city limits, and Buffalo has already enacted a similar ban.” Even closer to home both Dryden and Ulysses boards are exploring legal options to draft a fracking ban.
And that has some Caroline town officials running scared. Two town council members have decided to take preemptive action – they’ve submitted a resolution that would preclude the board from taking any action to consider drafting a local ban.
“Before the petition is presented and before necessary legal research is done,” says Podulka.
Council members Linda Adams and Peter Hoyt co-authored the legislation, and Toby McDonald supports it. Should gas wells be drilled in town, all stand to benefit: Hoyt and McDonald have leased their property to gas companies, and Adams directs the Tompkins Landowner’s Coalition, a group whose sole purpose is to help landowners obtain the best lease possible.
Adams and Hoyt don’t see a problem with their proposed law. They contend that local drilling bans are not permitted because New York State statute preempts local regulation of natural resource mining activities.
But many legal experts dispute this interpretation of the statute. They say that although local regulation of the day-to-day operations of resource extraction is indeed prohibited, there is ample case law to show that outright banning, which falls under local land use determination, is permissible.
Residents are outraged. “Given that these elected officials all have ties to gas leasing, their action strikes me as a brazen abuse of power to benefit their own self-interests,” says Irene Weiser.
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| Aerial view of drilling in Colorado |
Another explained that this resolution, if passed, “… would severely limit the town’s options in the face of massive industrialized hydraulic fracturing. If this type of industry is encouraged in the rural corners of Caroline,” he says, “the quiet, sweet rolling hills of green with thrushes, peepers, crickets and wild flowers could quickly be replaced with thousands of thundering trucks and hundreds of massively noisy industrial drilling rigs that will destroy the countryside for years to come — all for the short term financial benefit of only a few. These drilling rigs are massive and industrial; this is not your grand-dad’s little gas well sitting quietly out on the back forty.”
Earlier today town supervisor Don Barber commented on the attempt to short-circuit the democratic process. The resolution may be an attempt to stop debate about a frack ban. “But the town board will have that debate,” Barber said. “ The town needs to hear from all its residents before taking a position.”
The Caroline Town Board will hold its public business meeting on Tuesday, June 14, at 7 pm. Public comments regarding the proposed resolution will begin at 8:15 pm, after the Board considers other matters.
Text Of The Proposed Resolution
Resolution Clarifying the Town of Caroline’s Role Regarding Gas Development Based on Current Environmental Conservation Law
Whereas Ecl 23-0303, section 2 states, “The provisions of this article shall supersede all local laws or ordinances relating to the regulation of the oil, gas and solution mining industries; but shall not supersede local government jurisdiction over local roads or the rights of local governments under the real property tax law”; and
Whereas it is the opinion of our municipal attorney that the State clearly, with intent and purpose, set this scope; therefore be it
Resolved that the Town will not attempt to either encourage or limit gas drilling in the Town of Caroline; and further
Resolved that the Town will exercise its fiduciary responsibility to protect its investments in local roads, primarily through road use agreements; and further
Resolved that the Town through its authority under the Stormwater Law will protect local water supplies from any damaging effects of surface runoff due to gas drilling or any other large scale industrial activity.



Here is my Letter to the Editor on exactly this issue. I have initiated and constantly adding to
Dear Editor,
Ever since I became aware of the controversial Hydrofracking method of natural gas
extraction I’ve wondered why … why the Quixotic push by the “Big Gas” for it in New
York State where the sweet spot the vast Marcellus natural gas deposit that is touted
by the natural gas industry as the key to America’s energy independence is in
Pennsylvania where it is already permitted and New York state has all the hassles of
popular and political opposition and moratoriums etc.?
Well, (no pun intended) here’s three reasons you’re not going to see from Bradley Gill director
of the Independent Oil and Gas Association of New York (IOGA of NY) who of course toes the
Big Gas company line. First, apart from the most famous signature moment in the documentary
Gasland of the exploding faucet another is where the creator Josh Fox of Pennsylvania
gets a lease offer tender from a Big Gas company which was essentially “Please, oh please Mr.
Fox lease us your land so you may receive all the riches we can bestow upon you”. However
here in New York it would go some like this: “Dear Mr. Fox, Here’s the deal. Here’s our offer
that’s pretty much the same as your neighbors. If you don’t take our offer of 30 pieces of
Judas silver from your apparent high moral fortitude and integrity; No Problem! 60 percent
of your neighbors probably will and we can drill your land anyway per a rule special to New
York called: Compulsory Integration. Ha!
Secondly, New York has zero, zilch Hydrofracking experience. Even with what Big Gas says
will be the most stringent rules and regs in the county; no matter, it is still just state oversight
with the teeth of a meth addict as in none and Big Gas has the Cheney Exemption. Look at
Pennsylvania which supposedly has tough regs, blowouts and contaminated water wells. No
problem for Big Gas.
Thirdly a New York Hydrofracking moratorium would discredit Big Gas and set precedents
for anti-Hydrofrackers everywhere. Finally, an easy homework assignment: Go Google
Compulsory Integration New York and Cheney Halliburton exemption.
Ciao
Joel Shapiro
Rochester, New York
Of course the natural gas industry likes to hype the Hydrofracking oversight rules, regulations
and environment in Pennsylvania what it claims to be the toughest in the United States …
a state whose public health department doesn’t even keep a database with respect to the
Marcellus shale Hydrofracking operations.
http://thetimes-tribune.com/news/state-health-agency-doesn-t-keep-marcellus-database-1.1160278#axzz1OoPJ4s8C
OF COURSE they’re not going to find any connection between it and health problems!