February 24, 2013
Honorable Andrew M. Cuomo
Governor of New York
The State Capitol
Albany, NY 12224
Dear Governor Cuomo:
We, the undersigned, write respectfully to request that you:
a) immediately put on-hold your Department of Health's (DOH) Public Health Review of High Volume Hydraulic Fracturing (HVHF) pending fulfillment of formal public participation requirements;
b) resolve the fundamental shortcomings of your Department of Environmental Conservation's (DEC) draft Supplemental Generic Environmental Impact Statement (SGEIS); and
c) withhold completion of the DOH Review pending review of the final results of three investigations that your Health Commissioner Dr. Nirav R. Shah called "...the first comprehensive studies of HVHF health impacts at either the state or federal level."
d) require all these critical concerns to be addressed openly and transparently before your DOH completes its Public Health Review and DEC adopts a Final SGEIS based on the findings and recommendations of that DOH Review.
DOH Commissioner States That HVHF Review Requires Additional Time to be Completed
On February 12, 2013, Dr. Shah wrote to your DEC Commissioner Joseph Martens and stated:
"In September, you asked me to initiate a Public Health Review of the Department of Environmental Conservation's (DEC) draft Supplemental Generic Environmental Impact Statement for High Volume Hydraulic Fracturing (HVHF)."
"The Department of Health review is considering whether the final draft SGEIS adequately identifies potential public health impacts of HVHF and whether additional mitigation measures are needed beyond those already proposed in the draft SGEIS."
"The decision to permit HVHF is important, and involves complex questions about the impact of the process on public health. The time to ensure the impacts on public health are properly considered is before a state permits drilling (emphasis in the original)."
Dr. Shah concluded: "the DOH Public Health Review will require additional time to complete based on the complexity of the issues."
You were quoted on February 13, 2013 that hydraulic fracturing is "too important to make a mistake (emphasis added)." You were also quoted that you would not rush Dr. Shah to meet an "arbitrary (emphasis added)" deadline for completing the DOH Review.
DOH Review Requires Public Participation and Major Revisions
We could not agree more with your sentiments. That is why we write to ask that you fulfill the following requests.
A. Above all, it is inconceivable that the critically important DOH Review is being conducted totally in secret without any opportunity for public input. That is completely contrary to the "open" and "transparent" government you promised your administration would provide.
We also believe that you are required to provide formal public participation for the DOH Public Health Review. State law and regulations are clear about the reason for environmental impact statements (EISs). New York has an "obligation to protect the environment for the use and enjoyment of this and all future generations." In defining the word "environment," "human health" is specifically noted. The statute on environmental impact statements also makes explicit the requirement to "solicit comment" for proposals "that may significantly affect the quality of the environment."
We request that you immediately:
1) Put on-hold the DOH Public Health Review of HVHF pending fulfillment of all requested public participation requirements;
2) Provide written public notice of the intent and scope of the DOH Public Health Review as well as how it is being undertaken and all other appropriate disclosures regarding the proceeding;
3) Hold at least one public hearing to allow Dr. Shah and the three outside experts to hear testimony from interested parties about how the DOH Public Health Review should be undertaken in order to fulfill its mandate; and
4) Require a minimum 30-day public review and comment period regarding the DOH Review.
B. The DOH Review must resolve the shortcomings of a draft SGEIS that fails to document: 1) the full spectrum of air, land and water pollutants generated by HVHF; 2) the environmental fate and transport of those HVHF contaminants; 3) if the public is exposed to HVHF contaminants and for how long and at what concentration; and 4) the potential health outcomes caused by those exposures.
A previously secret State Health Impact Assessment document was recently reported by the press. It reports:
"...human chemical exposures during normal HVHF operations will be prevented or reduced below levels of significant health concern. Thus, significant adverse impacts on human health are not expected from routine HVHF operations."
"When spills or accidents occur, the Department has identified numerous additional mitigation measures, including emergency-response planning, setbacks and buffers, so that significant exposures to people and resources on which they rely are unlikely."
These critical assertions are directly contradicted by extensive information that DEC deliberately excluded from earlier draft SGEISs, including hundreds of natural gas/oil fires, explosions, polluted water supply wells, uncontrolled drilling wastewater discharges, abandoned and unplugged wells, illegal brine pits and home evacuations due to gas intrusion. These hazards are documented in New York State by DEC and local health departments in Chautauqua, Cattaraugus and Allegany counties.
Many of these incidents caused public health impacts far beyond the setbacks and buffers proposed by DEC in its Revised Rulemaking proposal.
Given these concerns, we request that the DOH Review include a detailed analysis of all these documented incidents with regard to DEC's proposed mitigation measures.
See Appendix A: New York State Data Sources Requested to be Included in DOH Public Health Impact Review of High Volume Hydraulic Fracturing
Link: http://www.toxicstargeting.com/node/37736
C. We request that the DOH Review must not be completed until it includes an assessment of the final results of at least the three investigations referenced in Dr. Shah's letter to Commissioner Martens. He wrote that: "These are the first comprehensive studies of HVHF health impacts at either the state or federal level (emphasis added)." We believe "prudence dictates (emphasis added)" that the DOH Review must assess the final results of these "first comprehensive studies (emphasis added)."
Conclusion
You have repeatedly vowed that your final decision whether to allow HVHF Marcellus Shale gas extraction in New York would be based on "facts and information." With that goal in mind, we request that you require the actions specified in this letter to be fulfilled without regard to any "arbitrary" deadline.
We trust that you will find our request self-explanatory. Thank you for your consideration. We look forward to receiving your prompt reply.
Very truly yours,
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Holly Nolting
14185 W. 50th Place
Golden, Colorado |
Kara O'Connor
537 Oquaga Lake Rd
Deposit, NY |
John Flowers
Adjunct Professor
5404 State Route 414
Hector, NY |
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Lewis Ward
246 Smith Rd.
Newfield, NY |
LAURA NOWACK
405 SHEFFIELD COURT
Brewster, New York |
Lotte Carpenter
P.O. Box 209
Freeville, New York |
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Ilse Funk
238 Mill Rd
Cherry Valley, NY |
Deborah Kahkejian
398 State Route 69
Williamstown, NY |
Lewis Gurley
6520 N. Avon Rd
Honeoye Falls, NY |
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Denise Mooney
4450 Lower Covert Road
Trumansburg , NY |
Emoretta YANG
40 Mill St
Lansing, NY |
david quintana
93-18 103rd avenue
ozone park, ny |
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Robert Silsbee
Professor of Physics Emeritus
433 Savage Farm Drive
Ithaca, NY |
DARLENE MASTRO
3515 78ST ST
JACKSON HEIGHTS, NY |
Stephen Boss
27 North Street
Camillus, NY |
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Catherine Chadwick Baker
178 Columbus Avenue #231573
New York, New York |
Marty Hiller
128 Rachel Carson Way
Ithaca, NY |
Karyn Quinlan
7161 CR 12
Naples, NY |
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Karina Naumer
102 Clay Street #4
Brooklyn, NY |
Larry Beebe
2422 Danby Road
Willseyville, NY |
Steve Saperstein
320 Milltown Rd
Brewster, New York |
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Maureen Thitchener
7161 Coun ty Rd. 12
Naples, New York |
Barbara Chasin
129 Rachel Carson Way
Ithaca, NY |
Linda Cuminale
114 Clinton Street
Saratoga Springs, New York |
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Martin Myers
761 Adirondack Rd.
Schroon Lake, New York |
Bonnie Seegmiller
Associate Professor (Retired)
PO Box M
Downsville, NY |
dennis tomkins
662 driggs ave, brooklyn
new york, NY |
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Ronald Schassburger
798 Elm Street Extension
Ithaca, NY |
Arlene Hughes
3124 Wolf Creek Road
Cuba, New York |
John Hughes
3124 Wolf Creek Road
Cuba, New York |
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Anita Graf
323 North Albany St.
Ithaca, New York |
Francisco Figueirido
116 Pinehurst Ave H43
New York, NY |
Keith Chadwick
1257 Fowler Place
Binghamton, New York |
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Annemarie Hosnedl
274 River St.
Oneonta, New York |
Dennis Turechek
392 HathawayRoad
Otego, New York |
nick pionessa
5977 main st
williamsville, ny |
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Candace Wadsworth
4077 Abbey Rd
Syracuse, NY |
Robin Gardner
229 Main St
Leicester, New York |
Neal Johnston
4050 N SHULER RD
ALPINE, NY |
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Bill Ferullo
4834 Leraysville Rd.
warren center, Pennsylvania |
Jeremy Crytzer
8202 Route 96
Interlaken, NY |
vincent tobia
266 troy del way
williamsville, ny |
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John Holland
140 East 92nd St.
New York, NY 10128 |
Pete Robbins
Commissioner
849 Peak Rd
Stone Ridge, NY |
Gay Nicholson
President
109 S Albany, Suite 105
Ithaca, New York |
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Cynthia Hale
67 w. 1st st.
Corning, NY |
Dan Belliveau
95 Lafayette Ave
Geneva, New York |
Doreen Doucette
109 Elmwood Ave
Newark, New York |
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Nathan Couchon
109 Foster Avenue
Elmira, NY |
Doug Couchon
109 Foster Avenue
Elmira, NY |