ARD – Munich – Fracking German Report – concerned residents, contaminated lands (English Sub) – YouTube
February 8, 2012 1 Comment
Kind regards, Sandra
Gas Drilling Awareness for Cortland County
February 8, 2012 1 Comment
Kind regards, Sandra
January 10, 2012
recorded version available Jan 11,2012
January 9, 2012
Physicians Scientists & Engineers for Healthy Energy.
“Epidemiologic and Public Health Considerations of Shale Gas Production: The Missing Link”
HEALTH EXPERTS URGE HALT TO HYDRO FRACKING EXPANSION UNTIL NEEDED RESEARCH IS DONE INTO HEALTH IMPACTS
Industry Called Upon to Set Up Foundation to Conduct Needed, Independent Research
January 2, 2012 1 Comment

December 29, 2011
CEHD Gas Drilling Comments final 12 29 09.pdf (application/pdf Object).
It has been pointed out that the 2009 SGEIS fails to answer the majority of comments provided by the Conference of Environmental Health Departments in 2009.
December 18, 2011
NY1 Online: Inside City Hall Debates Hydrofracking – NY1.com.
NY1 VIDEO: Inside City Hall’s Errol Louis discusses the issue of hydrofracking in New York with two supporters of the drilling—Arthur “Jerry” Kremer, a former state assemblyman who is with the New York Affordable Reliable Electricity Alliance, and Ross Pepe, president of the Construction Industry Council and Building Contractors Association—and two opponents: ecologist and author Sandra Steingraber and economist Jannette Barth of J.M. Barth and Associates.
November 15, 2011
N.Y. has to really study gas drilling impact – Times Union.
By Robert Howarth and Larysa Dyrszka, Commentary
Updated 07:57 a.m., Tuesday, November 15, 2011
When Gov. Andrew Cuomo said he would let science and health concerns drive his decision about issuing permits for hydraulic fracturing natural gas wells, we were encouraged. When we read the draft Supplemental Generic Environmental Impact Statement prepared by the state Department of Environmental Conservation, however, that encouragement evaporated.
We are part of a group of physicians and scientists with expertise in public health, engineering and environmental risk assessment and a keen interest in hydrofracking. We have come together as Physicians, Scientists and Engineers for Healthy Energy (http://www.psehealthyenergy.org). From the many problems with the environmental impact statement — both with what it contains, and what is left out — there clearly is need for far greater study before the state begins issuing permits that can affect the long-term health and well-being of New Yorkers.
We are frankly stunned by the absence of any serious health impact assessment in the SGEIS. The state rejected a call by the federal Environmental Protection Agency that the Health Department be named a co-lead agency to ensure that human health implications of hydrofracking get their proper attention. It is not encouraging that Health Department officials told members of a special state advisory committee they had not performed specific public health impact analyses, and did not plan to do so until hydrofracking began.
To say that this is putting the cart before the horse is an understatement. As Dr. Thomas Schaeffer of the American Academy of Pediatrics District II office in Albany noted, “Children are far more susceptible to environmental toxins, since they absorb and metabolize toxins at a higher rate for their body mass.”
The SGEIS mentions many of the toxic chemicals used in hydrofracking, but makes no attempt to evaluate the kinds of health consequences that have already shown up in other states where shale gas drilling is taking place. It is an established scientific fact that exposure to these chemicals in early life, as well as the air pollution generated by hydrofracking, is associated with preterm birth, asthma and lowered IQ in children, and higher risks of heart attack, breast cancer and diabetes in adults.
How could the state even think of proceeding based on a document that does not consider these health impacts?
The state’s promise to exempt the New York City and Syracuse watersheds raises questions about whether this is a political rather than a science-based decision. The state argues that those two cities do not filter water supplies, while other municipal water systems do.
But the SGEIS does not analyze in any depth the ability of existing drinking water filtrations systems to process and remove the toxic effluent, or flowback, from hydrofracking processes. Current filtration systems, many based on a century-old design, are designed to remove pathogens and will not provide adequate protection against toxic substances that enter the watershed.
And the SGEIS recognizes that there will likely be accidents, and that hydrofracking can lead to water contamination with toxic substances.
If the risk from hydrofracking is too high for the watersheds of New York City and Syracuse, then it is too high for any watershed in the state.
We urge New Yorkers to attend the public hearings beginning Wednesday in Dansville and continuing later in Binghamton, Loch Sheldrake and New York City. Tell the DEC and the governor that the rush to issue permits before knowing the health implications cannot stand.
It is a matter of life and health.
Robert Howarth is the David R. Atkinson professor of ecology and environmental biology at Cornell University. Dr. Larysa Dyrszka is a pediatrician.