Thursday, May 29, 2014

Environmental, Other Groups Oppose More State Forest Drilling

Civic, religious and environmental groups Thursday called on Gov. Tom Corbett to reverse his decision to permit additional leasing of mineral rights in state parks and forests for natural gas drilling during a news conference organized by Rep. Greg Vitali (D-Delaware), Minority Chair of the House Environmental Resources and Energy Committee.
"This is bad public policy," said rep. Vitali. "If Gov. Corbett wants to raise additional revenues from gas drilling he should impose a severance tax instead."
The Rev. Sandra L. Strauss from the Pennsylvania Council of Churches said the governor's decision violates the Pennsylvania constitution, which calls for the land to be preserved for all -- now and into the future – and notes that public natural resources are common property.
"Our children and grandchildren will inherit the environmental problems we leave behind," Strauss said. "Future generations already face tremendous debts. It's up to us to speak up, reminding our governor and our General Assembly of their duty to uphold Pennsylvania's Constitution, and raising our faith voices to call for a halt to the governor's disgraceful action."
Pennsylvania Sierra Club Chapter Director Joanne Kilgour said the impacts of drilling are already being felt on state lands, and she noted that from 2008 to 2012, more than 300 notices of violations were issued to gas drilling-related companies for incidents such as brine spills and residual waste discharges. An expansion of drilling, she said, would make matters worse.
"This summer, as you are hiking with your spouse, teaching your children to fish, and picnicking along the banks of a clean trout stream, imagine the loud, polluting noise of a compressor station or hundreds of large, industrial trucks passing by on the way to a nearby well pad," Kilgour said.
Delaware Riverkeeper Maya Von Rossum said the governor's order will invite, inspire and spawn industrial development along state parks and forests, and eventually pave the way for the state to open parks entirely for drilling.
Also speaking were PennFuture Policy Director Steve Stroman, PennEnvironment Advocate Kristen Cevoli, Clean Water Action Central Pennsylvania Campaign Coordinator Nathan Sooy, Pennsylvania League of Women Voters President Susan Carty and Ralph Kisberg from the Responsible Drilling Alliance.
Forty-four percent of state forestland, or 673,000 acres, already is subject to Marcellus shale drilling.
Meanwhile, Rep. Vitali is awaiting details from the Corbett administration about plans for expanded gas drilling. The Pennsylvania Office of Open Records last week granted Rep. Vitali's appeal seeking details about Corbett’s plan to raise the $75 million through the additional leasing of mineral rights.
Rep. Vitali sought information about what parks and forests are under consideration for drilling, how many acres would be leased, which companies will be doing the drilling and how the $75 million figure was calculated.
He has yet to hear from the administration, and said the information is needed to properly consider the budget that General Assembly will vote on next month.
Gov. Corbett issued an Executive Order last week laying out the ground rules for any new drilling on State Forest or State Park lands.
Click Here for a fact sheet on the Executive Order and Non-surface Disturbance Leasing of DCNR Lands.  For more information, visit DCNR’s Natural Gas Development and State Forests webpage.

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