Report shows billions risked on oil shale speculation | Taxpayers for Common Sense

Report shows billions risked on oil shale speculation | Taxpayers for Common Sense.

“Cuomo Puts the Cart Before the Horse on Fracking—Elected Officials, Leading Environmental and Health Experts Call on Cuomo to Open Health Review to the Public,” Dec. 3, 2012

With thanks to Richard Averett for posting info about Concerned Health Professionals of New York, here is my entire statement from the press conference today in Albany with Barbara LIfton, Matt Ryan, Walter Hang, and Roger Downs of the Sierra Club.  I haven’t seen any media coverage yet.  Sandra



Prepared Remarks, Albany Press Conference, “Cuomo Puts the Cart Before the Horse on Fracking—Elected Officials, Leading Environmental and Health Experts Call on Cuomo to Open Health Review to the Public,” Dec. 3, 2012

 

I am Sandra Steingraber, biologist at Ithaca College

 

I saw some of you last Thursday when I was here to announce the launch of Concerned Health Professionals of New York—an initiative of doctors, nurses, and environmental health researchers.

 

Concerned Health Professionals was launched in response to the secrecy of the ongoing health review, the exclusion of New York State’s own public health experts in the process, and Governor Cuomo’s rejection of our unified demand for a transparent, comprehensive Health Impact Assessment.

 

Not knowing what documents the three outside health reviewers have been asked by DOH to review, we’ve created a website:  www.concernedhealthny.org where we’ve uploaded peer-reviewed studies, reports, and our testimonies and letters to serve as a repository of our many concerns about the consequences of fracking for public health.

 

Since then, we’ve also uploaded an  eight-minute video appeal to the three panelists from three of New York’s leading public health physicians, two nurses, the founder of New York Breast Cancer Network, and myself—an environmental researcher.  In this video, we speak directly to the three panelists about our most urgent concerns.  These include—

 

  • Radium in flowback fluid

 

  • Diesel exhaust and its link to breast cancer risk

 

  • Impaired birth outcomes of newborns born to women living near drilling and fracking operations

 

None of these concerns appear in the last iteration of the sGEIS. We have no idea if they are in the current one or are part of documents pieced together in secrecy by the DOH.

 

Okay.  Can I just say that this is crazy?  Scientists and doctors creating videos and websites funded out of their own pockets to get information and data to our out-of-state colleagues because our collective knowledge has been entirely ignored by our own government?

 

But it gets even crazier.  On Thursday, we learned that draft regulations were being released.  On Friday, we learned that two of the three outside reviews—in whose hands the fate of millions of New Yorkers now lie—are being paid for 25 hours of work.  Twenty-five hours is three working days.  You cannot even READ all the literature on fracking’s health effects in three days.

 

So what should be a linear, deliberative process of decision-making—

 

first, we investigate cumulative health impacts (how many New Yorkers will get sick and die if fracking comes to our state?), then we fold those answers into a larger EIS that examines if said impacts are acceptably mitigatable, and only then, if they are, do those results become the foundation for regulations—

 

what should be a linear process of decision-making is twisted into a pretzel:

 

The regs are out and we can comment on them.

 

But the EIS is not out.

 

And the health study, which should be its basis, isn’t even done, and it’s being carried out in total secrecy, and, oh, yeah, today’s the reported deadline for the receipt of the outside reviewers review based on unknown scoping and three days’ work.

 

That’s not just irrational.  That’s surreal

 

In twenty years of serving on state and federal advisory panels and watching science get turned into policy, I have never seen a more shameful process.  The scientific process behind the decision to frack or not to frack New York is befitting a Third World dictatorship, not a progressive democracy.

 

Here’s what needs to happen:  The process by which the state of New York is evaluating health effects must be opened up to public scrutiny and input.  We must have public hearings.  We must define the broad spectrum of pollutants associated with fracking, document their fate in the environment, identify pathways of human exposure, and investigate long-term health consequences.

 

Until then, the public health community of New York will raise our voices in objection.  Because science is supposed to be transparent, and the Governor’s process has been anything but transparent.  Because this process feels like a series of reactions to attacks from the fracking industry, rather than a deliberative process for implementing sound public policy.

 

It is alarming for the administration to attempt to rush the enormous amount of work that must be done into the next 85 days.  We hope—and demand—that they will step back, see the dangerous path they are on, step out of the backrooms to engage the public, and keep their promise to follow the science.

LOOK-BEFORE-YOU-LEAP: LPG Exports

LOOK-BEFORE-YOU-LEAP.pdf (application/pdf Object).

LOOK BEFORE THE LNG LEAP:
Why Policymakers and the Public Need Fair Disclosure Before Exports of Fracked Gas Start

Sierra Club

High Volume Hydraulic Fracturing Proposed Regulations – NYS Dept. of Environmental Conservation

High Volume Hydraulic Fracturing Proposed Regulations – NYS Dept. of Environmental Conservation.  2012

Fracking Secrets by Thousands Keep U.S. Clueless on Wells – Bloomberg

Fracking Secrets by Thousands Keep U.S. Clueless on Wells – Bloomberg.

Clear earth, air, water ’round here–CD

Clear earth, air, water ’round here. (More information)

The Benefit enviro CD “Singing Clear: Clean earth, air, water ‘round here” is here! It is a compilation CD addressing issues of hydrofracking, mountaintop removal, the oil and gas industry with songs for a clean planet and sustainable energy. The compilation features excellent songs donated by artists including The Horse Flies, Driftwood, Marie Burns (of the Burns Sisters), emma’s revolution, Colleen Kattau and Some Guys, Aro Veno, Bev Grant, and Thousands of One, and includes a moving statement by acclaimed environmental activist and author, Sandra Steingraber excerpted from her Heinz award acceptance speech.

The CD benefits the work of GDACC, Shaleshock, NOON (Neighbors of the Onondaga Nation), Friends of Blair Mountain, and other groups working for a clean planet. Mastered beautifully by Jocko Randall of More Sound Studio and with the fresh and clear art work of Felicity Frisbie, the songs, mastering and artwork flow effortlessly to create an album of unity in diversity – as if the arts could shift the course of energy policy. (Purchase Information)

Otsego Community Advocacy

Otsego Community Advocacy.

Debate at SU on Hydrofracking 11/30/12

NEW CAMPBELL DEBATE ON HYDROFRACKING
November 30, 7:00-8:30 p.m., Maxwell Auditorium, Syracuse University
“This Assembly Believes Hydrofracking Does More Harm Than Good.”
That is the proposition to be argued in the next Campbell Debate,  on Friday, November 30, from 7:00 to 8:30 p.m. in the Maxwell Auditorium on the Syracuse University campus.  Members of the Central New York  community are warmly invited to this free event.
Given the intense attention that this issue has generated, it needs little introduction, and indeed, it has been debated before.  But in  sponsoring this debate, the Campbell Institute is hoping to add some  additional light to the considerable heat the issue has produced thus far.
Speaking in favor of the proposition are Paul Gallay, President,  Hudson Riverkeeper, and Robert Howarth, the David R. Atkinson Professor  of Ecology and Environmental Biology at Cornell University.
Speaking against the proposition are Edward Hinchey, Principal Consultant, ERM Group, and Tim Whitesell, Supervisor, Town of Binghamton, and President, New York Association of Towns.
The debate will provide opportunities for lively direct exchange  among the speakers, as well as questions and brief points from the  audience.  The audience will register its views on the issue both before and after the event.
There will be a public reception following the debate, and parking  is available for a reduced rate in the Irving Garage on the Syracuse  University campus.
Grant Reeher Director, Campbell Public Affairs Institute
Professor of Political Science
Maxwell School of Citizenship and Public Affairs 313 Eggers Hall Syracuse University Syracuse, NY 13244 Tel.  315-443-5046 FAX  315-443-9082 gdreeher@maxwell.syr.edu
Host of “The Campbell Conversations” on WRVO – 6:30 p.m. on Fridays and 4 p.m. Saturdays — http://www.wrvo.fm/programs/campbell-conversations-wrvo-1-npr-news

Pa. company proposed 75-mile natural gas pipe line through Broome, Chenango counties | Press & Sun-Bulletin | pressconnects.com

Pa. company proposed 75-mile natural gas pipe line through Broome, Chenango counties | Press & Sun-Bulletin | pressconnects.com.

PA fracking waste destinations

 PA fracking waste destinations 

Also, PA Department of Environmental Protection provides well production and waste data. I’ve pulled out the sites in PA that ship their waste to NYS from January 2011 to June 2012. Click on the dots for pop-up windows with more information. Also, know that the second button from the left will expand the table of contents so you can toggle on and off the 2011 and 2012 data.

http://bit.ly/QYskBt

In summary:

In 2011, 5 NYS landfills (Angelica, Lowman, Niagara Falls, Painted Post, and Waterloo) received a total of:

  • 213,724.44 tons of drill cuttings
  • 8590 Bbls of drilling fluid
  • 1320 BBls of flow-back fluid
  • 443.47 tons of flow-back fracturing sand
  • 445 BBls of produced fluid

From January to June, 2012, 3 NYS landfills (at Lowman, Niagara Falls, and Painted Post) received a total of:

  • 54,958.36 tons of drill cuttings
  • 8199.48 Bbl of drilling fluids
  • 55.7 tons of flow-back fracturing sand