Activists who want to keep the state's moratorium on fracking are pressuring the governor to open the state's health review of the drilling practice open to the public.

They also came armed with maps showing current toxic sites and locations of uncapped wells in New York State to argue the d-e-c hasn't been able to properly regulate conventional drilling. State DEC commissioner Joe Martens said his department won't set forth fracking regulations before the health review is finished.
"It is being undertaken completely in secret. There has never been a single piece of paper released to the public about the scope of the Department of Health review, about how it is being undertaken," said Walter Hang of Toxics Targeting.
"New York state had a great record and that's why we didn't have to recreate the wheel? Well it's clear we have to recreate the wheel especially for an industry that is far more intrusive than vertical drilling," said Binghamton Mayor Matt Ryan.
The DEC says complaints regarding potentially leaking wells have proven to be from wells drilled before environmental regulations were put in place or were from naturally occurring sources of contamination. New York will miss a deadline tomorrow to release a set of fracking regulations. But Martens has said he can issue fracking permits after the health review is done, if the review finds the health concerns have been adequately addressed.
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Binghamton, NY (WBNG Binghamton) A coalition letter against Hydraulic Fracturing is circulating the area and asks for public participation on the Department of Health's review.
The letter to Governor Cuomo wants to see the "DOH's Review of the Public Health Impact on High Volume, Hydraulic Fracturing" put on hold until there is opportunity for public feedback.
"And if he does not give us what we've requested so respectfully, he's going to continue to absorb tremendous criticism, again not just from local government officials but senior leadership in the Assembly and the State Senate," said President of Toxics Targeting Walter Hang.
Binghamton Mayor Matthew Ryan was joined with the President of Toxics Targeting and a representative of New York Residents Against Drilling.
More than 1,500 citizens signed the letter that was released on Sunday.
"We hope that he (Gov. Cuomo) will be guided by our very respectful coalition letter to open this entire proceeding up to public participation. This is the most important environmental issue for the Southern Tier in a generation," Hang said.
Toxics Targeting is an environmental data services company that provides online interactive maps of known or potential toxic sites, some from traditional gas drilling.
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ALBANY — Gov. Andrew Cuomo on Wednesday pushed back against the suggestion his administration is playing politics in further delaying a decision on hydraulic fracturing, saying the issue is “too important to make a mistake.”
Cuomo’s administration this week said it would not meet a Feb. 27 deadline to finalize a set of long-awaited regulations for high-volume fracking, the method used to extract natural gas from shale formations. In a letter Tuesday, Health Commissioner Nirav Shah said he needs a “few weeks” to complete a review of fracking’s impacts on human health — a study he launched in September.

Speaking in Queens on Wednesday, Cuomo told reporters he wouldn’t rush Shah to meet an “arbitrary” deadline.
“I don’t think that’s prudent and I don’t think that’s right and I won’t do it,” said Cuomo, who reiterated his call for a decision based on “facts and information” and not “emotion”.
The delay sparked a renewed round of criticism from gas-drilling supporters, who have expressed continued frustration with the state’s indecisiveness on whether to open the gas-rich Marcellus Shale formation to drilling.
In a statement Wednesday, the head of the Independent Oil & Gas Association of New York criticized a favorite Cuomo slogan — “New York is open for business” — by saying “the only economic sign we see is ‘Keep Out.’”
“This latest delay may seem inconsequential in the context of a four-plus-year regulatory review process, but it is not when one considers the benefits other states are experiencing,” said Brad Gill, the industry trade group’s executive director. “It’s difficult to determine how the science of safe natural gas development becomes so much more difficult when you cross the border from Pennsylvania to New York.”
The Department of Environmental Conservation first launched its own review of large-scale fracking in 2008, 17 months before Cuomo took office.
Since then, the issue has only intensified across the state, with Cuomo, a Democrat, facing pressure from his party’s base and an aggressive, well-organized movement of anti-fracking activists. Statewide polls have only complicated the matter for Cuomo, with a Siena College survey this month showing an even split among fracking supporters and opponents.
Cuomo received praise from environmental groups for his administration’s decision to allow the Feb. 27 deadline to lapse, which will require the DEC to re-propose the regulations and subject them to 45 days of public comment and a hearing.
“I was impressed that they weren’t just holding their finger up and looking at the political winds and which way the political winds were blowing, but they were actually reading science,” Robert F. Kennedy Jr., president of the Waterkeeper Alliance and Cuomo’s former brother-in-law, said Tuesday.
Some groups, however, expressed concern with statements made by DEC Commissioner Joseph Martens, who suggested his agency may move forward with issuing fracking permits before the regulations are finalized if Shah’s health review doesn’t raise any uncontrollable issues.
If that were to happen, the DEC would apply certain conditions on each gas well permitted rather than have regulations that apply across the board. The agency has issued conventional gas-drilling permits under such a system since 1992.
“Needless to say, the state would be on extremely shaky legal ground should it choose that course,” said Deborah Goldberg, managing attorney for Earthjustice, an environmental law group.
Cuomo said the state has gone through a “deliberative process” in coming to a decision on fracking.
“People say you should rush; I’m not going to rush anyone,” he said. “If the health commissioner says he needs more time to come to an intelligent conclusion, then he needs more time to come to an intelligent conclusion.”
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ALBANY, N.Y. — A coalition of 65 state lawmakers is asking Gov. Andrew Cuomo to release the Department of Environmental Conservation's review of potential health impacts of shale gas drilling for public comment before deciding whether to allow drilling to begin.
The group headed by Assemblywoman Barbara Lifton sent a letter to Cuomo on Tuesday. They said the Health Department's evaluation of DEC's "health impact analysis" should be transparent, but the public hasn't been given any information about it. It's expected to be complete within a few weeks.
At a budget hearing Monday, DEC Commissioner Joe Martens told lawmakers there was no separate health study. He said the entire environmental impact study of shale gas drilling stood as a health impact study because it identifies potential adverse health impacts and measures to prevent them.
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ALBANY — State Assemblywoman Barbara Lifton, D-Ithaca, joined with 65 lawmakers to support putting hydrofracking’s health review on hold, so there can be public review and comment on the process.
Lifton called the Department of Health review "unacceptably inadequate.”
There are more than 22,000 signatories to a coalition letter which requests that the hydrofracking’s environment impact study get withdrawn due to “fundamental inadequacies, notably failure to safeguard public health,” according to a press release by the assemblywoman.