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Coalition Letter to Governor Cuomo Regarding Executive Order No. 41: Requiring Further Environmental Review of High-Volume Hydraulic Fracturing Combined With Horizontal Drilling

January 5, 2011

Honorable Andrew M. Cuomo
Governor, State of New York
The Capitol
Albany, NY 12224

Dear Governor Cuomo:

We, the undersigned, strongly support safeguarding the environment, public health and natural resources of the Catskills, Finger Lakes and Southern Tier regions that overlay New York’s Marcellus Shale formation, potentially the largest natural gas reservoir in America. That is why we write to thank you for your “continuation” of Executive Order No. 41: Requiring Further Environmental Review of High-Volume Hydraulic Fracturing Combined With Horizontal Drilling.

That order requires your Department of Environmental Conservation (DEC) to:

“complete its review of the public comments, make such revisions to the Draft SGEIS that are necessary to analyze comprehensively the environmental impacts associated with high-volume hydraulic fracturing combined with horizontal drilling, ensure that such impacts are appropriately avoided or mitigated consistent with the State Environmental Quality Review Act (SEQRA), other provisions of the Environmental Conservation Law and other laws, and ensures (stet) that adequate regulatory measures are identified to protect public health and the environment;”

More than 10,000 citizens, elected officials, business owners, environmental groups and students are signatories to a letter that requested Governor Paterson to withdraw the draft Supplemental Generic Environmental Impact Statement (draft SGEIS) due to its fundamental inadequacies and send it back to the drawing board. We are very grateful that Executive Order No. 41 requires DEC to address those shortcomings “comprehensively” before lifting New York’s de facto Marcellus Shale horizontal hydrofracking moratorium.

See: http://www.toxicstargeting.com/MarcellusShale/coalition_letter

A 12/13/10 article in The New York Times underscores the flaws of the draft SGEIS proceeding. Then Acting DEC Commissioner, Peter Iwanowicz, reportedly said: “many of the comments have criticized the proposed standards for failing to adequately address issues like the cumulative impact of multiple drill sites, disposal of wastewater from the drilling and the protection of drinking water.”

DEC deliberately excluded a broad range of critical issues from the scope of the SGEIS proceeding by ignoring extensive testimony at its scoping hearings. Moreover, a great deal of new information has become available since the scoping process ended. Against that background and in order to fulfill the goals of Executive Order No. 41, we respectfully request that you require DEC to:

A) Convene a Citizens Advisory Committee as well as a separate Technical Advisory Committee to guide the agency in its decision-making. At a minimum, these committees should be comprised of representatives from: 1) local, state and federal government agencies involved with regulating Marcellus Shale gas matters; 2) local governments, the State Legislature and Congress; 3) the natural gas industry; 4) property owners who leased their mineral rights; 5) civic, environmental, public interest and good government groups; 6) concerned citizens; and 7) academic researchers.

B) Provide public notice and accept comments for no less than 30 days regarding how the agency can best fulfill the requirements of Executive Order No. 41; respond in writing to all comments before beginning the process of revising the draft SGEIS; and afford the public regular, on-going opportunities for participation and comment.

C) Adopt the following proposed policies:

  1. Discharges of natural gas flowback, drilling and production wastewaters must meet New York State’s GA (groundwater that supplies potable drinking water) effluent limitations when discharged into ground and surface waters or public and private treatment plants or re-used for hydraulic fracturing or injected into underground disposal wells. Natural gas wastewaters have been documented to contain high concentrations of Total Dissolved Solids (TDS), toxic chemicals and Technology Enhanced Naturally Occurring Radioactive Materials (TENORM). These persistent pollutants can contaminate groundwaters, “pass through” “secondary” wastewater treatment systems, concentrate in residual sludges and cause worker hazards.
  2. Marcellus Shale horizontal hydrofracturing must be regulated by Individual EIS proceedings instead of a Generic EIS. DEC proposed to require individual EIS reviews for the New York City and Syracuse watersheds, but not for the rest of the Marcellus Shale formation. Moreover, according to the draft SGEIS, “Flowback water recoveries reported from horizontal Marcellus wells in the northern tier of Pennsylvania range between 9 and 35 percent of the fracturing fluid pumped (emphasis added)” (Page 5-97.) Those meager recovery rates support the conclusion that horizontal hydrofracturing constitutes deep well injection of fluids that could threaten drinking water supply sources. DEC requires State Pollutant Discharge Elimination System (SPDES) permits for deep well injection of natural gas fluid. Those permits can only be granted on the basis of site-specific, individual EIS reviews.
  3. An investigation must be undertaken to determine whether the 1992 GEIS is sufficient to safeguard public health and if “No known instances of groundwater contamination have occurred from previous horizontal drilling or hydraulic fracturing projects in New York State.” (See: DEC Marcellus Shale homepage.)

    DEC concluded in its Final SGEIS Scope: “In the absence of a pattern of incidents that indicates a regulatory weakness or gap, the occurrence of isolated accidents or violations do not of themselves constitute reason to re-open the GEIS.” (See 8.3.2)

    DEC’s assertion is directly contradicted by hundreds of spills reported to the agency as well as additional information compiled by Chautauqua, Cattaraugus and Allegany County Health Departments. Those data were not provided to DEC during its scoping hearings.

    DEC’s investigation must include a review of the following information:

  4. DEC’s GEIS must be updated on a comprehensive basis. The U. S. Environmental Protection Agency wrote to DEC that its 1992 GEIS is out-of-date in so many respects that it should not serve as the basis for developing new horizontal hydrofracturing regulations. DEC must revise the GEIS to address all of the regulatory shortcomings identified by EPA, including: potential impacts to public health, water supply, water quality, wastewater treatment operations, local and regional air quality, management of naturally occurring radioactive materials and cumulative environmental impacts.

    See: http://www.toxicstargeting.com/MarcellusShale/documents/epa_letter

Conclusion

In conclusion, Executive Order No. 41 is an historic effort to require DEC to make sure that the environmental impacts associated with Marcellus Shale horizontal hydrofracturing are “appropriately avoided or mitigated” prior to the permitting of that activity. The actions we respectfully request you to undertake would help achieve that goal and serve as a model of effective government regulation for the nation as a whole.

Thank you very much for your consideration. Best of luck with your administration.

Very truly yours,

Total Signatory Count: 5254

Katrina Morse
111 Homestead Rd.
Ithaca, NY
David Pacun
111 Ithaca Road
Ithaca, NY
Deawn Hersini
200 Buttermilk Lane
Ithaca, NY
Carola Burroughs
264 Clifton Place
Brooklyn, NY
Cory Foster
312 Eastwood Avenue
Ithaca, NY
diane hope
545 Forest lawn Rd
webster, NY
Catherine Farber
GDACC
5964 Brake Hill Road
Homer, NY
Nancy Kern
1202 County Highway 26
Fly Creek, NY
Maria McMullen
44 Jefferson Ave
Oneonta, NY
Andrew Marietta
6400 State Highway 28
Fly Creek, NY
Rita Johnson
935 County Hwy 33
Cooperstown, NY
John Romano
571 Smith Road
Worcester, New York
Debra Brennan
NRTA
30 Wood Ave
Stony Point, NY
melissa tuckey
104 Rachel Carson Way
ithaca, new york
Susan Rausch
517 Hudson St.
Ithaca, NY
George Damasevitz
4232 Marietta Drive
Vestal, NY
Graham Ottoson
207 Rachel Carson Way
Ithaca, NY
Rose Hostomsky
30 Jacobs Rd.
Thiells, NY
Marc Pritsky
11 Front Street
Nyack, NY
jacqueline fox
NRTA
12 hidden Hill Drive
Stony Point, Ny
Iliana Cruz
North Rockland Teacher Association
116 Laurel road
New City, Ny
Megan Pugh
203 rachel carson way
ithaca, ny
Renee Freed
108 Homestead Circle
Ithaca, MY
Gina Keel, PhD
8 Pearl St. West
Sidney, NY
holly fanion
151 Apple creek rd
cooperstown, NY
Rick Manning
114 Dey street
Ithaca, New York
Eugene Endres
126 Sears Street Apt. 1
Ithaca, NY
Theresa Sheusi
20 Croydon Drive
Merrick, NY
Susan M. Gregg
North Rockland High School
7 Madison Court
Stony Point, NY
Christine Brouwer
Mira's Movement
407 Second Street
Ithaca, NY
Lorraine O'Connor
34 Jackson Drive
Stony Point, NY
Michael Bogin
Hobart and William Smith Colleges
221 Slosson Lane
Geneva, NY
Jeanne Maguire
41 Poplar Road
Garnerville, NY
Michele Berzon
NRTA
100 Fieldstone Drive
Thiells, NY
Cheryl Thompson
3112 Perry City Rd.
Trumansburg, NY
Deacon John Peters
39-42 47th St
LIC, NY
Eric Skutch
111 Homestead Rd.
Ithaca, NY
James Kraus
North Rockland School Board Trustee
21 Heights Road
Stony Point, New York
Barbara Fry
821 Bostwick Rd.
Ithaca, New York
Carmen Esteves
CUNY ProfessorFava
21 Heights Road
Stony Point, New York
Francisco Batista
Villave of Haverstraw Elected official
13 Santiago Ave.
Haverstraw, New York
Stephen Hilgartner
533 Cayuga Heights Road
Ithaca, NY
Jo Ellen del Campo
43 Hillcrest Drive
Alfred, NY
Ana Santos
north rockland central school district
10 cambridge rd.
highland mills, ny
jacqueline ebner
162 Long Meadow Circle
Pittsford , New York
Karen Wollweber
2111 Abbot Avenue
Merrick, NY
Herbert Roff
9 Lighthouse Court
Tomkins Cove , New York
Chandra Lilley-Kapusinsky
2 Dunderberg Rd.
Tomkins Cove, NY
John Gebhards
48 Wintergreen Ave.
Newburgh, NY
Kailee Karst
4400 Vestal Parkway East
Binghamton, Ny
Carol Malz
5346 State Highway 7
Oneonta, NY
Johanna Martinez
11 Simenovsky Drive
Haverstraw, NY
Lauren Roberts
319 lake road
dryden, ny
Roslyn Shafer
Concerned Citizens for Otego
89 River Street
Otego, NY
Julia Berazneva
329 South Geneva ST
Ithaca, NY
Daniel White
32 McMillan Rd.
West Shokan, NY
Janielle Zinna
NYSUT
59 3rd Ave., Apt.2
Nyack, NY
John Humphries
405 Euclid Ave
Elmira, NY
Charlene Christie
26 Franklin St
ONeonta, NY
Janice Baer
121 Kelder Road
Olivebridge, NY
Milagros Torres
153 Washburns Lane
Stony Point, NY
Robert Lipari
3991 Rt. 228
Alpine, NY
John Messerschmidt
26 Purcell Lane
High Falls, NY
Carol Worth
Keuka Lake Association
575 E. Lake Rd.
Penn yan, NY
Liz Meade
204 Tudor Rd
Ithaca, NY
Robert Silsbee
Cornell University
433 Savage Farm Drive
Ithaca, NY
Elizabeth East
15 Waterview Circle
Ithaca, NY
Dr. Gary Zeller
15261 State Highway 30/POB Z
Downsville, NY
Joyce Spector
15261 State Highway 30/POB Z
Downsville, NY
Evan Zeller
15261 State Highway 30/POB Z
Downsville, NY
amy friedman
149 haver road
olivebridge, NY
yvette newborn
106 Hammond Rd
Theills , NY
Peter Sullivan
135-24 Hoover Avenue
Jamaica, New York
James Gates
The Phoenix Inn on River Road
1270 County Highway 33
Cooperstown, NY
Danielle Pearson
94 Averill Ave Apt 6
Rochester, NY
Linda Becker
17 Pine Circle
Newfield, NY
marilyn gaddis rose gaddis ross
5 riverside drive, #508
Binghamton, New York
Christina Becker
17 Pine Circle
Newfield, NY
melissa zinkin
Binghamton university
3260 dogwood dr
binghamton, ny
Therese Sullivan
Capital District Against Fracking
21 Pashley Rd.
Scotia, NY
Ken Witty
42 West 71st Street & 668 North St
New York & Cherry Valley, NY
Rich Kellman
429 arnold road
Lisle, NY
Judith Rabi
40 West 77th Street
New York, New york
Gary Seaman
19 Cortelyou Road
Merrick, New York
Benita Roth
143 Crary Avenue
Binghamton, NY
Ana Arce
North Rockland Central School district
30 Gurnee Ave
Haverstraw, New York
Alan Warshauer
505 East 79 Street
New York, New York
Anthony Reeves
125 1/2 Leroy St.
Binghamton, NY
Claire Armstrong
NRTA
11 Jane Court
Monroe, N.Y.
James Davis
Wittenberg Center for Alternative Resources
17 Jonet L.
Bearsville, NY
Todd Scharfe
Keuka Lake Association
762 Middlebury Road
Webster, NY
Brian Kane
6 Foltim Way
Congers, NY
Beverly Carlton-Carter
22 Mountain View Drive
Thiells, New York
Sarah Amberge
631 Black Oak Rd
Newfield, NY
Vera Whisman
1 Academic Drive
Corning, NY
Mary Beth Houlihan
4 Orchard Farm Road
Port Washington, New York
Anna Keeton
310 East Lincoln Street
Ithaca, NY
Steven Zerby
PO Box 7
Westford, NY
Lauren Mattina
103 Chestnut Street
Binghamton, NY
Joyce Mosher
61 Wellington Road
Delmar, N.Y.
Martha Stettinius
109 Rachel Carson Way
Ithaca, NY
Nicole Dauria
home owner
521.5 South Albany Street
Ithaca, NY
Caitlin Stewart
PO BOX 602
Lake Pleasant, NY
Brenda Marston
111 Bridge St.
Ithaca, NY
Barry Maxwell
108 Irving Place
Ithaca, NY
melissa melnik
8524 Hayes Hollow rd
colden, NY
George Hovis
316 County Hwy. 52
Cooperstown, NY
Nicholas Kaldis
Binghamton University
305 Burd Drive
Vestal, NY
Leslie Schultz
PO Box 293
Ithaca, NY
Jennifer Barrett
206 St. John's Place
Plattsburgh, NY
Isabela Mihajic
81-22 254th Street
Floral Park, New York
Richard Driscoll
Town of Newfield
114 Bank St.
Newfield, NY
Benjamin Lainhart
401 Jodie Drive
Vestal, NY
Daniel Roth
144 Lancaster St.
Albany , NY
tim wolcott
BRSC
13 marlayne dr
johnson city, ny
Thomas Chase
250 RedHouse hill Rd
Cooperstown, ny
Pamela Spearman
109 Roycroft Road
Syracuse, NY
Lowell Chamberlain
Developing Pictures Media
210 Highgate Rd.
Ithaca, Ny
Al caucci
FUDR
1250 Winterdale Road
starlight, Pa
Dennis Turechek
392 Hathaway Road
Otego, NY

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