Gas Drilling Doublespeak | Environmental Working Group
December 12, 2011
Gas Drilling Awareness for Cortland County
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Tompkins Weekly – Your Source for Local News and Events.
Gas Leases Pose Conflicts with Mortgages–Tompkins Weekly Nov. 12, 2011
November 10, 2011
Letter: Drilling in residential areas may be possible | Press & Sun-Bulletin | pressconnects.com.
Recent Guest Viewpoints by Binghamton Mayor Matthew T. Ryan and Victor Furman spoke about gas drilling in city or residential areas.
It appears to me that drilling under residential areas could readily occur without permission of residents. Here is how:
A typical Marcellus drilling unit will be two miles long and one-half mile wide.
Drilling from a leased well pad outside a residential area and going more than three-quarters of a mile under residences could easily occur without permission of those landowners using the eminent domain-like legal procedure of Compulsory Integration.
It would only be necessary for the driller to have leased 60 percent of the land outside the residential area.
According to New York environmental conservation law, permission for the rest of the drilling unit can be acquired simply on the request of the driller.
Stanley R. Scobie
Binghamton
October 29, 2011
https://docs.google.com/viewer?a=v&pid=forums&srcid=MDEzNjU1MzI4MTU2NTI1NzY5MDkBMTA5MjcwNTY4MDU2NTgzMzY1MDMBMkJFRDMyMzUtMjg2Qi00MTE0LUE2Q0QtMzk1MTAzNzRGNDNDQHR3Y255LnJyLmNvbQE0AQ
October 22, 2011
Ithaca — Mortgage rules governing gas drilling are in question following reports in The New York Times and by the Tompkins County Council of Governments’ Task Force on Drilling.
The reports have led Congressman Maurice Hinchey, D-22nd, to send letters to the Federal Housing Finance Agency and the NYS Department of Environmental Conservation, asking they initiate an examination of how mortgage rules on gas drilling will affect more than 1 million gas leases signed between shale gas drilling companies and property owners.
Some banks have policies of not offering mortgages on properties with gas leases. As a result, some landowners have had difficulty selling or refinancing their homes.
The Tompkins County Council of Governments’ Task Force on Drilling asked state officials in May to implement requirements as part of gas drilling regulations to prevent unintended negative consequences on the realestate market and county assessment rolls.
A subcommittee of the task force reported that lenders are reluctant to approve residential mortgages on the increasing number of properties where leases do not conform with regulations of thesecondary mortgage market.
Hinchey said this week that the problem can be attributed to rushing into drilling.
“Many homeowners who signed leases now have questions about their mortgages and their ability to refinance or resell their homes, because important information was not brought to their attention by drilling companies pushing to them to lease their land,” Hinchey said.
Hinchey said he has asked federal and state regulators for clarification on mortgage rules and an examination of leases that were already signed to determine the extent of mortgage violations that may have occurred.
New guidelines will help homeowners and local banks protect their own financial interests, he said.