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Wastewater from gas drilling being used for area road maintenance

07/21/11


Several New York municipalities -- including communities in Chemung, Broome and Tompkins counties -- are using contaminated wastewater from natural gas drilling operations as part of their road and highway maintenance programs, according to an Ithaca-based environmental activist.

The state Department of Environmental Conservation sanctions the use of the wastewater, with restrictions, through a "beneficial use determination" program.

The wastewater is the fluid that flows back to the surface through a well bore along with natural gas. The fluid often contains brine, heavy metals and radioactive materials, said Walter Hang, president of Toxics Targeting in Ithaca.

"The attitude is that it's just salty water that comes up with the gas, but people are just going to be shocked that they were being exposed to the contaminated wastewater through DEC-sanctioned dumping programs without any comprehensive health assessment," Hang said.

The DEC contends the use of the wastewater is safe for purposes such as keeping dust levels down during road construction and as a de-icer in winter.

The wastewater it approves for "beneficial use" comes from non-shale vertical wells that are drilled in New York, which rules out the brine produced in out-of-state wells that have been subjected to high-volume hydraulic fracturing.

"We consider the source, the potential use, the characteristics of the water itself, and where it would be applied," said DEC spokesman Michael Bopp.

"Where the designation has been used, it's been granted for conventional vertical wells. We don't give the designation for produced water from out-of-state."

For use on roads

According to documents released by Hang's firm, Toxics Targeting, wastewater generated by hundreds of natural gas production wells, along with brine generated by gas storage facilities and gas pipelines, have been approved to be spread on roadways in Chemung, Broome, Tompkins, Tioga, Chenango, Steuben, Cayuga, Cortland, Madison, Genesee, Chautauqua, Cattaraugus, Allegany, Wyoming and Otsego counties.

Hang has posted to his website, www.toxicstargeting.com, detailed information mapping the roads where the wastewater is used, the municipalities that have applied to the DEC for permission to apply the wastewater to road surfaces -- usually by spraying -- and the DEC's approval of the applications.

For example, Hang says, Chautauqua County reportedly spread 1,322,450 gallons of "gas well production brine" in 2010-11.

Restrictions in place

According to preliminary information released to this newspaper by Hang, A.D. Call & Sons Excavating, of Stafford, N.Y., submitted a beneficial use determination application to the DEC for production brines from gas wells in Medina, Theresa and Queenston wells in February and March 2010. The DEC approved the request, with certain conditions, in April of the same year.

The conditions include requirements that the vehicles transporting or spraying the brine have the appropriate permits and spay bars must have shut-off mechanisms in the cabs of the trucks. Furthermore, the road spreading plans must be conducted in a manner that minimizes the chances of the brine running off into streams, creeks, lakes and other bodies of water.

Chemung County roads to be treated by A.D. Call & Sons include 30 miles of dirt road maintained by the Baldwin Town Highway Department and 41 miles of dirt road maintained by the Erin Town Highway Department.

Hang's material also included letters sent to the DEC in August 2009 from the respective town highway department heads asking that A.D. Call & Sons be allowed to use the well production brine on their roadways.

The highway superintendants from either town could not be immediately reached for comment.

"There's been a lot of focus on the flow back water, but there should be an equal concern on the produced water brine," Hang said. "The lynchpin issue is what to do with the gas drilling wastewater, which has high levels of total dissolved solids, chlorides and heavy metals."

Website logs use

Toxics Targeting has also made available a free map on its website that allows residents to type in their addresses or town names to see if gas drilling wastewater has been approved to be spread near their homes or sources of drinking water. The maps can be accessed at www.toxicstargeting.com/MarcellusShale/interactive_map.

The documents approving the use of the wastewater can be found at toxicstargeting.com/sites/default/files/pdfs/foil-hl-110718.pdf.

Auburn council votes against accepting gas drilling water

07/08/11




The Auburn City Council has passed a resolution to ban the city from accepting gas drilling wastewater into their sewage treatment facility. Our Katie Gibas tells us what led council members to this decision.

AUBURN, N.Y. -- The Auburn City Council has passed a resolution that will ban the city from accepting gas drilling wastewater into their sewage treatment facility.

A rally, petition and a public outcry led to decision last night. Despite a presentation by the water treatment plant's manager on the water having been successfully treated at the plant for the past 10 years, the public was still concerned that the plant could be responsible for treating hydrofracking water in the future. City officials thought it was time to take action.

The measure was approved with a vote of 3 to 1, and could result in a loss of $600,000 a year in revenue.

A Message for Martens

07/06/11




Town of Union, NY (WBNG Binghamton) New York's DEC Commissioner visits Broome County and is met with opposition just days after draft regulations for hydrofracking are issued.

Members of NYRAD, Toxics Targeting and others stood in the road, waiting for Commissioner Joe Martens Wednesday morning as he left another media outlet.

Martens' car drove by and there was no comment.

The groups say they want the draft re-done, adding equal protection in drilling regulations.

Under the draft, the NYC and Syracuse watersheds would be prohibited to natural gas extraction.

"We want to send a message to commissioner Martens that I don't know a single person in Upstate New York that thinks we deserve less protection than NYC and Syracuse. It is unfair and he needs to know that we are not going to stand for that," said Ben Perkus, NYRAD Board Member.

80% of the Marcellus shale available would be accessible.

"We got an incredible crew out here to send a message to commissioner Martens that he should be ashamed. He's proposing to protect some New Yorkers more than others," said Walter Hang, Toxics Targeting.

"I'm here today because I do not believe Martens is doing any justice by saying it is safe," said Fay Gougakis, Ithaca.

The State DEC will have a 60 day comment period. That is anticipated to start by late August after the SGEIS is updated with socioeconomic research.
Public contact for DEC:

Phone: 518-402-8044

Email: public@gw.dec.state.ny.us

Mail address: Division of Public Affairs and Education, 2nd Floor, 625 Broadway, Albany, NY 12233-4500http://media.wbng.com/images/470*264/martens61.JPG

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Anti-drilling protest

07/06/11




UNION, N.Y. -- A group of Southern Tier residents made quite a stir Wednesday morning in the Town of Union. Members of various anti-drilling groups came together when they learned DEC Commissioner Joseph Martens was being interviewed at a local media outlet.

The group held up the signs as the commissioner exited the facility.

We spoke with one person who got a chance to talk to the commissioner and members of his team. She says she was pleased they let her speak her mind.

"We are all human beings and I said to her as you drive around, look at these beautiful hills, look at these trees, remember every family in here has unfiltered water. We are sitting ducks for this," Rema Loeb said.

"I think we sent a strong message that we are listening, we are here we are not going away and that we really demand only what is fair. We demand that the government be responsible to its citizens to provide them equal protection that we all need," Ben Perkus said.

The group says they want the DEC to know they are not pleased with the proposed draft regulations and would like to see the recommendations completely redone.

Gov may lift fracking ban

07/06/11




Hydraulic fracturing, or “hydrofracking,” is a controversial technique for extracting natural gas from shale deposits a mile or more beneath the Earth’s surface. And it may be coming to New York State, according to the State’s Department of Environmental Conservation.

On June 30, the D.E.C. released a summary of a 900-page report, which will be released in its entirety on July 8. Reversing a 2009 report, the new guidelines would prohibit high-volume fracturing in the New York City and Syracuse watersheds, within all primary aquifers and on State-owned land, but would allow it elsewhere in the State with what the summary calls “rigorous and effective protections.”

The hydrofracking process involves injecting a soup of chemicals and water into shale deposits and then literally cracking the rock at intervals to release the gas. It can take five to seven million gallons of water to “frack” a single well. Thousands of wells are proposed to tap New York State’s gas-rich Marcellus Shale, which runs from New York to Tennessee and west to Ohio — the biggest natural gas formation in the country. Beneath the Marcellus Shale is another natural gas deposit, the Utica Shale, which is denser and thicker than the Marcellus Shale, and which would also be tapped, requiring even more chemicals and water.

In 1949, Halliburton became the first company to use hydrofracking for commercial purposes. Since then, the practice has spread, with few federal regulations governing the industry.

“I don’t believe that the science of fracking is safe,” said Borough of Manhattan President Scott Stringer, who spearheaded a coalition of elected officials, environmental advocates and concerned citizens in a 2009 campaign against New York State hydrofracking called “Kill the Drill.”

“When I did my report that catalogued all the explosions and damage where this drilling has occurred, in 13 states, it has shown a pattern of real devastation to our waterways, to people’s homes and the like. I don’t think we should allow for drilling until we know for sure that it’s a safe protocol,” Stringer said in response to the news that the Cuomo administration was contemplating a partial lift on the state’s hydrofracking moratorium.

“I think the governor’s move to ban drilling in our watershed is a good first step,” Stringer added, “and I want to work closely with him on this issue. The good news is that he has proven that he knows how to listen, he understands how to bring people together to have meaningful conversation, and I look forward to engaging in a positive dialogue with Andrew Cuomo.”

The D.E.C. plans a 60-day comment period on the hydrofracking proposal, beginning in August. Stringer believes that the comment period should be longer and should include a public hearing in New York City. “I don’t think it’s enough to send emails and letters,” Stringer said. “I think we need to have a direct conversation with the State D.E.C. Extending the comment period and having a public hearing – these are very important issues because there’s so much at stake as it relates to frack drilling — for the environment, for our water supply — that we have to be very careful that we get this right.”

Other New York City politicians expressed cautious optimism at the preliminary news of the D.E.C.’s recommendations. A spokesman for U.S. Congressman Jerrold Nadler said that Nadler “welcomed the new regulations and was encouraged and will review them and get back with official comment later.”

New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg said that he was pleased that the plan would protect New York City’s drinking water while creating revenue and jobs in upstate New York.

New York State Assembly Speaker Sheldon Silver issued a statement in which he said, “I am pleased that the D.E.C. will permanently ban hydraulic fracturing in sensitive watershed areas and the aquifers that feed them. The Assembly also will be vigilant as the D.E.C. moves forward and will work to ensure that no permits are issued anywhere in the state where there are any possible dangers identified by the federal E.P.A. study.”

Walter Hang, the owner of Toxics Targeting, an environmental database firm in Ithaca, N.Y. and an expert on hydrofracking, was not so politic.

“I think it’s an appalling development,” Hang said of the Cuomo administration proposal. “It is, in effect, an admittance that horizontal hydrofracking in tight shale is inherently unsafe no matter what safeguards the D.E.C. might propose. That’s why the governor is saying, ‘don’t allow it in the New York City watershed or the Syracuse watershed or on State lands.’ So in effect he’s creating an entire group of second-class citizens who are going to be exposed to this practice if he gets his way. That shouldn’t be allowed. There should be equal protection for all citizens.”

Hang raised a number of issues not addressed in the D.E.C.’s summary, though they may well be addressed in the full report. Hydrofracking produces contaminated wastewater that must be carted away and treated, with a significant toll on roads and bridges and questions about the adequacy and safety of treatment plants. There are also indications that hydrofracking creates greater vulnerability to earthquakes.

“It turns out that New York is the third most active state seismically east of the Mississippi and I doubt that [the D.E.C.] dealt with that,” said Hang.

Hang also asked, “Where are you going to get the water to do the hydrofracking? You can see data from Pennsylvania where very robust streams are drained dry.”

As for the “rigorous and effective protections” that the D.E.C. said would be put in place before hydrofracking could begin, Hang noted that, “Even if the D.E.C. had the best regulatory controls ever adopted, they basically have very limited enforcement ability.” They currently employ 15 people to cover all of New York State, according to Hang.

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