TELL GOVERNOR CUOMO: “DON’T SACRIFICE THE SOUTHERN TIER, BAN FRACKING IN NEW YORK!” Time: Wednesday, June 13th – June 20th 11:59 pm. What: Virtual Rally Where: Facebook: http://on.fb.me/lpzD8E & Twitter: http://j.mp/MrEopx The New York Times article (http://j.mp/L52SFJ) just indicated a plan from the NYS DEC and Governor Cuomo to create sacrifice zones for fracking in the Southern Tier.

Governor Cuomo Virtual Rally Flyer-1

 

TELL GOVERNOR CUOMO: “DON’T SACRIFICE THE SOUTHERN TIER, BAN FRACKING IN NEW YORK!”

 

                                                                                  

Time: Wednesday, June 13th – June 20th 11:59 pm.

What: Virtual Rally

Where: Facebook: http://on.fb.me/lpzD8E  &  Twitter: http://j.mp/MrEopx

The New York Times article (http://j.mp/L52SFJ) just indicated a plan from the NYS DEC and Governor Cuomo to create sacrifice zones for fracking in the Southern Tier. We need a quick and overwhelming response to this outrageous plan and blatant environmental injustice.

The bottom line, it is not okay to turn any part of New York and/or any New Yorkers into sacrificial fracking guinea pigs.

Take 3 actions and share far and wide.

 

1. Go to Gov. Cuomo’s Facebook page:  tell him we want a ban on fracking in all of New York including the Southern Tier: http://on.fb.me/lpzD8E

2. Tweet Governor Cuomo:  http://j.mp/MrEopx – #Fracking would create the greatest health and environmental disaster in NY’s history, and @NYGovCuomo if you break it, you own it.

3. Call Governor Cuomo:  1-866-584-6799 – and tell him,

“It is not okay to sacrifice any part of New York, fracking would create the greatest health and environmental disaster in NY’s history, if you break it you own it.”

Hydrofracking Under Cuomo Plan Would Be Restricted to a Few Counties – NYTimes.com

Hydrofracking Under Cuomo Plan Would Be Restricted to a Few Counties – NYTimes.com.

Police halt fracking demonstration | www.riverreporteronline.com

Police halt fracking demonstration | www.riverreporteronline.com.

Industrialization of Finger Lakes

Seneca Lake Entergy Storage Facility  Photos of Industrialization of Seneca Lake.

 

I recently learned that you among others passed a bill designating Seneca Lake as a Scenic By-Way.

Attached please find several photographs of what is happening on Seneca Lake, as Kansas-City based Inergy prepares to turn Upstate NY into the gas storage and transport hub of the North East, with Seneca Lake at its epicenter. Please take a look at the attached photos. This unsightly project is visible from across the lake while driving down Route 414, the very section of road that would be designated as “scenic”.This will have a seriously negative impact on the Wine, Tourism and Agricultural businesses in our region, and will cause a major increase in truck traffic along our rural roads.

There seems to be a disconnect between your vision of the region and what is actually happening. We need your help, before it is too late. Please stop Inergy from industrializing the Finger Lakes.

Businesses Endorse Fracking Ban

Constituency-form-final-1.pdf (application/pdf Object).

 

Endorsement
Form
I
support
a
ban
on
fracking
in
New
York.
I
urge
Governor
Andrew
Cuomo
and
the
New
York
State
Legislature
to
prohibit
this
dangerous
method
of
gas
drilling
that
threatens
our
water,
food,
and
air,
and
would
endanger
our
communities,
economy,
and
environment.
Your
Name:
_______________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Address:__________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
____________________________________________________________________________________________Zip
Code:
_____________________
Phone
Number:_________________________________
Email
Address:_______________________________________________________
Please
tell
us,
in
2
or
3
sentences,
why
you
support
a
ban
on
fracking:
_____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
_____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
_____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Name
of
company,
institution
or
organization
_______________________________________________________
Web
site:
_____________________________________________
Your
title:
____________________________________________
Type
of
organization
(please
circle
all
that
apply):
Business:
Farm
Restaurant
Food
&
beverage
industry
Real
estate
Tourism
Health
care
or
public
health
Other:
_________________________________
Non-­‐Profit
Organization:
Environmental
Business
association
Union
or
labor
Student
Faith-­‐based
Other:______________________________________
Please
check
here
if
you
are
signing
on
behalf
of
your
business
or
organization:
_______
Please
check
here
if
you
would
like
your
affiliation
listed
for
identification
purposes
only:
_________
By
signing
this
form,
you
agree
to
allow
New
Yorkers
Against
Fracking
to
list
you
and/or
your
organization,
institution,
or
company
on
our
web
site,
be
included
in
media
announcements,
and
be
added
to
public
education
materials.
For
more
information,
or
if
you
have
any
questions,
please
contact:
David
Braun:
david@nyagainstfracking.org;
917-­‐514-­‐0700
Endorsement
forms
can
be
returned
to:
c/o
Food
&
Water
Watch,
155
Water
Street,
6th
Floor,
Brooklyn,
NY
11201
http://www.NYAgainstFracking.

Silica handling in Owego

Stopping yesterday in Owego just west of Binghamton, I toured the town depot where silica is brought by rail from the west, stored in a large 4 chamber tower, loaded into silver tankers, and transported to Pennsylvania for fracking.  How many other such depots exist in our NYS towns, blowing dangerous silica dust over its citizenry in addition to the workers on the site?
Suzannah Glidden, Director
Croton Watershed Clean Water Coalition
914-234-6470
www.newyorkwater.org
CrotonWshed@aol.com

Group wants fracking study

Cortland Standard .net.

May 31, 2012

Group wants fracking study

FrackJoe McIntyre/staff photographer
Jim Weiss of Freetown expresses his opinion on hydraulic fracturing health issues during a protest to draw attention to Sen. Jim Seward’s position on hydrofracking. About 30 people demonstrated Wednesday afternoon outside Seward’s Cortlandville office on Route 281.

By CATHERINE WILDE
Staff Reporter
cwilde@cortlandstandard.net

CORTLANDVILLE — About 30 protesters gathered at noon Wednesday outside state Sen. Jim Seward’s office on Route 281, part of a larger statewide effort opposing hydraulic fracturing.
The group was pushing for Seward (R-Milford) to allocate state funding for a health impact study of hydrofracking, which injects chemically treated water into underground shale to fracture it so natural gas can be extracted.
Critics contend fracking has polluted air and water in some areas.
Approximately $100,000 that Assemblywoman Barbara Lifton (D-Ithaca) had called to be set aside in the 2012-13 state budget for a comprehensive health study of hydrofracking was eliminated from the Senate and governor’s versions of the budget in March.
Some protesters Wednesday carried signs and wore costumes.
Freetown resident Jim Weiss dressed like a doctor with a gag over his mouth, carrying a sign that read : “Pa. Doctors gagged about fracking. Why?”
Weiss, an outspoken critic of hydrofracking, said the sign represented the doctors in Pennsylvania and now Ohio, who are banned by law from speaking about cases of patients who might have been harmed by nearby gas drilling.
“What’s the industry afraid of?” Weiss said. “The Pennsylvania government is heavily dominated by the industry, and which way the New York government will go is a toss up.”
Weiss and other protesters wanted their presence outside Seward’s office Wednesday to draw public attention to the need for a health study. Similar rallies occurred in at least four other parts of the state as part of a “Day of Action” calling on state leaders to protect the public from fracking.
Truxton resident Joe Pullman was holding a sign with McLean resident Frank Ray that read, “Doctor’s orders: No fracking.”
“I want to see a thorough investigation into the health effects of fracking,” Pullman said.
Pullman visited Dimock, Pa., with his daughter and met many residents who were adversely impacted by gas drilling.
Ray, a member of anti-fracking groups like MoveOn and Citizens United for Action, said he was hopeful Seward could be swayed to push for funding of a health study.
Ray said he thinks a health impact study is inevitable.
“There will be such an assessment either done now when it could do some good and strengthen Seward’s reputation … or after hydrofracking is in action and a bunch of people get very sick,” Ray said.
He said if Seward pushes for a study to be done sooner rather than later, it would make him a “hero.”
Caroline resident Ellen Harrison carried a sign that read, “Drill a well, give a kid cancer.”
Harrison, a retired environmental scientist, said she used to study water pollution issues in Connecticut.
“Health assessments are not easy to do … but they’re essential,” Harrison said.
Potential exposure to toxic chemicals near drilling sites can come from water pollution and air pollution from evaporation, spills and compressor stations, she said.
Harrison wants a holistic and comprehensive study to assess all the health impacts of exposure to chemicals associated with hydrofracking.
Maryfaith Miller, a dairy farmer from Summerhill, stood waving a sign calling for Seward to protect his constituents and support the bill that would fund a health study.
“I’m concerned Senator Seward’s interests are in protecting the industry, not us,” Miller said.
She said a health impact study is essential, adding she won’t let her child be the “canary in the coal mine” for the industry.
Seward was in session in Albany at the time of the rally.
He said this morning the state Department of Health is reviewing all the comments on the state Department of Environmental Conservation’s Supplemental Generic Environmental Impact Statement, a document outlining all potential concerns of hydraulic fracturing.
Seward said since the Health Department is going to respond to all the health concerns that have been raised in the document, it would be “redundant” to set aside state funding for a health impact study.
“Whether it’s public health or any aspect of gas drilling, I think it’s important we allow the process to proceed and ultimately have judgements made based on facts and science of all aspects of the issue. And I believe public health issues are important and in my view the Health Department is well equipped to deal with the health aspects,” Seward said.

To read this article and more, pick up today’s Cortland Standard
Click here to subscribe

Meeting Minard

Meeting Minard.

The Minard Run Oil Company, based in Bradford, Pennsylvania, claims to be the oldest family-owned and -operated independent oil producer in the United States. Founded in 1875 by Pennsylvania Senator Lewis Emery, Jr., the company today is run by four of his great-grandchildren and one of his great-great-grandchildren.

In mid-March, Minard purchased 415 natural gas wells in the Finger Lakes from Chesapeake Energy, the nation’s second-largest producer of natural gas—at least for now. Chesapeake, formed in 1989, enjoys none of Minard’s stability: The company has been beleaguered by criticism of its corporate governance, the shenanigans of CEO Aubrey MacLendon (thoroughly documented by Jeff Goodell in Rolling Stone), and a business plan that has left it severely short of cash—perhaps $10 billion short this year alone. The company’s stock price has fallen 50 percent in the last year. How bad is the company’s management? This week, New York State Comptroller Thomas DiNapoli, who heads that state’s pension fund, recommended that Chesapeake’s stockholders refuse to renew the terms of two incumbent board members, saying it was a “necessary first step toward reconstituting a board that is currently entrenched and unaccountable to shareholders.” Corporate raider Carl Icahn, who is circling around the company, has indicated that he thinks the company’s problems are largely the result of poor management at the top.

The sale of Chesapeake’s New York assets to Minard is no doubt part of an effort to meet the cash shortfall. Minard’s new real estate interests, meantime, have augmented the company’s interest in the future of gas well drilling in New York State, especially the future of horizontal, deep-well, hydraulic fracturing, which is the subject of a state review.

Which may help to explain why, in the first week in May, James J. Macfarlane, Minard’s vice president for exploration, acquisitions, and operations, met with Republican State Senator Mark Grisanti in Buffalo’s Donovan State Office Building. Also in the meeting were Brad Gill, executive director of the Independent Oil and Gas Association on New York, or IOGA; Stephen W. Rhoads, manager of state government relations, Appalachia Region, for Shell Energy; and Daniel M. Krainin, an attorney in the New York office of the law firm Beveridge & Diamond, which specializes in environmental and land use law. Macfarlane and Rhoads are both board members of IOGA.

Grisanti, who is chair of the Senate’s Environmental Conservation Committee, has been in a crucible of pressure from both industry-funded proponents of horizontal fracking and environmental activists opposed to the practice. So far, he has declined to take a public position on whether the state ought to permit fracking, preferring to wait until the New York State Department of Environmental Conservation completes its review of the permitting and regulatory scheme it released last year.

 

COMMENT:

Concern: Minard Run now owns one of the state’s three injection disposal wells.
minardrunoil.com  They own fifteen thousand acres of lease holdings in the Marcellus in Bradford County.
We’d better pay attention here.  Minard Run, in their acquisitions  in Cayuga and Onondaga County in March, picked up the injection disposal well near Cayuga Lake not far from Montezuma Wildlife Refuge, name of well on DEC database Quill 672.  
Many  of the wells Minard picked up from CHK were old (1980s) Queenston sandstone wells, lots in Cayuga County.
In Ohio, many of the injection wells are older sandstone wells which were subsequently permitted to flip to injection disposal wells. 

There is no mandated public hearing when the EPA permits an injection well in NY.  (EPA has oversight, NY one of ten states that has not requested primacy for oversight.)   EPA does have to post on their website for thirty days any pending permits – and IF they consider there is sufficient public interest, they MAY issue a press release which the municipality MAY choose to publish.    

John Holko, of Lenape,  who owns another of the injection wells southeast of Rochester, was at the Auburn City Council meeting when they rescinded the ban on taking waste at the municipal treatment plant.  He was also quoted in the NYTimes as saying the infrastructure on waste will be developed as it goes in NY.    His injection well, named Ranous on the DEC site, drilled and permitted for injection in 1985, is 640′ deep.  No zero missing there.  Ranous well is the only one of the three wells exempt from mandated biannual certified sampling of injectate and exempt from nearby ground water monitoring wells required at the two other injection wells.  Interesting as it is the most shallow, the other two wells being 1080′ and 1800′ deep,  shallow still in relation to the injection wells in OH and TX which are several thousand feet deep.

Something to watch, Minard now owning that injection well, they having Marcellus holdings. Waste being a wildcard.  

Mary M


Pipeline firm: Feedback from residents has been positive » Local News » The Daily Star, Oneonta, NY – otsego county news, delaware county news, oneonta news, oneonta sports

Pipeline firm: Feedback from residents has been positive » Local News » The Daily Star, Oneonta, NY – otsego county news, delaware county news, oneonta news, oneonta sports.

Constitution Pipeline Presentation – YouTube

Constitution Pipeline Presentation – YouTube.