Hundreds of Youth Vote Leaders Converge on Albany to Demand Governor Cuomo Ban Fracking this weekend

Hundreds of Youth Vote Leaders Converge on Albany to Demand Governor Cuomo Ban Fracking

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: April 23, 2012

CONTACT: Caroline Cowley, 570-885-2188, ccowley@gmail.com

 

Hundreds of Youth Vote Leaders Converge on Albany to Demand Governor Cuomo Ban Fracking

Bill McKibben, Josh Fox & Sandra Steingraber to Keynote Youth-led Power Shift New York Conference

Monday March & Rally To Call for Green Economy, Not Dangerous Fracking

 

Albany, NY – Hundreds of youth vote leaders will converge in Albany this weekend for Power Shift New York, to demand Governor Cuomo ban fracking and build support for a clean energy economy.

 

Power Shift New York keynotes, which are open to the public, include acclaimed environmentalists and political leaders, including:

Bill McKibben, co-founder of 350.org

Josh Fox, Director of Gasland

Dr. Sandra Steingraber, recipient of the Heinz Award for the environment

Dominic Frongillo, the youngest elected Town Councilor of Caroline, NY

 

Hosted by the Green Umbrella: NY Youth for a Just and Sustainable Future, the conference will focus on building a movement to ban fracking and bring in a clean energy economy.

 

“Thousands upon thousands of people have called on Governor Cuomo to ban fracking, and at Power Shift NY we’re bringing those voices together” said J. Reed Steberger, a lead organizer of the Green Umbrella, “hundreds of youth vote leaders are coming together to demand Governor Cuomo stand with us to ban fracking, and join us in supporting innovative measures to build a clean energy economy here in New York.”

 

The conference will close with a major march on the Capitol to demand Governor Cuomo stand with the youth vote by banning fracking, and supporting ambitious measures to bring in a clean energy economy.

 

WHO: Hundreds of youth vote leaders, and environmental and political leaders including Bill McKibben of 350.org, Josh Fox, Director of Gasland, Dr. Sandra Steingraber, Heinz Award Winner, Dominic Frongillo, young elected official from Caroline, NY.

 

WHAT: Major mobilization and conference of youth vote leaders working to ban fracking and bring in the clean energy economy.

 

WHEN: Friday-Monday, April 27-29. March and rally is on Monday morning.

 

WHERE: The majority of the conference will be held at Hotel Albany, 40 Lodge St

Friday and Saturday keynote addresses will be held at Grand Street Community Arts Center, 68 Grand Street, from 7-9 PM.

Monday’s March & Rally is beginning at Riverside Park at 10AM and will finish out at West Capital Park at 12 PM with speakers until 2.

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K.C. Alvey
Cornell ’12 Natural Resources
Tompkins County Climate Protection Initiative (TCCPI)- Intern
Green Umbrella: NY Youth for a Just and Sustainable Future – State Coordinator
kca27@cornell.edu
516-592-7752

“Like” TCCPI on Facebook!

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Public Health Dimensions of Horizontal Hydraulic Fracturing: Knowledge, Obstacles, Tactics, and Opportunities–Seth B. Shonkoff

Shonkoff_Fracking Public Health_4_17_12

Public Health Dimensions of Horizontal Hydraulic Fracturing: Knowledge, Obstacles, Tactics, and Opportunities

Public Health Dimensions of Horizontal Hydraulic Fracturing:
Knowledge, Obstacles, Tactics, and Opportunities
A Report for the 11th Hour Project
Prepared By:
Seth B. Shonkoff, MPH*
University of California, Berkeley
April 17, 2012
*Author Contact Information:
sshonkoff@gmail.com
510.295.7969
6202 Telegraph Avenue, Oakland, CA 94609

FracTracker collecting hikers’ concerns about drilling’s outdoor effects

FracTracker collecting hikers’ concerns about drilling’s outdoor effects.

Gas Drilling: A Community Forum Apr. 28th Homer

Gas Drilling: A Community Forum

 

Questions about gas drilling and its impacts on the local community?

Feel like you don’t know enough about this much-talked-about industry?

Would you like to learn more about gas drilling’s effect on other communities?

Join us for a community forum featuring:

  •  Mary Jane Uttech—Deputy Director of the Cortland County Health Department  who will speak about the potential impacts to drinking water, air quality, and public health.
  •  Joe Heath—General Counsel for the Onondaga Nation who will speak about the environmental impact of gas drilling as well as gas leases.
  •  Craig Stevens—a citizen of Silver Lake Township, PA who holds a gas lease on his land and will speak about his first-hand experience of the gas industry

 Saturday, April 28, 7 – 9 p.m.

Free and Open to the Public

St. Margaret’s Church Parish Hall, 14 Copeland Avenue, Homer

  SPONSORED BY:

Moving In Congregations Acting in Hope (MICAH)

Organizing People to Have a Voice in Their Community

Park Foundation funds anti-fracking groups | Democrat and Chronicle | democratandchronicle.com

Park Foundation funds anti-fracking groups | Democrat and Chronicle | democratandchronicle.com.

Albany Residents, Business and Faith Leaders Join Albany Common Council Members In Rally Before Fracking Ban Vote

For Immediate Release

CONTACT: John Armstrong, Frack Action, 607-220-4632

Albany Residents, Business and Faith Leaders Join Albany Common Council Members In Rally Before Fracking Ban Vote

 

Albany Is 95th New York Municipality to Ban Fracking

 

1.2 Million New Yorkers Now Live In Towns and Cities With Bans

 

 

ALBANY – On Monday evening Albany residents including business and faith leaders joined members of the Common Council for a rally before the Albany Common Council votes on legislation to ban fracking in Albany. The ban is all but certain to pass, making Albany the 95th New York municipality to enact a ban on fracking. Those 95 municipalities represent 1.2 million New Yorkers.

“We applaud the Albany Common Council for joining almost a hundred other municipalities across New York in acting on the will and best interests of their residents by banning fracking. If Albany Mayor Jennings bows to gas industry pressure and vetoes Albany’s fracking ban, we believe we have enough support in the Common Council to override the veto,” said John Armstrong, Communications Director with Frack Action.

 

Local leaders in Syracuse and Buffalo, which have also passed fracking bans, expressed support for Albany joining the nearly one hundred cities with a ban in place.  Buffalo is the second largest city in New York State and is where the local ban movement started in 2011. Buffalo has banned fracking/wastewater in the city, and this March they also passed a resolution calling on Governor Cuomo to ban fracking statewide.

“I applaud the Albany Common Council’s vote to ban fracking within their city limits,” said Buffalo Councilmember Joseph Golombek Jr., sponsor of Buffalo’s fracking ban. “Many times, politicians are accused of putting their own interests before the community’s.  The Albany Common Council’s vote, along with the votes conducted by many other municipalities in New York State, show that the citizens of their communities come first, especially when it deals the dangerous impact fracking has on the environment.”

 “It’s good to hear that Albany may soon have a citywide ban on hydrofracking.  The Syracuse ban is strongly supported by local residents, even more so now that we know there’s a glut of natural gas

and the Marcellus and Utica shale gas, which comes with such environmental risk, is being exported to Europe!  Cities like Syracuse and Albany must invest in jobs with staying power, not transient jobs that could leave environmental hazards behind, said Jean Kessner, Syracuse Councilor-at-Large.

 

Participants in the rally also called on Governor Cuomo to follow the lead of municipalities across the state and ban fracking in New York.

“Governor Cuomo should heed the growing body of science that shows fracking cannot be done without sacrificing our health, environment, and economy,” said Julia Walsh, Campaign Director of Frack Action. “The decision on fracking rests with Governor Cuomo — if he breaks it, he owns it.”

“Banning fracking from the City of Albany and drilling wastes from our local treatment and disposal facilities is more than just a symbolic act — we are already finding the hazardous by-products of fracking discarded well outside the current zone of drilling, with little State oversight or concern,” said Roger Downs, Conservation Director for the Sierra Club Atlantic Chapter.  “We applaud the Albany Common Council for filling the leadership void on industrial gas development.  Governor Cuomo has offered only the assurances of a half-baked regulatory program to New Yorkers who stand to lose everything to this out-of-control industry.  We hope this stand in Albany does not go unnoticed.” 

BACKGROUND

High volume hydraulic fracturing, combined with horizontal drilling, involves pumping millions of gallons of water, chemicals and sand underground to extract natural gas from shale bedrock.  Multiple studies show how inherently dangerous it is. Most New Yorkers are wary of fracking. A recent Marist poll found a majority of New Yorkers oppose legalizing fracking due to its potential to contaminate New York’s watersheds with carcinogens and other toxicants.

With or without regulations in place, fracking is a menace to public health.  It lays down blankets of smog, fills roadway with trucks hauling hazardous materials, sends sediment into streams, and generates immense quantities of radioactive, carcinogen-laced waste for which no fail-safe disposal options exist.

Since fracking began in states outside of New York, there have been more than a thousand reports of water contamination. New studies link fracking-related activities to contaminated groundwater, air pollution, illness, death and reproductive problems in cows, horses and wildlife, and most recently human health problems. A recent study from the Colorado School of Public Health found that those living within a half-mile of a natural gas drilling site faced greater health risks than those who live farther away.

New York has seen a surge of local fracking bans enacted across the state Overall, 94 towns and 6 counties have enacted bans or moratoria in New York State.  Sixty-eight municipalities are also considering or staging a ban or moratorium. In the past month,Buffalo, the second largest city in New York, and Niagara Falls both passed resolutions calling for Governor Cuomo and the state legislature to pass a statewide ban on fracking.

The Buffalo Common Council also recently passed a resolution of support for bills S4220/A7218 a fracking ban in New York, stating that a law to prohibit natural gas drilling in New York will protect residents and neighbors from the harmful effects of drilling, as well as safe-guarding air, land, and local waterways. The DEC, while prohibiting fracking in certain watersheds in Syracuse and New York City, has not prohibited drilling in any Western NY watersheds.

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John Armstrong
Albany, NY
607-220-4632

CITIZEN POWER ALLIANCE

CITIZEN POWER ALLIANCE.

The Fracking Debate: A Policymaker’s Guide

The Fracking Debate: A Policymaker’s Guide.

The Fracking Debate: A Policymaker’s Guide

Content Items

  • Hydraulic Fracturing: The 2012 Debate
    • Domestic Resource and Production Projections
    • Low and Stable Prices, for Now
    • Economic Benefits: Impact Studies and Their Omissions
    • Public Health and Environmental Concerns
  • States Take Action: The Balancing Act
    • 2012 Legislative Trend Overview
  • State Policy Actions
    • Generating Revenue
    • Increasing Transparency
    • Water Quality Protection
    • Monitoring to Improve Knowledge Base
  • Federal Action
  • Outlook
  • Appendix
  • Notes

NCSL Staff Contact

Jacquelyn Pless

drilling rrigApril 2012

By Jacquelyn Pless

Concerns about hydraulic fracturing are behind many states’ reluctance to tap the economic benefits created by natural gas development. Hydraulic fracturing—“fracking”—is an oil and gas extraction method that uses hydraulic pressure to break up rock. Millions of gallons of pressurized liquids, usually a water-based mixture of sand and chemical additives, are pumped deep underground to help release trapped gas.

This report provides an introduction to the domestic natural gas picture, explores the motivation behind state legislative involvement in fracking regulation, and summarizes state legislation that is being developed to address environmental concerns.

Hydraulic Fracturing: The 2012 Debate

Fracking allows access to previously inaccessible resources, such as shale gas, which is making up an increasingly large portion of the overall energy supply in the United States.

Combined with recent advances in horizontal drilling, the technology has opened up resources that, only a decade ago, were too expensive to develop. Some forecast that this increase in supply could sustain current U.S. consumption levels for another 90 years. Rapid expansion of hydraulic fracturing in densely populated regions where the process is unfamiliar, however, has focused attention on its potential to affect public health and the environment.

Domestic Resource and Production Projections

Cumulative natural gas production from 2010 through 2035 is projected to be 7 percent higher than expected just a year ago.1 This is mainly due to technological advances in hydraulic fracturing that now make shale gas more accessible. According to the U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA), shale gas production alone will increase nearly threefold from 5.0 trillion cubic feet in 2010 to 13.6 trillion cubic feet in 2035. This equates to 23 percent of total U.S. dry gas production in 2010 and 49 percent of total U.S. dry gas production in 2035 (Figure 1).

The EIA expects domestic natural gas production to exceed consumption early in the next decade. By 2016, the United States is projected to become a net exporter of liquefied natural gas (LNG) and an overall net exporter of natural gas by 2021.2

Download PDF (18 page document) to access the full report.

LIVESTOCK, COMPANION ANIMALS AND THE GAS INDUSTRY

O P E N   T O   T H E   P U B L I C

 

Lecture and Slide Presentation

Q & A to follow

Data Gathered from Six States

 

LIVESTOCK, COMPANION ANIMALS AND THE

GAS INDUSTRY

 

 

 

Monday, April 23, 2012

7:00 – 9:00pm

 

Robert Oswald

Professor of Molecular Medicine

College of Veterinary Medicine, CornellUniversity

 

Michelle Bamberger

Doctor of Veterinary Medicine

Private Practice Veterinarian

 

NYSGrangeBuilding

100 Grange Place, off Clinton Ave.

Cortland, NY13045

607-756-5991

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U.S. Geological Survey Links Man-Made Earthquakes to Gas Drilling | StateImpact Pennsylvania

U.S. Geological Survey Links Man-Made Earthquakes to Gas Drilling | StateImpact Pennsylvania.