Tuesday, March 10, 2026

Cameron County Chamber Of Commerce: Sinnemahone Paddle Race Set For April 11

On March 10, organizers of the
Sinnemahone Paddle announced arrangements are in place for the annual canoe and kayak event which will take place Saturday April 11 on the Driftwood Branch of The Sinnemahoning Creek.  

The starting line is across from the Emporium Country Club and the 11 mile race ends in Driftwood.  

Registration forms can be picked up at the Cameron County Chamber of Commerce or participants can register online.  

There are several classes for kayaks and canoes including tandem kayaks.  

The price is $45.00 for adults and $30.00 for children under the age of 18.  Competitors receive a $10 food voucher and goodie bag.  T-shirts can be ordered by April 1.  

The coveted traveling trophy named for Bob Umbenhauer will be up for grabs!  

The event has been held for decades beginning in the 1950’s with friends, before later becoming the Cameron County Canoe & Kayak Classic. 

Safety for the event is coordinated with Mountaineer Search & Rescue.  

Water rescue teams from across the region will be on the stream banks and fire police will direct traffic and parking at the start and finish.  

Water levels may force a change to the course.  That decision will be made by April 10.

Visit the Sinnemahone Paddle website for all the details.

[Posted: March 10, 2026]  PA Environment Digest

DEP Citizens Advisory Council Invites Comments On DEP's Act 54 Report Documenting Adverse Impacts Of Longwall And Underground Coal Mining On Structures, Surface And Ground Water; Report Says 20% Of Undermined Streams Damaged

On March 10, the
DEP Citizens Advisory Council issued an invitation to the public and other stakeholder interests to provide comments on DEP's 6th Act 54 report covering 2018-2022 that documents adverse impacts of longwall and underground coal mining on structures, surface and ground water.

The deadline for comments is June 8.

A letter inviting comments said-- “On behalf of the Citizens Advisory Council to the Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Protection, the Council’s Act 54 Report Committee is writing to request feedback, recommendations, and proposed programmatic changes from technical experts, regulated entities, and interested members of the public, in light of the Department’s Sixth Act 54 Report.”

"Under Act 54 of 1994, DEP is required to compile data and report findings regarding the effects of underground mining on land, structures, and water resources. 

"This report is done with assistance from professionals with appropriate expertise, as stipulated by Act 54, and presented to the Governor, the General Assembly, the CAC every five years.

"This report is an important audit of Pennsylvania’s underground mining program, providing various stakeholders with an opportunity to review and comment on the program and allowing DEP and other stakeholders to consider programmatic and structural improvements.

"While Act 54 has guided DEP for more than 30 years, environmental stewardship from all stakeholders have significantly evolved. 

"In preparing its response to the sixth Act 54 Report, the Committee believes that it has the opportunity to more broadly reflect on the overall structure, scope, and process of the report itself. 

"Therefore, the Committee is seeking feedback from stakeholders on two primary areas."

"Some key insights that the Committee would like to hear about are:

-- After three decades, is the current report format appropriate for its purpose?

-- Are there ways that the report could be streamlined for greater transparency and information circulation (e.g., online quarterly or semi-annually)?

-- Are there opportunities to improve accessibility, organization, and use of digital tools or information?

-- Can the information in the report be available, periodically or in near real-time, online?

-- Are there other ways to modernize the report?

-- With online updates, should the report summarize data, audit information submission, and look to the future versus a look to the past?"

"The Committee is particularly interested in recommendations that may help evolve the Act 54 Report and its processes to ensure it remains a meaningful, readable, and useful tool while balancing it with the demands that Act 54 places on DEP, its staff, the regulated community, and stakeholders."

How To Submit Comments

Public and stakeholder comments should be sent to Ian Irvin, CAC Executive Director to: iirvin@pa.gov  by June 8.

Click Here for the CAC invitation for comments.

In addition to the 2018-2022 Act 54 report, DEP also made available the raw information it gathers on these issues annually.

Visit DEP’s Act 54 Report webpage for more information on the current and past reports.

Summary Of Key Findings In Report

On October 14, 2025, the Department of Environmental Protection reported to the Citizens Advisory Council 20% of the streams undermined by underground coal mining between 2018 to 2022 were damaged by mining, according to the latest five-year Act 54 mining impact report.

Act 54 of 1994 requires DEP to analyze and document the environmental and property damage caused by longwall and other underground coal mining and make recommendations on how that damage can be prevented in the future.

The total number of incidents of damage from active coal mining to homes and other structures, land and water supplies has increased 17.5% in the last four Act 54 five-year reports from 2003-2008 to the 2018-2022 report in spite of a 31% decline in the number of acres undermined by mining, according to an analysis of DEP data prepared by James A. Schmid, PhD on behalf of the Citizens Coal Council of Washington, PA because DEP did not compare previous reports.

The number of reported incidents from active mining in the 2003-2008 report totaled 605 mine-liable damage incidents to homes, structures, water supplies and land and 711 incidents of mine-liable damage in the 2018-2022 report, according to the Citizens Coal Council analysis.

  DEP reported the number of underground mines covered by the Act 54 reports declined 38% from 50 to 31 mines from the 2003-2008 to the 2018-2022 reports.

The acreage undermined by deep coal mining decreased 31% from 38,256 acres in 2003 to 26,366 acres in 2022.

DEP also reported in the 2018-2022 report there were--

-- 455 claims of structure damage of which 357 required mining company action;

-- 273 claims of water loss, of which 186 required mining company action;

-- 173 claims of water contamination, of which 86 required mining company action;

-- 106 claims of land damage, of which 83 required mining company action;

-- 3 claims of utility impacts, 2 required mining company action; and

-- 2 claims of methane intrusion, both required mining company action.

DEP made a series of recommendations based on the latest report, including-- updating its legacy mining information database BUMIS to a more modern platform; improving GIS capabilities and better integrating mining company reporting into the system; improving public information displays; improve communication with affected parties; encourage electronic permit information and reporting submittals; and improving wetland data received from mining companies.

DEP also said it would revisit the review process and procedures for preparing new and updated Cumulative Hydrologic Impact Assessments (CHIAs) which are now based on 1997 guidance.

Center For Coalfield Justice

Ethan Story from the Center for Coalfield Justice based in Washington, PA offered eight pages of comments and recommendations on the 2018-2022 Act 54 report to the Council on October 14.

“The organization’s mission is to improve policy and regulations for the oversight of fossil fuel extraction and use; to educate, empower, and organize coalfield residents; and to protect public and environmental health.

“As such, and on behalf of our members and supporters, we are acutely aware of the subsidence-induced impacts caused by longwall coal mining and the need to address those impacts adequately. 

“North America's largest underground coal mine complex is located in Greene and Washington Counties. 

“The communities we serve have experienced firsthand the subsidence-induced damage to homes and other structures, water supplies, and streams described in the most recent Act 54 Report.

“Historically, CCJ would begin this comment by analyzing and comparing the previous five reports with the most recent 6th Act 54 Report. However, there has been substantial backsliding in progress here. 

“The first Act 54 Report, released in 1999, was conducted by the Department itself. It was met with disapproval due to the argument that it lacked credibility and was not sufficiently objective. 

“The Department responded appropriately and commissioned the second through the fifth reports to different educational institutions. 

“Though imperfect, these reports were more conclusive and provided much deeper commentary on impacts with richer statistics. 

“However, this most recent Act 54 Report, the 6th report, was again done internally by the Department, retaining many, if not more, of the same criticisms of the 1st report.”

[Note: Click on these links to compare the 2013-2018 report done by the University of Pittsburgh and the most recent 2018-2022 report done by DEP.]

The Center also said an eight month overlap-- January 1, 2018 to August 20, 2018-- is a major concern in comparing the latest Act 54 reports and previous reports.

“This overlap is not addressed in the Act 54 Report and thus confuses the data. These inconsistencies are severely problematic as they create redundancy, play into regulatory confusion, and blur the record of what is happening vs what is actually reported. 

“Therefore, the statistics in the Act 54 Report must be viewed cautiously.”

Housing Impacts Of Longwall Mining

The Center provided extensive comments on damage to homes and structures, water supplies and stream impacts and how they were treated in the latest report and the impacts on mining communities.

‘As coal companies address subsidence impacts by purchasing property before or after mining, more people move out of the area. The homes and water supplies located on those properties may never be repaired or replaced. 

“Again, as the Act 54 Report outlines, several of these mining issues are deemed “resolved” when the company outright purchases the property.”

“The 2020 Greene County Comprehensive Plan provides a better understanding of the negative impacts on the local community as previewed in the Act 54 Report.

“The 2020 Greene County Comprehensive Plan recognizes that the County has experienced a decline in the overall population and an increase in the median age. 

“Greene County has also experienced a dramatic decrease in school enrollment over the last ten (10) years.”

“The Comprehensive Plan further acknowledges that the majority of people working in Greene County do not live in Greene County.  Currently, 62 out of every 100 workers commute from outside the County.”

“[The] Comprehensive Plan suggests that inadequate housing choice may be to blame. 

“According to the Comprehensive Plan, the natural average annual housing vacancy rate is 6%, representing the supply of units in a given market that are not leased or occupied, allowing for housing turnover. 

“However, the average housing vacancy rate in Greene County is much higher at 14.3%.

“The Comprehensive Plan explains that the remaining share of vacant housing (8.3%) is not available for sale or rent but is vacant due to needed repairs, foreclosure, or other reasons.

“Many vacant homes have suffered subsidence-induced damage to the dwelling or water supply and are now owned by coal mine operators.

“Others may be vacant because the post-mining “unspecified agreement” did not provide full compensation for the necessary repairs.”

Recommendations

“CCJ would be willing to meet with members of the Citizens Advisory Council and the Department to discuss what more can be done to ensure coalfield communities and public natural resources are properly protected. 

At a minimum, the Citizens Advisory Council should recommend the following:

-- Independent Preparation of Report: The Department returns to its previous practice of commissioning Act 54 Reports to outside entities that provide more detailed and non-subjective reporting, including overlaying or duplicating reporting dates.

-- Regular Mining Company Reporting On Damages: The Department issues enforceable orders for repairing or replacing water supplies and structures when the company is found liable for the impact. Alternatively, the Department should require underground coal mine operators to submit status updates for impacted properties every six months. The Department should use these routine status updates to proactively identify properties where the Department’s intervention would help resolve subsidence damage claims promptly and adequately.

-- Increased Groundwater Monitoring/Repair Of Well Damage: The Department requires underground coal mine operators to sample hydrologic monitoring reports groundwater monitoring points for groundwater elevation at a frequency that is at least consistent with the pre-mining and post-mining sampling of surface water. The Department must also require the replacement of groundwater monitoring equipment that is damaged or destroyed during undermining.

-- Update Stream Flow Guidance: The Department revises its pre-mining and post-mining flow monitoring requirements specified in the Stream Protection Technical Guidance Document. The flow data currently collected is inadequate for making informed decisions about the environmental impacts of mining on overlying streams.

Click Here for a copy of the Center’s comments.

Groups like the Pennsylvania Environmental Council [Read more here], Center for Coalfield Justice [Read more here] and the Citizens Coal Council [Read more here.] have been involved in suggesting improvements to the report and the analysis required by Act 54 for many years.


(Photos: Examples of damage from underground coal mining; Underground longwall coal mining areas  in 2025 (pink) and other bituminous mining areas, courtesy Citizens Coal Council of Washington, PA from DEP mapped data.)

Resource Link:

-- DEP Reports 20% Of Streams Damaged By Underground Coal Mining; Total Incidents Of Damage To Homes, Streams, Land, Water Supplies Increased 17.5% Since 2003, In Spite Of A 31% Decline In Acreage Mined [PaEN]

[Posted: March 10, 2026]  PA Environment Digest

DEP Tells Environmental Quality Board It Is Looking To Make A Recommendation On Petition To Increase Setbacks From Shale Gas Wells By The End Of 2026

On March 10, the Department of Environmental Protection told the
Environmental Quality Board it is actively reviewing the rulemaking petition accepted by the Board in December for study to increase setbacks from shale gas wells and is looking to have a recommendation to the Board by the end of the year.

DEP gave an update to the Board on a total of six rulemaking petitions accepted by the Board for study-- four in December and two earlier.

In other action, by a vote of 15 to 4, the Board adopted a final regulation changing stream designations for 98 Fish and Boat Commission Class A Wild Trout Streams to High Quality representing 530.41 miles of streams .

Those voting against the redesignations were Sen. Gene Yaw (R-Lycoming); Rep. Martin Causer (R-Cameron); John St. Clair, Rosebud Mining Company, Citizens Advisory Council; and Thaddeus Stevens, land developer, Citizens Advisory Council.

Setback Petition

Laura Griffin, DEP Regulatory Coordinator, said-- “At this time, DEP's programs and toxicologists are reviewing the 42 scientific studies included with the petition and the Bureau of Regulatory Counsel is working on a legal analysis. Our timeline for this petition is probably the end of the calendar year.” 

In October 2024, the Clean Air Council and Environmental Integrity Project submitted a rulemaking petition to the Board to increase setbacks from shale gas wells from 500 feet to a minimum of 3,281 feet from buildings and drinking water wells, 5,280 feet from schools, daycares and hospitals and 750 feet from any surface water. Read more here.

Reducing Greenhouse Gas Emissions

On a April 2019 petition to to adopt a regulation to reduce greenhouse gas emissions from 14 different industries in Pennsylvania, Laura Griffin said-- “DEP is currently identifying necessary updates to the draft report and supporting analysis that we completed prior to the [Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative] litigation that was indirectly related to this petition, that had left the petition on hold until this time.” 

On February 5, 2026, environmental and public interest groups submitted a  495-page “demand for action” on the greenhouse gas rulemaking petition filed by 192 petitioners originally in November 2018 asking the Environmental Quality Board to adopt a regulation to reduce greenhouse gas emissions from 14 different industries in Pennsylvania.  Read more here.

Shale Gas Well Bonding

In November 2021, the Environmental Quality Board accepted separate rulemaking petitions to increase bond plugging amounts for conventional oil and gas wells and shale gas wells to meet the taxpayer  cost of plugging those wells.  Read more here.

A change in law in 2022 abrogated the EQB’s authority for 10 years to change the well plugging bonding amounts for conventional oil and gas wells. Read more here.

The petition for increasing bonding for shale gas wells is still pending.

Griffin said-- “At this time, the Oil and Gas Program is allocated funding for an actuarial study to identify adequate financial assurance for plugging unconventional wells. It's going to be completed... Well, the money is allocated in this budget year. I'm not sure if it will be completed this year or not, but we are working on it.”

Processing Shale Gas Wastewater

The Marcellus Shale Gas Coalition submitted a rulemaking petition accepted by the EQB in December 2025 to change Chapter 78a.58(a) regulations to “allow fluids from various oil and gas operations to be processed and stored at the site at which they are produced, at the well site where they are used or at a well site from which they are distributed to other wells sites for use in stimulating wells at those other sites.”

If the change was adopted, the regulation would allow the driller to set up oil and gas wastewater and mine influenced water processing and storage facilities at any well site taking wastewater from any other well site to be processed and/or stored and then taken to any other well site for reuse.

Griffin said-- “Onsite processing of fluids from oil and gas operations, this is currently undergoing legal review.”

Attainable Bottom

In December, the EQB accepted a rulemaking petition submitted by the Marcellus Shale Gas Coalition, the Pennsylvania Coal Alliance, and the Pennsylvania Independent Oil and Gas Association requesting the Board promulgate a rulemaking to “clarify how attainable bottom is determined and how plugging [of wells] should proceed from that point.”

Discussion of “attainable bottom” has been going on for years with the conventional oil and gas industry which has disagreed with DEP’s definition that uses a set of criteria for determining when a well owner has cleaned out enough of a well being plugged to assure it can be successfully plugged to stop the flow of fluids and gas.

Griffin said-- “Currently, we have hired an annuitant [a retired DEP employee] to work with the Oil and Gas Program to look at options and develop concepts. 

“We will be meeting with the well plugging work group [associated with the DCED PA Grade Crude (Oil) Development Advisory Council] on April 22nd to discuss those options. And we will continue to be reporting back to this group on the proposals that we develop.”

Well Pad Emergency Plans

The EQB accepted a petition for study in December submitted by the Marcellus Shale Gas Coalition that requests the Board promulgate a rulemaking to allow for well operators to maintain Preparedness, Prevention and Contingency (PPC) plans electronically to provide for “frequent updates and easier access and utilization of records in electronic format on site.

Griffin said the petition is currently “currently undergoing legal review.”

For available handouts and other background information, visit the Environmental Quality Board webpage. 

Updating Rulemaking Petition Process

Glendon King, alternate for Rep. Martin Causer (R-Cameron), asked for an update on its initiative to consider changes to the EQB rulemaking petition process.

Laura Griffin said-- “We are working on that. We did meet with the Citizens Advisory Council this January, thank you, to gather feedback from that group on the petition policy. 

“And we're taking that feedback, and doing some additional work, and continuing with that process. So, we're working on it.”

For available handouts and other background information, visit the Environmental Quality Board webpage. 

Questions should be directed to Laura Griffin, Regulatory Coordinator, Environmental Quality Board, P.O. Box 8477, Harrisburg, PA, 17105-8477, laurgriffi@pa.gov,  (717) 772-3277. 

Background On Setbacks

Legislation has been introduced in the House and Senate to increase setbacks from 500 to 2,500 feet across the state consistent with the 2020 state Grand Jury Report.

Rep. Greg Vitali (D-Delaware) introduced House Bill 1946, which was the subject of a Committee hearing in November.  Read more here.

The bill remains in the House Environmental and Natural Resource Protection Committee.

Sen. Steven Santarsiero (D-Bucks) and Sen. Carolyn Comitta (D-Chester) introduced Senate Bill 1083 also increasing setback distances from unconventional shale gas wells.

The bill remains in the Senate Environmental Resources and Energy Committee without action.

PA Senate Republicans Vote To Punish Communities

On May 7, 2025 Republicans on the Senate Environmental Resources and Energy Committee voted to report out legislation-- Senate Bill 102 (Bartolotta-R-Washington, Yaw-R-Lycoming) to punish communities taking steps to protect their residents from the health and environmental impacts of shale gas drilling by doing things like increasing setbacks from well pads.  Read more here.

The bill would prohibit municipalities from receiving Act 13 drilling impact fees if they set protective standards on the development of natural gas that “imposes a standard or condition on well development that conflicts with or exceeds those contained” in state law. Read more here.

The legislation was, in fact, prompted by an ordinance adopted by Cecil Township in Washington County.

Sen. Camera Bartolotta (R-Washington), the prime sponsor, represents Cecil Township in the state Senate.

The bill is now in the Senate Appropriations Committee.


(Photos: top- Range Resources Augustine Drill Pad in Cecil Township; Augustine Drill Pad showing scale of operation;  bottom- Map of Shale gas wells (red dots), conventional oil and gas wells (blue/green dots) in Cecil Township (DEP Oil & Gas Program); 523 feet from nearest house; Well pad gas flare from bedroom window near Augustine well pad (WTAE). Other photos Courtesy of The Energy Age Blog.)

Resource Links - Setbacks:

-- Environmental Quality Board Votes To Accept Petition To Study An Increase In Setback Safety Zones From Shale Gas Wells; And 3 Petitions From Oil & Gas Industry To Change Other Requirements  [12.9.25] 

-- 500 Feet Isn’t Enough - House Hearing I: Shale Gas Industry Says Setbacks Won’t Protect Residents, Public Health, Environment From Shale Gas Operations, Only ‘Rigorous Oversight’ Will; Standards Have Not Changed In 9 Years  [PaEN] 

-- 500 Feet Isn't Enough- House Hearing II: As A Township Supervisor We Have An Obligation To Protect The Health, Safety And Welfare Of Our Township Residents From Shale Gas Development  [PaEN]

-- 500 Feet Isn't Enough - House Hearing III: What It’s Really Like Living Next To A Shale Gas Well Pad - Nosebleeds, Headaches, Nausea, Air Pollution, Vibrating House, Sleepless Nights, Anxiety, Truck Traffic  [PaEN]  

-- 500 Feet Isn’t Enough:  42 Scientific Studies, 20+ Years Of Experience With Shale Gas Drilling In PA; A State Grand Jury Report; Criminal Convictions; Public Complaints; Lawsuits; Media Reports All Document The Need To Increase Setbacks From Shale Gas Wells  [PaEN] 

-- 500 Feet Isn’t Enough:  Michelle Stonemark Tells What It’s Really Like Living Next To A Shale Gas Well Pad - Nosebleeds, Headaches, Nausea, Air Pollution, Vibrating House, Sleepless Nights, Anxiety - In Cecil Twp., Washington County   [PaEN]

-- 500 Feet Isn't Enough: Environmental Groups Urge Environmental Quality Board To Accept Rulemaking Petition For Study Increasing Setbacks From Shale Gas Wells  [PaEN] 

-- House Committee Hearing On Increasing Safety Setback Zones Around Natural Gas Facilities Heard About First-Hand Citizen Experiences On Health Impacts; From Physicians On Health Studies; The Gas Industry On Job Impacts  [PaEN] 

-- House Environmental Committee To Hold Oct. 30 Hearing On Bill Increasing Setback Safety Zones From Shale Natural Gas Drilling Sites, Infrastructure Based On Latest Science, Grand Jury Report [Background on the Issue]  [PaEN] 

-- Sen. Yaw, Republican Chair Of Senate Environmental Committee, Calls Bill To Reduce Shale Gas Industry Impacts On Health, Environment ‘Stupid’  [October 2023] 

-- Rep. Vitali Introduces Legislation To Increase Setbacks From Unconventional Shale Gas Wells From 500 Feet To 2,500 Feet From Homes, 5,000 Feet From Schools, Hospitals  [10.15.25]

-- Senators Santarsiero, Comitta Introduce SB 581 Increasing Setback Safety Zones From Natural Gas Drilling Sites, Other Infrastructure, Based On Latest Science  [January 2024]

-- Marcellus Drilling News: Capital & Main Resolves Legal Challenge From CNX Resources Over Its Reporting With Editor’s Note Explaining What It Did Not Say Or Write About In An Article  [PaEN]

-- Environmental Hearing Board Agrees There Is ‘Acute’ Danger In CNX Misusing A Deposition In An Appeal Before The Board To ‘Punish’ An Environmental Advocate For Her Advocacy Against CNX  [PaEN]

Related Articles This Week:

-- DEP Tells Environmental Quality Board It Is Looking To Make A Recommendation On  Petition To Increase Setbacks From Shale Gas Wells By The End Of 2026  [PaEN] 

-- Environmental Hearing Board Grants Request By Center For Coalfield Justice To Intervene In EQT Production Co. Appeal Of DEP Records Request In Ongoing Investigation Of 940,000 Gallon Shale Gas Wastewater Spill In Washington County, Six Other Well Pads  [PaEN]  

-- DEP Working With Heirs Of Deceased Owner Of 43 Abandoned Conventional Oil & Gas Wells On State Game Land In Venango County To Clarify Current Status  [PaEN]

[Posted: March 10, 2026]  PA Environment Digest

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