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The Fight Against Fracking

How New Yorkers won a moratorium on a drilling practice that threatens their lives, homes, and water.
— tags:

Gasland documentary still

Filmmaker Josh Fox watches a resident demonstrate the effects of hydrofracking chemicals on his water.

Photo courtesy of Gasland

When politicians refer to natural gas as a "clean" alternative to oil and coal, they seldom mention a commonly used technique called horizontal hydraulic fracturing, also known as fracking.

But in New York, residents were concerned enough about the long-term environmental, health, and economic fallout of fracking that they convinced the state Senate to institute a moratorium on the practice. In a 48-9 bipartisan landslide, state leaders voted to prohibit fracking for nine months so they can evaluate the environmental and health impacts of the practice before deciding how to continue.

"It was absolutely the result of thousands of citizens weighing in with their senators,” said Katherine Nadeau, director of the Water and Natural Resources Program for Environmental Advocates of New York. “When that many people call, write, and show up, it gets results. The other side was spending obscene amounts of money, but the more compelling argument was that there have been serious tragic repercussions to drilling."

Those repercussions have included fatalities from exploding wells, 30-mile stretches of streams without any living organisms, exploding tap water, diesel fuel spills, sick children and adults, plummeting property values, farmland that is no longer tillable, the destruction of vast swaths of once-beautiful scenery, along with many other documented cases of harm to people and the planet.

Gasland's scene of a man lighting the water coming from his kitchen tap on fire has become iconic of fracking's dangers to drinking water.

Fracking involves blasting through shale rock to release the gas trapped deep below ground. Each fracked well uses between 3 and 8 million gallons of clean water—usually trucked in from rivers, streams, ponds, lakes, and other fresh-water sources—that is then mixed with sand and a toxic stew of chemicals that drilling companies are not required to disclose. But Theo Colborn, a noted endocrinologist and water issues expert, has identified many of them as carcinogins, neurotoxins, and endocrine disruptors. They include acrylonitrite, ammonium bisulfite, benzene, boric acid, ethylbenzene, 5-chloro-2-methyl-4-isothiazotin-3-one, formaldehyde, monoethanolamine, styrene, tetrachlorethalene, toluene, and xylene.

Much of the waste fluid is left underground, where these toxins have affected groundwater drinking supplies in many states.

First-Time Activists in “A Fight for Our Lives”

Many fighting this battle had never before been involved in political issues. But after seeing the impacts of fracking around the country or in their own daily lives, they got active.

They organized and attended forums, panels, meetings, and rallies—sometimes alongside public figures like actor Mark Ruffalo and singer-songwriter Pete Seeger. Day after day, thousands of people called state senate and assembly offices to pressure for the moratorium. Achieving it was a first-round victory beyond expectations—a small but important win.

With their air, water, land, properties, communities, and health on the line, residents have made the campaign a priority, often sacrificing family time, leisure time, and sleep to keep abreast of developments and share information. "The petrochemical-industrial complex is stealing our land and our health," says New York resident and architect Joe Levine. "Life as we know it will change forever if we don’t stop them."

Levine has a home near the New York State border in Damascus, Pennsylvania, with his wife, Jane Cyphers, and their two daughters. The family has turned over their lives to this issue since they were first approached by gas companies wanting to lease their land. They soon realized that their beloved Delaware River would be imperiled by drilling. Levine cofounded Damascus Citizens, a grassroots group made up of people who are fighting to keep the Delaware safe from fracking. Their influence, and the experiences of the town of Dimock, Pennyslvania, inspired Josh Fox to make the documentary Gasland.

Sullivan County, New York, resident Larysa Dyrszka, a retired pediatrician, has also taken on the role of state-level activist for the first time.

"Nobody thought drilling would really come here, to a populated area, with technology that couldn't ensure against harmful effects to our drinking water and health," says Dyrszka. "Little did we know it was already happening in Texas and Colorado and in other populated areas."

Together with her friends and neighbors, Dyrszka started SACRED—Sullivan Area Citizens for Responsible Energy Development. On January 25, Dyrszka joined hundreds of New Yorkers from all corners of the state to lobby their representatives in Albany—many, like Dyrszka, for the first time.

"I was hooked," Dyrszka says. "Now, whenever Roger [Downs, of the Sierra Club Atlantic Chapter] or Katharine [Nadeau, of EANY] or any fellow foot-soldier groups suggest a lobby day, I’m there."

For months, Dyrszka and her fellow activists continued building relationships by phone, e-mail, and in person with legislative staff, sending them scientific, health, legal, economic, and other information on fracking.

New York’s Recipe for Success

"For every 3 to 10 calls they got against the moratorium, there were 100 for it."
          -Wes Gillingham

Wes Gillingham is program director for Catskill Mountainkeeper. He was on the floor of the Senate all day August 3, waiting with Dyrszka and fellow activists until the bill finally came to a vote around midnight.

"I got two reports from Senate staffers later," he says. "One said that for every 3 to 10 calls they got against the moratorium, there were 100 for it. Another told me it was 80-to-1 in favor”—despite the fact that drilling companies funded a counter-campaign claiming that allowing fracking will bring riches to strapped upstate regions.

Timing also had something to do with the vote's outcome. "The Gulf spill and Gasland coming almost simultaneously got a lot more people aware of the carelessness of the gas and oil companies and what's happening with unconventional gas drilling,” says Kevin Millar, a retired nurse anesthetist from Tioga County who belongs to New York Residents Against Drilling and the Coalition to Protect New York.

Kennedy Main Photo by Shadia Fayne WoodCitizens, Defend Your Local River
Robert Kennedy, Jr.: Everyday citizens have powerful tools for protecting our waterways.

Filmmaker Josh Fox brought his award-winning Gasland to many New York cinemas in early summer. Fox, who'd traveled to 24 states to document the heartbreaking human stories behind the industry hype about a "safe, clean fuel," has appeared on the Daily Show with Jon Stewart, Fresh Air with Terry Gross, and other national shows. Gasland has been showing on HBO since debuting there in June. Its scene of a man lighting the water coming from his kitchen tap on fire has become iconic of fracking's dangers to drinking water. Everywhere it shows, more people join the antifracking movement.

In September, the New York Assembly will vote a similar moratorium bill. Activists are working to ensure it gets to the floor for a vote. Another focus is on educating outgoing Governor David Paterson, whom they expect to sign the moratorium bills (he had threatened to veto, but that's now unlikely, given the huge majority Senate passage).

The incoming governor will be the focus of attention post-election. Green Party candidate Howie Hawkins has called for a total ban on the practice. Democrat Andrew Cuomo and Republican Rick Lazio say they are in favor of "safe" drilling. Activists are already showing up at Cuomo's statewide rallies to let him know that fracking isn’t safe.

Antifracking advocates believe their multifaceted approach—based on educating themselves, the public, and legislators—will work. They're optimistic that their concerns about their health, homes, and drinking water won’t be ignored.

"Cooperation from around the state made us succeed in the Senate," says Dyrszka. "None of us are being paid. Nobody's offering us money, now or in the future. We're just fighting for our lives, and that 's why we're winning these little battles."


Maura Stephens wrote this article for YES! Magazine, a national, nonprofit media organization that fuses powerful ideas with practical actions. Maura is an independent journalist and associate director of the Park Center for Independent Media at Ithaca College and a founding member of the Coalition to Protect New York. She is writing a book, Frack Attack: Fighting Back, about unconventional gas drilling and the grass-roots people who are combating its dangers.

Interested?

YES! Magazine encourages you to make free use of this article by taking these easy steps. Stephens, M. (2010, August 13). The Fight Against Fracking. Retrieved February 09, 2012, from YES! Magazine Web site: http://www.yesmagazine.org/planet/the-fight-against-fracking. This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License Creative Commons License


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Reader Comments

excellent Fight Against Fracking piece

Posted by Eve Sicular at Aug 14, 2010 07:52 AM
thanks Maura Stephens, this is one of the best synopses I've seen of the fight against fracking in NYS. I'm heartened to see how awareness has grown and citizenry's creative concerned responses are actually making a difference, with many effective campaigns springing up. But it's a tough battle and this is a good piece also to heighten folks' awareness and keep vigilance going.

fracking

Posted by aaron at Aug 14, 2010 10:24 AM
good for howie... the link to the coalition website does not work...

Great article

Posted by Jan Quarles at Aug 14, 2010 05:48 PM
This article highlights the most important survival issues of our time: energy and water. In a few decades, drinking water in many parts of the U.S. will be very scarce due to global warming and increasing pollution. Our water is more precious than gas or oil! Please support renewable energy systems like solar, wind and geothermal, and help us ban fracking everywhere.

Fracking Moratorium

Posted by Jack Ossont at Aug 15, 2010 07:38 AM
Great article Maura Stephens. It's heartening to see the citizens of NY standing up for the protection of their water and the retention of their quality of life. Safe water supplies throughout the state are critical for staving off ruin to many economic sectors. Tourism, the wine trails around the Finger Lakes, organic agriculture and property values in general will all suffer greatly if high volume, high pressure hydrofracking is permitted in NY. Kudos to you and Yes Magazine for explaining the majority resistance to this unwanted technology.

The Truth about Fracking

Posted by Nancy at Aug 15, 2010 03:28 PM
Thanks for this article. Far too many people are unaware of this procedure and what it does to the environment, including the ways in which it directly affects humans. We need more coverage of this issue and others like it, and we need to make sure it gets as much attention as possible. How can you support fracking when you know you might not even be able to drink your tap water? That knowledge needs to be spread as quickly as possible.

Frack Not

Posted by Zoar at Aug 16, 2010 06:39 AM
I am encouraged to see this well written and persuasive article in YES. We need more people to become aware of the sinister dangers of slick water hydro-fracking and the real dangers of gas/methane drilling overall. In tandem with conservation of resources we need a real public education on the truth regarding ecosystem destruction of gad drilling activities. We also need to ask people---How would YOU feel if your well water became contaminated or toxic fumes from gas drilling in your community was making you and your loved ones deadly sick?

Fracking

Posted by Wendell Williams at Aug 21, 2010 10:19 AM
What is going on with fracking in nearby Pennsylvania, any info or links would be appreciated?

a few Pennsylvania resources

Posted by Maura Stephens at Aug 23, 2010 10:53 AM
"According to a report by the Pennsylvania Land Trust Association, there have been 1,435 violations by 43 different Marcellus Shale drilling companies since January 2008. 952 of them were identified as impacting the environment. Another analysis by Clean Water Action reports 565 violations at Marcellus Shale gas drilling sites just between January 1st and June 18th of this year." (from RenewableEnergyWorld.com article linked to below)

Damascus Citizens: http://www.damascuscitizens.org/

Vanity Fair article, "A Colossal Fracking Mess": http://www.vanityfair.com/[…]/fracking-in-pennsylvania-201006

ProPublica (check out all their fracking coverage, mostly by Abrahm Lustgarten and Sabrina Shankman, in a whole series on fracking at http://www.propublica.org/s[…]llings-environmental-threat),
http://www.propublica.org/a[…]tes-stream-killing-fish-921

RenewableEnergyWorld.com: "Why Pennsylvania Needs Clean Energy: Fracking Out of Control," http://www.renewableenergyw[…]t-i-fracking-out-of-control

a few Pennsylvania resources

Posted by Maura Stephens at Aug 23, 2010 11:07 AM
"According to a report by the Pennsylvania Land Trust Association, there have been 1,435 violations by 43 different Marcellus Shale drilling companies since January 2008. 952 of them were identified as impacting the environment. Another analysis by Clean Water Action reports 565 violations at Marcellus Shale gas drilling sites just between January 1st and June 18th of this year." (from RenewableEnergyWorld.com article linked to below)

Damascus Citizens: http://www.damascuscitizens.org/

Vanity Fair article, "A Colossal Fracking Mess": http://www.vanityfair.com/[…]/fracking-in-pennsylvania-201006

ProPublica (check out all their fracking coverage, mostly by Abrahm Lustgarten and Sabrina Shankman, in a whole series on fracking at http://www.propublica.org/s[…]llings-environmental-threat),
http://www.propublica.org/a[…]tes-stream-killing-fish-921

RenewableEnergyWorld.com: "Why Pennsylvania Needs Clean Energy: Fracking Out of Control," http://www.renewableenergyw[…]t-i-fracking-out-of-control

Fracking As Extreme Energy

Posted by Jeanne Fudala at Aug 21, 2010 06:31 PM
Superb article about the form of "extreme" energy that until recently had not been often discussed in the energy debate.
Natural gas is not a bridge to a cleaner future--it is a fossil fuel--and massive slickwater hydraulic fracturing emits a great deal of heat-trapping gasses during the lifelycle of its operations.
I hope to see more articles on the subject of fracking, especially by this author, an excellent writer with an impressive body of work.

I suggest a topic for hopefully the next issue of YES. The topic of "extreme energy": ie shale tar sands, mountain top removal and massive hydrofracking and the valiant struggles against those highly destructive operations.


the fight against fracking

Posted by Laurie Roe at Aug 22, 2010 05:02 PM
Thank you Maura for writing this article. I have shared it with concerned friends who are inspired to join the movement in a more active way because they feel encouraged and inspired by your writing. I encourage others to share this article too. This threatening industrialization is just one of the many heads of the huge corporate/regulatory agency resources- grabbing medusa that we must work to stop by all possible means..people are looking to NY to take a strong stand and wake up the nation to the dangers of this sort of unnecessary energy mining.

Fracking

Posted by Gudrun Scott at Aug 22, 2010 06:41 PM
Now, after two years of fracking 2,000 wells in Pa they still don't use safe management practices and have no intention of doing so. In Clearfield Pa on June 3 a Marcellus well became out of control and was a blow out. It spewed fracking fluid and gas into the air 6 stories high for almost 24 hours. The response from the company -EOG Resources who are an offshoot from Enron in 1999 and then Enron went bacnkrupt dragging many pensioners down while EOG made 6 billion dollar profit in 2007. There was no certified well specialist at the site. The Blow out Preventer BOP that we got to know so well from the Gulf oil spill was not systematically tested from well to well. The blow out was diagnosed as completely preventable. The EOG company man who was in charge was reported mostly resting in his truck. His previous assignments in his 30 something career were in Kasakstan, Nigeria, Russia and Algeria. No wonder he did not call the local first responders- he was used to working with locals who spoke foreign languages and who were ignorant about oil and gas spills. The workers on the job worked 36 hours straight-- you cannot do that on coffee alone- this likely required amphetamines but that question was not asked at the investigative hearing that was held by the DEP of Pa. They were lucky that the event occurred in an empty Hunting Club and that the well did not become a fireball. Here is the transcript of the hearing that was held on this unraveling well:
http://www.dep.state.pa.us/[…]/EOG.htm

renewable energy

Posted by Gdrun Scott at Aug 22, 2010 06:48 PM
natural gas is a good bridge to renewable energy because you can switch gas on and off when the solar or wind energy is insufficient.

However, we won't have that natural gas when we could use it if we insist on opening all these wells at once now and they produce more heavily in the beginning and then peter out.

Also the price of gas is low right now and why not wait for it to go back up and work on getting solar and wind in place now, then use the gas sparingly with the other energies.

Leave some for your grandchildren-- they always say that about the deficit--- leave water while you are at it.

Fight for Fracking Moratorium in NYS

Posted by Becky DeWitt at Aug 22, 2010 11:38 PM
 Ms. Stephens captured the very essence of this struggle. I know because I've lived through it with her and thousands of other New Yorkers. I do have experience with political movements, but never in my life have I seen anything like this knock-down, drag-out fight.
 The article spoke eloquently about the depth of peoples' concerns for their own lives and that of their families; but they also feel a very justifiable anger for what's happened to others in the name of a free market "greener" economy. The gas industry fooled people into signing leases. Yet in 35 states, including our neighbor Pennsylvania, people have developed catastrophic illnesses and the gas drilling companies lied and told them the technology was safe. Moreover, farm animals and pets have suffered severe health consequences and even death, just by drinking the water. If that's not evil, I don't know what is.
 I know the fight, in side out, and Ms. Stephens article spoke the plain, simple, and unequivocal truth. I thank her for it.

Destroying Value

Posted by David Alexander at Aug 26, 2010 04:32 PM
I'd like to return to the area in which I was born and raised, but I see now the value placed on mineral rights by some. But those mineral rights destroy quality of life rights, and the dollar value of those mineral rights is offset by the dollar costs to clean up spills and accidents and to treat victims of contamination and poison. I'm sorry, but before I'm willing to buy land anywhere in the Marcellus Shale region, I need to know that my water and air and beauty of sight rights are going to be there for the future. And that right there means that the property value for owners of land not used for mineral extraction has gone down.

Fracking in NY

Posted by Amy at Nov 24, 2010 05:09 PM
Please sign this pettition, it takes two seconds and pass on to everyone you know who lives in New York. If we want to protect New York's drinking water from risky natural gas drilling, we need to act now.

http://action.workingfamili[…]EY=2773&tag=fbhydro1110

Next Monday, the New York State Assembly will hold its final meeting of the year -- their last chance to pass a moratorium on "fracking," a drilling method that threatens our water supply and our environment, pumps Benzene and other highly toxic chemicals 8000 feet into our ground water supply. (In 2005, the Bush/ Cheney Energy Bill exempted natural gas drilling from the Safe Drinking Water Act. It exempts companies from disclosing the chemicals used during hydraulic fracturing. Essentially, the provision took the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) off the job. It is now commonly referred to as the Halliburton Loophole.)

After grassroots pressure from tens of thousands of concerned New Yorkers, the State Senate approved the moratorium this summer. But unless the Assembly passes the same bill before the end of the year, the ban won't become law, and risky new drilling in New York could begin.

I just signed the Working Families Party's petition telling the New York Assembly to protect our water. Will you join me? Just go to:

http://action.workingfamili[…]Y=2773&tag=hydro1110taf

Thank you!
Amy

P.S. Please see below for more information about the problem...and gasland movie trailer

Hydraulic Fracturing FAQs
http://gaslandthemovie.com/trailer

How does hydraulic fracturing work?
Hydraulic fracturing or fracking is a means of natural gas extraction employed in deep natural gas well drilling. Once a well is drilled, millions of gallons of water, sand and proprietary chemicals are injected, under high pressure, into a well. The pressure fractures the shale and props open fissures that enable natural gas to flow more freely out of the well.
What is horizontal hydraulic fracturing?
Horizontal hydrofracking is a means of tapping shale deposits containing natural gas that were previously inaccessible by conventional drilling. Vertical hydrofracking is used to extend the life of an existing well once its productivity starts to run out, sort of a last resort. Horizontal fracking differs in that it uses a mixture of 596 chemicals, many of them proprietary, and millions of gallons of water per frack. This water then becomes contaminated and must be cleaned and disposed of.
What is the Halliburton Loophole?
In 2005, the Bush/ Cheney Energy Bill exempted natural gas drilling from the Safe Drinking Water Act. It exempts companies from disclosing the chemicals used during hydraulic fracturing. Essentially, the provision took the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) off the job. It is now commonly referred to as the Halliburton Loophole.
What is the Safe Drinking Water Act?
In 1974, the Safe Drinking Water Act (SDWA) was passed by Congress to ensure clean drinking water free from both natural and man-made contaminates.
What is the FRAC Act?
The FRAC Act (Fracturing Responsibility and Awareness to Chemical Act) is a House bill intended to repeal the Halliburton Loophole and to require the natural gas industry to disclose the chemicals they use.
How deep do natural gas wells go?
The average well is up to 8,000 feet deep. The depth of drinking water aquifers is about 1,000 feet. The problems typically stem from poor cement well casings that leak natural gas as well as fracking fluid into water wells.
How much water is used during the fracking process?
Generally 1-8 million gallons of water may be used to frack a well. A well may be fracked up to 18 times.
What fluids are used in the fracking process?
For each frack, 80-300 tons of chemicals may be used. Presently, the natural gas industry does not have to disclose the chemicals used, but scientists have identified volatile organic compounds (VOCs) such as benzene, toluene, ethylbenzene and xylene.
In what form does the natural gas come out of the well?
The gas comes up wet in produced water and has to be separated from the wastewater on the surface. Only 30-50% of the water is typically recovered from a well. This wastewater can be highly toxic.
What is done with the wastewater?
Evaporators evaporate off VOCs and condensate tanks steam off VOCs, 24 hours a day, seven days a week. The wastewater is then trucked to water treatment facilities.
What is a well's potential to cause air pollution?
As the VOCs are evaporated and come into contact with diesel exhaust from trucks and generators at the well site, ground level ozone is produced. Ozone plumes can travel up to 250 miles.



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