NIMBY: Not In My Back Yard. But fracking already is in the back yard: Pennsylvania. Soon to be in New York if we do not act.
Why will I fail to act? Because disaster this preposterous just can’t happen in my back yard. I can’t believe it. I can’t wrap my mind around it.
Right. Tell that to anyone living on the Gulf Coast.
I received this today and reproduce it here verbatim, bolding mine:
“Tap water set on fire… 50-foot-high flare expected to continue burning for three or four more days…Twenty-eight cattle quarantined…Drinking water turned brown.”
These are just a few of the news items hitting headlines in the last month, from Pennsylvania to Texas, and they’re all related to an increasingly-used destructive practice called hydraulic fracturing. Can you ask your representative to protect drinking water, communities and the environment by passing the FRAC Act?
We’ve seen scores of documented cases of drinking water contamination near natural gas drilling sites, likely from the toxic mixture they inject into the ground for hydraulic fracturing. Due to a legislative loophole, we can’t even hold these energy companies accountable under the Safe Drinking Water Act, and they don’t have to disclose the 596 chemicals that may be contaminating our water. Fortunately, there is a bill in congress that could close the loophole and require companies to disclose the chemicals they are using. Send your representatives an email asking them to support the FRAC Act today!
Hydraulic fracturing, or fracking, is a drilling technique used to extract natural gas from shales and tight rocks by shooting millions of gallons of a mixture of water, chemicals and sand into the ground. As the rock cracks and creates fissures, natural gas flows more freely out of the well. Unfortunately, some of the toxic fluids remain underground after extraction and can seep into groundwater. Contamination of groundwater can affect the quality of drinking water even hundreds of miles away. Ask your representatives to protect groundwater from dangerous toxins.
Send a message to your representative today.
http://action.foodandwaterwatch.org/p/dia/action/public/?action_KEY=4317Thanks for taking action,
Meredith Begin
Education & Outreach Organizer
Food & Water Watch
mbegin(at)fwwatch(dot)org
http://cce.cornell.edu/EnergyClimateChange/NaturalGasDev/Documents/PDFs/SGEIS%20commentsFinal12_31_09%20_2_.pdf
I just came across this…the sGEIS did not cover adequately direct, indirect and cumulative impacts and also, the community character impact analysis was woefully inadequately. These two Cornell profs submitted these comments to the DEC. Also, please write to your senator and ask that they extend the moratorium until the NYSDEC comes back with the Final sGEIS (I don’t know how they could allow them to issue permits without it) as they apparently have a lot of work yet to do to finish it.