Film Screening “Drill Baby Drill” by Lech Kowalski

Film Screening “Drill Baby Drill” by Lech Kowalski | shaleshock.org.

 

Comment by Mary Menapace:

My (amateur) review and impressions.

Attended the American premiere of Drill Baby Drill in Utica this afternoon.  Shaleshock blurb on it here.   http://shaleshock.org/2013/03/film-screening-drill-baby-drill-by-lech-kowalski/

The director Lech Kowalski.ski was there to answer questions afterwards.
almost three hundred people, theater was near full.

The film beautifully lays out the ugly issues, mainly the way they operate as if exempt from any oversight or laws.  As they are.   Voice over narration by Lech.  Polish farmers live simply on beautiful land, produce their own food, milk and eggs each even.  Subtitled, their language direct, simple,  logic irrefutable.  The gathering and swift direct action respectful, effective,  inspiring.   Interesting that the leader was a woman (familiar?)  she spokesperson but the room and fields were filled with mostly men on film anyway.   Lech was asked, on film, many times to stop filming, by gov. and Chevron.   As he commented afterwards, he coulda made an entire movie of being told not to be filming.  To see the same issues laid out across the sea opens up the perspective.

Pennsylvania portion has familiar faces, Carol French piece opens the film.  Was good to see her farm, heartbreaking to see her cows.  Very  powerful was a truck driver, Ray, who quit, his testimony on the status quo of how it all works and home water situation straight up bad.  He was present at the screening.  So was a psychologist who on film talks about the sand importing facility next door to a day care center in wyalusing.  She was to speak afterwards about her work with Fracking victims but disappointingly there was not time.

Afterwards, there was good discussion about the larger picture of corporate power being the enemy, not Fracking.  Local county legislator spoke, another truck driver who quit spoke, his story confirming Rachel’s testimony of woodchips being added to liquid for import to Seneca landfill and other NY landfills.    He hauled the waste to NY working thirteen hour days and other lawbreaking policies he ultimately could not abide, echoing the driver in the film.

So the film bore good discussion.  The distribution will be film festivals and will be available on VOD which I am assuming is video on demand, and Lech is looking to have a tour of dozens of locales across the northeast.  He will be figuring out dates sometime shortly.

Unsealed Records in Contamination Case Claim Lax Oversight by DEP | StateImpact Pennsylvania

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.

Sewage Plants Struggle To Treat Wastewater Produced By Fracking Operations | Chemical & Engineering News

Sewage Plants Struggle To Treat Wastewater Produced By Fracking Operations | Chemical & Engineering News.

Washington County judge orders Marcellus Shale development settlement records unsealed

Washington County judge orders Marcellus Shale development settlement records unsealed.

Gas Rush Stories, part 14: Organic Farmers on Vimeo

Gas Rush Stories, part 14: Organic Farmers on Vimeo on Vimeo

via Gas Rush Stories, part 14: Organic Farmers on Vimeo.

MarcellusGas.Org Home Page

MarcellusGas.Org Home Page.

Information Related to Pennsylvania Deep Gas Well Activity
Home
How To Use This Site
Wells » Well Data Reports
Wells » Drilling Maps
Wells » Well Packet Information
Wells » Frac Fluid Composition Reports
Graphs and Statistics
  – by State
  – by County
  – by Township
Impact Fee Revenue Calculator
Record Setting Wells
Record Setting Gas Companies
State Maps
Gas Company Information
Waste Facility Information
FREE Guest Membership
Full Membership Sign Up
Membership Benefits
Your Account Information
Contact MarcellusGas.Org
About MarcellusGas.Org
Related Sites & Links
Privacy Policy
Terms Of Use

U.S. Geological Survey: Natural Gas Fracking Is Destroying Pennsylvania Forests – Natural Gas Watch.org

 

U.S. Geological Survey: Natural Gas Fracking Is Destroying Pennsylvania Forests

Oct 24th, 2012 | By fjgallagher | Category: FrackingLead Articles

“>

Natural gas drilling rigs, similar to the one shown here in Colorado, are destroying thousands of acres of forest in Pennsylvania, according to a recent report issued by the U.S. Geological Survey.

Natural gas drilling activity is destroying thousands of acres of forest in Pennsylvania, according to a recent report issued by the U.S. Geological Survey.

“This type of extensive and long-term habitat conversion has a greater impact on natural ecosystems than activities such as logging or agriculture, given the great dissimilarity between gas-well pad infrastructure and adjacent natural areas and the low probability that the disturbed land will revert back to a natural state in the near future,” the U.S.G.S. report states.

Much of the damage can be traced to the consequences of hydraulic fracturing — or “fracking,” as it is called in the parlance of our time — although the extraction of coal-bed methane has also contributed to the ongoing environmental degredation, the report notes.

Ed. note – If you enjoy the content and coverage provided by NaturalGasWatch.org, please take a moment to click on one of the advertisements on the right-hand side of the page. Your support will help us keep the site up and running. Thanks, fj.

Much of the damage, the report states, stems from fragmentation of the existing forest, where a habitat is divided by roads, drilling pads, pipelines and other infrastructure development associated with fracking into smaller, less functional areas.

From the U.S.G.S. report:

Although many human and natural activities result in habitat fragmentation, gas exploration and development activity can be extreme in their effect on the landscape. Numerous secondary roads and pipeline networks crisscross and subdivide habitat structure. Landscape disturbance associated with shale-gas development infrastructure directly alters habitat through loss, fragmentation, and edge effects, which in turn alters the flora and fauna dependent on that habitat. The fragmentation of habitat is expected to amplify the problem of total habitat area reduction for wildlife species, as well as contribute towards habitat degradation.

The picture, below, (Figure 2 from the U.S.G.S. report) illustrates the effect that fragmentation has on a forest.

A photograph from a recent report issued by the U.S. Geological Survey illustrates the degree of damage done to forest land in Pennsylvania by natural gas drilling activity. The report found that natural gas driling activity is a primary force behind the destruction of Pennsylvania forest land.

The bottom line, according to the report: natural gas drilling has profoundly altered the forest in Pennsylvania.

From the U.S.G.S. report:

The overall landscape effects of natural gas development have been substantial. (emphasis added) Over 9,600 Marcellus Shale gas drilling permits and over 49,500 non-Marcellus Shale permits have been issued from 2000 to 2011 in Pennsylvania (Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Protection, 2011) and over 2,300 Marcellus Shale permits in West Virginia (West Virginia Geological and Economic Survey, 2011), with most of the development activity occurring since 2005.

With the accompanying areas of disturbance, well pads, new roads, and pipelines from both types of natural gas wells, the effect on the landscape is often dramatic. Figure 2 (below) shows a pattern of landscape change from forest to forest, interspersed with gas extraction infrastructure. These landscape effects have consequences for the ecosystems, wildlife, and human populations that are colocated with natural gas extraction activities.

Read the complete report here: Landscape Consequences of Natural Gas Extraction in Bradford and Washington Counties, Pennsylvania, 2004–2010

Tags: ,,

DEP MOVING CLOSER TO FINALIZING OIL AND GAS RULES

http://m.thetimes-tribune.com/news/state-dep-moving-closer-to-finalizing-oil-and-gas-rules-1.1442738

EARTHWORKS | Re: Cancellation of meeting on DEP Water Testing and Notices of Violations Procedures Related to Sha

EARTHWORKS | Re: Cancellation of meeting on DEP Water Testing and Notices of Violations Procedures Related to Sha.

DEP shelves more stringent water test

 

 

http://www.heraldstandard.com/marcellus_shale/dep-shelves-more-stringent-water-test/article_4b96dcfc-84c3-5421-abdc-d0a3573700bf.html