Frackfree America National Coalition
(234) 201-8007
  • Home
  • Contact
    • Subscribe
    • States >
      • State Groups
      • State Event Calendars >
        • PA-calendar
        • OH-calendar
  • Blog
  • Resources
    • Mapping
    • Water
    • Field Guide
    • Downloads
    • federal-loopholes
    • YouTube videos
    • Report It
    • reports
    • Recommened Reading
    • Films - Movie Night
    • Yard Signs
    • Posters
    • PA DEP List
    • Well Permits
    • Sand
    • Movie Night 2
    • Leasing hazards
    • airportdrilling
  • News
    • Photos
    • injection wells ohio
    • FANCy in the News
    • Breaking News
    • FrackFreeMa
    • News 1
    • News 2
    • Drill Rigs
    • Bans
    • Q & A
    • Promised Land
    • misc images
    • drilling-violations
    • brinereport
    • Archived Stories
    • archive
  • Youngstown
    • SWAPwells
    • HandsAcrossOurLand
    • Youngstown print files
    • education
    • part1of2partsLA
    • CallYoungstown
  • National Day of Action (Annual)
    • 2016 Participants - Add your town
    • National Day of Action - Details and Updates
    • 2015 Participants National Day of Action
    • 2012 Participants National Day of Action
    • 2012 National Day of Action
    • Photos 2012 National day of Action
  • National Citizens Against Injection Wells
    • Ohio SWDisposal wells 2016
  • Two for Tuesdays

Public Ejected From Injection Well Non-Hearing At Athens, Ohio, ODNR Open House

11/29/2012

1 Comment

 
Picture

photo credit: Appalachia Resist! and Athens County Fracking Action Network
Contacts: ACFAN,  AR!: 740 591 2693


FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE:
November 28, 2012.
To: News Media
From: Appalachia Resist! and Athens County Fracking Action Network
Contacts: ACFAN,  AR!:  740 591 2693
Re: ODNR INVITES PUBLIC IN, THEN KICKS THEM OUT


ORIGINAL POSTED HERE: http://www.acfan.org/2012/odnr-invites-the-public-in-kicks-them-out/ Includes more images.
Tonight, soon after the ODNR invited the public into an "open house" about  injection wells , they thought better of it and ordered the public to leave.

Though over 100 community members requested a public hearing about a newly permitted well, the ODNR had instead opted for an “open house” format, designed to diffuse agency accountability and community solidarity. The event was held 6 PM Wednesday night at the ODNR headquarters on East State Street.

More than fifty residents were crowded inside the ODNR headquarters on East State Street, when they took matters into their own hands and transformed the ODNR'S planned "open house" into the public hearing they had requested.  The crowd was made up of concerned landowners, farmers, business owners, and mothers with young children.  Ex-county commissioner Roxanne Groff hosted the impromptu event.  She began by acknowledging Rick Simmers, Chief of the Division of Oil and Gas Resource Management, and moved on to take prepared public comments from the assembled crowd.  ODNR personnel were visibly at a loss.  Law enforcement quickly interrupted Groff, asking her to leave, at which point Groff asked the public if they would like her to continue.  The room broke into enthusiastic applause.  After law enforcement again ordered residents to leave, the crowd broke into a “mic check", chanting as they left the building "The ODNR has been bought by the oil and gas industry!" "No new permits!" "When is the public hearing?"  When the public left, the room was nearly empty, except for ODNR personnel and the large law enforcement presence they had invited.

After the public was ordered out, they were met outside by over 100 Athens County residents who had marched down east State Street to ODNR headquarters to voice their objection to the ODNR’s continuing disregard of the widespread community concern about Class II injection wells.

The marchers carried placards emblazoned with skulls and held a banner that read "Shut it Down! No New Wells!" and signs with slogans such as “Our Safety is Not for Sale”, "Defend Our Water", "We Demand a Public a Hearing", and "I Want my Concerns on Record" ".  Marchers wore hazmat style suits and respirators to draw attention to the fact that Class II injection wells accept massive amounts of radioactive fracking waste from out-of-state.

Community objection to injection wells has been increasing lately, as landowners have realized that they do not have any say if an injection well goes into operation on or near their property.  Ms. Malvena Frost, who owns the property on which the Atha injection well is proposed in Rome Township, Athens County, does not want an injection well on her land.  She “fears her only source of drinking water, a private well...will be contaminated," according to public comments submitted on her behalf to ODNR by her attorney, Mike Hollingsworth.

SB315, cited by some as a law that will increase regulations on injection wells, actually makes it easier for ODNR to bypass public notice period for new wells, and makes it more difficult for landowners to appeal permits.

A public hearing, the ODNR’s standard system for public redress, allows citizen comments to be entered into the legal record, so that citizens can challenge an agency decision through the court system. An “open house” offers no such substantial participation in public process.

Underscoring how opposed they were to receiving public input, ODNR designated an outdoor, “free speech zone” for the ralliers, and forbade the public from bringing in signs, banners, backpacks, or audio or videocameras.  One citizen was ordered to leave after recording officials' comments.  Ralliers brought their own solar-powered sound system, stage, and roster of speakers. "We will challenge these intolerable restrictions on our constitutional rights to freedom of speech and assembly," said Smiles Welch, the emcee of the event.

Speakers at the event raised many objections to injection wells, including a history of failed wells and water contamination.  The ODNR claims that there have been no cases of water contamination by Class II injection wells in Ohio for decades, yet they do no testing of groundwater or surface water near the wells.  "The reason they have not found contamination is that they have never looked for it," stated Grace Hall, one of the 100 who sent in objections.

Although the fracking waste that is dumped into injection wells is hazardous, it is not legally classified as such due to exemptions given to the oil and gas industry.

Nov 28, 2012, 2 minute video by Don E Wirtshafter. " The Ohio Department of Natural Resources tried to abridge citizen rights to a hearing before granting a permit for a new toxic waste injection well in their community. Instead, they hosted a "public meeting", a dog a pony show that had no legal impact. This is the community's reaction."
LINK to original if player does not load: http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=ZEnMzjK69-k

Appalachia Resist! and Athens County Fracking Action Network
photo from: Appalachia Resist! and Athens County Fracking Action Network
Contacts: ACFAN,  AR!: 740 591 2693

Other media coverage:

The Columbus Dispatch, November 29, 2012. Columbus, Ohio.
http://www.dispatch.com/content/stories/local/2012/11/29/fracking-dispute-gets-hotter.html

NBC4i.com, November 29, 2012. Columbus, Ohio.
http://www2.nbc4i.com/news/2012/nov/29/landowner-does-not-want-pending-injection-well-her-ar-1257615/

The Athens News, November 28, 2012. Athens, Ohio.
http://www.athensnews.com/ohio/article-38515-odnr-shuts-down-attempt-at-impromptu-public-hearing-on-injection-well.html?utm_source=contactology&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=TheAthenseNEWS%3ATOPNEWS+11%2F29%2F12

2 Previous Protests, June 26, August 15, October 3, 2012:
http://www.facebook.com/photo.php?fbid=506640166022449&set=pb.205575299462272.-2207520000.1354214128&&src=http%3A%2F%2Fsphotos-b.xx.fbcdn.net%2Fhphotos-snc6%2F175513_506640166022449_1097389779_o.jpg&smallsrc=http%3A%2F%2Fsphotos-b.xx.fbcdn.net%2Fhphotos-prn1%2F522165_506640166022449_1097389779_n.jpg&size=1800%2C662
1 Comment

Athens County (Ohio) Fracking Action Network & Appalachia Resist! Respond to ODNR's Breach of Public Trust

11/26/2012

0 Comments

 
Athens County Fracking Action Network and Appalachia Resist!
For immediate release  Nov. 28, 2012
Contacts: Heather Cantino, heather.cantino@gmail.com, 740-594-3338, acfan.org
Grace Hall, 99slow@gmail.com, 740-590-0500, appalachiaresist.wordpress.com

ODNR announces “Open House,” tramples on Truth and Community’s Rights

Ms. Malvena Frost, who owns the property on which the Atha injection well is proposed in Rome Township, Athens County, does not want an injection well on her land. She “fears her only source of drinking water, a private well...will be contaminated," according to public comments submitted on her behalf to ODNR by her attorney, Mike Hollingsworth. Ms. Frost’s comments requested a public hearing on the Atha permit application.  Hers was not the only one: Approximately 100 Athens County residents submitted comments objecting to the Atha permit on grounds of health and safety, requesting a public hearing. This may be the largest number of comments ever submitted to ODNR on an injection well permit application.

If members of the public raise relevant and valid concerns about health and safety, Ohio law requires that a public hearing be held.  Ms. Frost and most of the 100 others received instead a form letter announcing an "open house" would be held. With a week’s notice, the event will be held on Wednesday, Nov. 28, from 6 to 8 p.m. at ODNR E. State St. headquarters, Athens. Phone conversations have elicited statements by ODNR officials that this open house is intended as a substitute for a public hearing.

“This is a clear abuse of discretion on the part of ODNR’s Oil and Gas Chief.  Ohio Administrative Code 1501:9 mandates a public hearing if valid objections are received,” commented Roxanne Groff, member of Athens County Fracking Action Network and speaker at a recent public forum on the Atha permit.  Ms. Groff stated, “It is indefensible for Chief Simmers to dismiss Malvena Frost’s clearly valid and extensive concerns with a form letter. It is also clearly an abuse of discretionary power to categorically dismiss the rest of the 100 comments, which we know contain well substantiated public health and safety concerns.”

A public hearing is a legal forum in which citizens speak to the ODNR one at a time, allowing each statement to be heard by the entire group.  More importantly, comments presented in a public hearing are entered into the legal record and can thus help hold ODNR accountable.  Grace Hall, one of the 100 citizens who submitted comments on the Atha permit application, explained, “A public hearing allows us to hear what fellow citizens' concerns are and allows us to hear citizens' challenges to ODNR's rhetoric.  A hearing provides an opportunity for citizens to broaden their understanding of the issue and brings a level of accountability to officials.  An open house provides none of these things, because members of the public mill simply around the room, talking to various ODNR representatives in a casual one-on-one manner.”   

Athens County Fracking Action Network and Appalachia Resist! object to ODNR's outright dismissal of public comments and denial of a public hearing as a clear breach of public trust. Madeline ffitch, of Appalachia Resist! added, "This 'open house' is simply a way for ODNR to avoid having to face tough questions in public."

One concern cited in letters to ODNR is the content of waste likely to be injected intothe Atha well, as in all Class II wells.  While ODNR claims that the Atha well will accept only local, conventional oil and gas waste, there is no legal restriction on waste accepted. Hundreds of millions of gallons of highly radioactive fracking waste have been injected in Ohio injection wells in the past year.  Over half of waste injected in Ohio last year came from out of state.

Unlike Class I, Class II wells are not designed for hazardous waste. Due to exemptions from federal hazardous waste regulations, oil and gas waste is not legally classified as hazardous. ACFAN member Nancy Pierce, explained the danger of this situation: “Declaring it legally non-hazardous doesn’t make it any less hazardous.  The fracking waste being dumped into Class II wells contains highly toxic toluene, benzene, and other neurotoxic, carcinogenic, and radioactive substances, all of which are regulated as hazardous for all other industries under the Safe Drinking Water Act, Clean Water Act, and hazardous waste regulations.” She continued, “Ohio does not monitor drinking or groundwater around any Class II injection wells. I don’t understand how Heidi Hetzel-Evans can repeatedly claim these wells haven’t contaminated water when ODNR does not monitor water or soil to find out whether there’s contamination from its wells.”

The American Academy of Pediatrics “recommends that families with private drinking water wells in NGE/HF [natural gas extraction/hydraulic fracturing] areas should consider testing the wells before drilling begins and on a regular basis thereafter for chloride, sodium, barium, strontium and VOCs…” This is not surprising, given that industry admits that eventual well failure is inevitable. A recent Propublica series documents thousands of cases of well failure and fluid migration from Class I and II injection wells nationwide. In one Ohio case, “pollution had risen 1400 feet through solid rock and was progressing toward surface aquifers” from a Class I well before the breach was discovered.

Athens County Fracking Action Network and Appalachia Resist are planning a coordinated response to this clear breach of the public trust. This response will include a march from the Athens Community Center, 701 E. State St., to ODNR offices, 360 E State St., where citizens who wish to address one another have been assigned to a “free speech zone” outside. Citizens who wish to participate in the march are asked to meet at 5:30 in the west foyer near the Athens Community Center meeting rooms. The march will begin at 6 p.m. Attendees to the march and rally are asked to dress warmly and bring a flashlight and a mug.  Hot beverages will be provided.

OAC1501:9-3-06(E)(2)(c): If an objection is received, the chief shall rule upon the validity of the objection. If, in the opinion of the chief, such objection is not relevant to the issues of public health or safety, or to good conservation practices, or is without substance, a permit shall be issued. If the chief considers any objection to be relevant to the issues of public health or safety, or to good conservation practices, or to have substance, a hearing shall be called within thirty days of receipt of the objection. Such hearing shall be held at the central office of the division or other location designated by the chief. Notice of the hearing shall be sent by the chief to the applicant and to the person who has filed the objection.

HB 474, which would require a public hearing before permitting and denial of a permit based on local officials’ opposition to an injection well, did not move through the Ohio House this year.
###

0 Comments

“Unconventional Gas Development from Shale Plays: Myths and Realities” at Youngstown University, Youngstown, OH Nov. 7, 2012

11/5/2012

0 Comments

 
A. R. Ingraffea, the Dwight C. Baum Professor of Engineering in the School of Civil and Environmental Engineering at Cornell University, presents “Unconventional Gas Development from Shale Plays: Myths and Realities” at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday, Nov. 7 in Room 1171 of Williamson Hall on the campus of Youngstown State University, 221 North Hazel Street, Youngstown OH 44503

Ingraffea will make the presentation via live video conferencing, following by a question and answer session. The presentation is free and open to the public.

Announcement posted at The Akron Beacon Journal • 44 E. Exchange Street, Akron, Ohio 44308, http://www.ohio.com/blogs/drilling/ohio-utica-shale-1.291290/fracking-critic-to-speak-on-wednesday-in-youngstown-1.347731 , a repost of original article by The Business Journal (Youngstown, Ohio) http://businessjournaldaily.com/drilling-down/myths-realities-shale-gas-ysu-topic-2012-10-30

ALSO SEE: YSU News Center | Youngstown State University http://www.ysunews.com/myths-realities-shale-gas/

ALSO SEE: "Unconventional Gas Development from Shale: Myths and Realities Related to Human Health Impacts". Keynote address by Dr. Anthony Ingraffea at Marcellus Shale Exposed, held March 17, 2012 at Northampton Community College, Bethlehem, PA,
PART ONE:   http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7DK3fODCZ3w
PART TWO:   http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JTUrwtYJhGk&feature=relmfu
PART THREE:  http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_JyC_8-sDuU&feature=relmfu

ALSO SEE: Unconventional Development of Natural Gas from Shale Formations: Impacts on Water and Climate PDF presentation by Dr. A. R. Ingraffea: http://www.chesapeake.org/stac/presentations/208_Ingraffea%20Part%201.pdf
and
http://www.chesapeake.org/stac/presentations/208_Ingraffea%20Part%202.pdf
Picture

slide from Dr. Ingraffea presentation: http://www.chesapeake.org/stac/presentations/208_Ingraffea%20Part%202.pdf
0 Comments

Prince Frederick Civil Discourse On Fracking Southern Maryland Nov. 13, 2012

11/4/2012

0 Comments

 
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Contact:  Robyn Truslow  410-535-0291
Questions about “fracking?”  Is natural gas hydraulic fracturing the answer to energy independence and job growth or environmental nightmare?  Calvert Library, Prince Frederick, Maryland, is hosting a conversation about this controversial process of harvesting natural gas on Tuesday, November 13 at 7pm.  The conversation will be kicked off by participants with various viewpoints and then opened to the audience to share their concerns, questions and thoughts about the process and impact for Southern Maryland.

Guests that have already RSVP’d include Emily Wurth, a Food & Water Watch representative; Delegate Shane Robinson, a representative working for a formal ban on “fracking” in Maryland; Douglas Duncan, a scientist with the US Geological Survey; and Steve Everly, a spokesman from the Energy In Depth campaign launched by the Independent Petroleum Association of America which is focused on public education “about the promise and potential of responsibly developing American’s onshore energy resource base.”

This conversation is part of Calvert Library’s Civil Discourse series which has been going on for several years as a partnership with the Calvert County Community Mediation Center, All Saints Episcopal Church, Trinity United Methodist Church, Unitarian Universalist Fellowship of Southern Maryland, and other active engaged citizens interested in discussing and learning more about controversial topics that impact our community.  This conversation has further collaboration from Patuxent Riverkeeper, St. Mary’s Watershed Association and the Tidewater Land Trust.

For more information, call the Calvert Library, 850 Costley Way, Prince Frederick, MD 20678 at 410-535-0291 or 301-855-1862 or check the website at http://calvert.lib.md.us/

####
CONTACT:
Robyn Truslow
Public Relations Coordinator
Calvert Library
850 Costley Way
Prince Frederick, MD  20678
Phone 410-535-0291

Elsewhere on the web: http://smnewsnet.com/archives/32742
                                      http://www.americantowns.com/md/princefrederick/news/fracking-conversation-next-topic-in-civil-discourse-series-at-calvert-library-11635898
0 Comments

    All Posts

    March 2019
    January 2019
    December 2018
    November 2018
    September 2018
    August 2018
    July 2018
    January 2018
    December 2017
    November 2017
    October 2017
    December 2016
    August 2016
    July 2016
    August 2015
    September 2014
    April 2014
    March 2014
    February 2014
    January 2014
    December 2013
    March 2013
    February 2013
    January 2013
    December 2012
    November 2012
    October 2012
    September 2012
    August 2012
    May 2012


    WATCH PROMISED LAND
    TRAILER (CLICK)
    Freedom From Toxic Fracking Waste

    About

    Current issues covered by Frackfree America National Coalition based in Youngstown, Ohio - F.A.N.C.Y.

    Categories

    All
    City Council
    Illinois
    Ingraffea
    Injection Well
    Injection Well
    New York
    Odnr
    Ohio
    Rally
    Toxic Wastewater
    Toxic Wastewater
    Youngstown

    RSS Feed

Powered by Create your own unique website with customizable templates.