Drillers Silence Fracking Claims With Sealed Settlements – Businessweek
June 6, 2013
Drillers Silence Fracking Claims With Sealed Settlements – Businessweek.
Gas Drilling Awareness for Cortland County
March 22, 2013
Unsealed Records in Contamination Case Claim Lax Oversight by DEP | StateImpact Pennsylvania.
MLADEN ANTONOV / AFP/GETTY IMAGES
Consol Energy drill rig explores the Marcellus Shale in Greene County.
A Washington County couple settled a high profile Marcellus Shale contamination case for $750,000 and signed affidavits that say no medical evidence ”definitively” connects their children’s health problems to drilling activity. Stephanie and Chris Hallowich also signed an affidavit that says their children were in good health. More than $155,000 will go to the plaintiff’s attorneys. Each Hallowich child receives $10,000 to be placed in a trust. Stephanie and Chris Hallowich receive $594,820.37. The settlement requires arbitration should the children suffer any future health impacts.
On Wednesday, 971 pages of court records were unsealed in a closely watched case where the mother, an outspoken critic of gas drilling, is now under a gag order. A formal complaint was never filed in Hallowich v. Range Resources, but a draft of a complaint was attached as part of the settlement agreement. StateImpact Pennsylvania has uploaded the documents, which can be accessed by clicking here.
The complaint describes how the Hallowich family bought land in rural Washington County to raise their children in a healthy environment. But they soon discovered that the mineral rights beneath their land were already leased to Range Resources by the previous owner. Once gas drilling activity began near their home, they describe foul odors, loud noise, and ill-health, which they connected to air emissions, and contaminated water supplies.
August 11, 2011
The Capitol Pressroom for August 8, 2011 | WCNY Blogs.
Could sealed lawsuits hold data that could alter how the scientific community views fracking and its affect on ground water? We discuss the topic and what it could mean for New York with Catskill Mountainkeeper Program Director Wes Gillingham and Dusty Horwitt, Senior Counsel for the Environmental Working Group.
And we remember Hugh Carey with friends and colleagues from Albany and New Year. Dr. Len Cutler, the Chairman of the Center for the Study of Government and Politics at Siena College navigates us through some of the high points of Carey’s life.