For those who don't anticipate or think that it could happen in our towns
please read and this should be posted
on our respective websites.
Best,
Jack
----- Original Message -----
From: "MB"
<
mbsweeney@echoes.net>
To: "MarcellusGasInfo" <
marcellusgasinfo@googlegroups.com>
Sent: Wednesday, June 23, 2010 1:12 PM
Subject: [MarcellusGasInfo] Pittsburgh weighing Marcellus Shale drilling
concerns
> Note that: 1) drilling within the city of Pittsburgh is a real
> possibility,
and, 2) the proposed setback from buildings within the
> city is 1000 feet, with some asking for larger setbacks,
while here in
> NY we have setbacks of just 100 ft. from private residences and 150
> ft. from public buildings.
Those living in Binghamton who are thinking
> that drilling will be a purely rural phenomenon had better wake up.
>
>
>
http://www.post-gazette.com/pg/10171/1066991-53.stm>
> ======================================================================
> Post-gazette.com
>
>
> City weighing Marcellus Shale drilling concerns
> Some on Council favor limits, others
want to prohibit it
>
> Sunday, June 20, 2010
> By Rich Lord, Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
>
> The prospect of gas wells near Lawrenceville condos or Lincoln Place
> gardens has Pittsburgh Council weighing
whether to bar the Marcellus
> Shale boom from the city, or just strictly limit it.
>
> Whether council
can do either is questionable, given state law that
> preempts local gas drilling rules. And it may be tough to build
> consensus around either Councilman Patrick Dowd's proposal to set
> conditions for drilling, which he'll introduce
Tuesday, or colleague
> Doug Shields' preference for prohibition.
>
> Mr. Shields said he would "want
to start for openers at, 'No, I don't
> want to see [drilling] in the city,' " and negotiate from there.
>
> "On a personal level, as an individual, I might want to see an
> outright ban," Mr. Dowd said Saturday.
"I fear what [drilling] will do
> to my drinking water, and more importantly I fear what this will do to
>
my kids' drinking water."
>
> However, legislation barring gas drilling "would eliminate our ability
> to engage in this conversation," he said.
>
> Spurring the conversation, statewide and beyond,
is the rush to tap
> gas trapped a mile underground in the Marcellus Shale formation.
> Statewide, close to
800 rigs are built or under construction, and
> nearly 2,000 drilling sites have been permitted so far.
>
> None are within the city's borders, but agents have approached
> landowners about leasing the rights to gas
beneath their property. Mr.
> Dowd said he's aware of more than 60 signed leases for property in
> Lawrenceville,
and Mr. Shields has been educating Lincoln Place
> residents to implications of signing such documents.
>
> "What will this do to health and safety and wellbeing of residents?"
> Mr. Dowd asked.
>
> He'd like to allow oil and gas drilling in areas zoned for industry
> only, and then only after "yes"
votes by the City Planning Commission
> and council. Those bodies would consider whether a driller had a site
>
of 15 acres or more that was at least 1,000 feet from homes or public
> buildings, and scrutinize their plans to minimize
noise and air
> pollution.
>
> Drillers would have to disclose the chemicals they would use on the
> site, submit emergency management plans, test soil and water before
> beginning work, and return the site to
its prior condition after
> shutdown. Their trucks also would be barred from residential streets.
>
>
The proposed road rule alone "appears to effectively prohibit [gas]
> development within the city limits,"
said Kathryn Z. Klaber, president
> and executive director of the Marcellus Shale Coalition, an advocacy
>
group for the industry. "If you can't move vehicles around the
> vicinity of a well, you really can't develop
a well site."
>
> Cities like Fort Worth, Texas, have found ways to balance civic
> concerns
with the economic benefits of gas extraction, she said, in
> ways that "truly changed the economy of that city."
>
> Fiscally challenged Pittsburgh could make money by leasing public land
> to drillers, she said. Property
owners, meanwhile, could get royalty
> checks from wells deep underground that fan out from a central rig.
>
> "There are economic windfalls for landowners that will never see their
> property disturbed," she
said.
>
> She said drilling rules should be statewide, not local, but added that
> she is reaching
out to council members to work with them on their
> concerns.
>
> Mayor Luke Ravenstahl hasn't yet
seen the legislation, said his
> spokesman, Joanna Doven.
>
> "His number one priority is to
protect city residents, and to the
> extent this legislation does that, that's something that's certainly
>
worth looking into."
>
> Mr. Dowd said his council collaborators on the legislation include R.
>
Daniel Lavelle, Ricky Burgess and Theresa Smith. Council President
> Darlene Harris said Mr. Dowd and Mr. Shields
should try to work out
> the differences in their approaches.
>
> Industry skeptics praised Mr. Dowd's
proposal, while suggesting that
> it could be strengthened.
>
> "It's an excellent first start,"
said state Sen. Jim Ferlo, D-Highland
> Park, who is pushing in Harrisburg for a one-year moratorium on new
>
drilling. He said council should consider barring drilling near the
> rivers and demanding that firms post a bond
to pay for any accidents.
>
> This month has seen gas well blowouts in Clearfield County and near
>
Moundsville, W.Va.
>
> Gloria Forouzan, a Lawrenceville resident and activist, urged that the
> minimum
distance from homes be increased from the proposed 1,000 feet.
> She said drilling companies should have to reimburse
the city for
> training its personnel need in gas emergency management.
>
> Environmentalists realize
that natural gas extracted from the
> Marcellus Shale burns much more cleanly than coal, said Peter Wray, co-
>
chair of the Conservation Committee of the Sierra Club Allegheny
> Group. The challenge is getting it out of the shale
it in a way that
> doesn't pollute ground water or disrupt neighborhoods.
>
> "Given those concerns,
we and other environmental organizations will
> have to consider whether a moratorium on Marcellus drilling is the
> better approach or whether an immediate set of safeguards is needed,"
> he said.
>
> Because
proposed zoning legislation takes effect on a temporary basis
> at the moment of its introduction, Mr. Dowd's proposal
would kick in
> Tuesday. It then would be the subject of hearings and votes before the
> Planning Commission
and council. Mr. Shields also wants a panel
> discussion, to include the mayor of Dish, Texas, who has said that gas
> wells polluted that tiny town north of Fort Worth. The process could
> take many months.
>
>
Any delay is "not to the detriment of the industry as much as it's to
> the detriment of landowners in Pittsburgh,"
said Ms. Klaber. An
> outright or de facto ban would make the industry "less likely to lease
> the land,"
and eventual extraction "may not be as lucrative to the
> landowners as in a community that has reached out to
work with the
> industry."