Dear Friends, Very soon a bill will be introduced in the U.S. House of Representatives that is critical to our health. It will repeal the exemption given to the oil and gas industry in 2005 from the Safe Drinking Water Act of 1974 (see below). Although the bill doesn't have a number yet, the industry is already lobbying hard against it, saying any further regulation will cost jobs and make us more dependent on foreign oil. They fail to note that without this regulation our health is at stake.
The bill will be referred to the U.S. House Committee on Energy and Commerce, members of which are listed below. If your state has one or more Representatives on that committee, your help is first needed to get the bill moved favorably out of committee and onto the floor of the House for a vote. Please fax a short letter to each committee member from your state as well as to your own Congressman/woman, urging co-sponsorship of the bill and pushing for its passage. Those of you whose state has no one serving on the committee can go ahead and write your Representative now, asking for co-sponsorship of the pending bill to repeal the exemption. Letters sent by US mail take too long because they have to be checked for anthrax; emails may not get recorded or counted, plus they look like they are organization-generated. So please send a fax or make a phone call. A fact sheet from four major environmental organizations working on this issue is attached. Please understand that unlike traditional vertical drilling, the high-pressure, horizontal hydraulic fracturing (aka hydrofracking) of shale, sandstone or coal beds requires, per well, hundreds of heavy trucks to carry millions of gallons of fresh water (never to be returned to its source) across county and town roads to a 3- to 5-acre well pad. Then chemicals (some toxic, including endocrine disruptors) are added to the fresh water and forced under very high pressure down the well to break up the formation to free the gas. After the fracking is finished, much of the toxic waste stays underground where it can travel. Much comes up in even more toxic form because heavy metals and radon are picked up in the process. This "produced water" has often been pumped into open, plastic-lined evaporation pits which pollute the air 24/7 and pollute the soil and water when the plastic leaks or the pond floods. An alternative is to transport (with the risk of leaks and spills) the toxic waste to a dry well and inject it back into the ground for storage (and possible leaks). Traditional water treatment facilities cannot handle this industrial waste because the energy companies won't reveal its contents. (The chemicals we know about are from samples taken after above-ground accidents out west). Since the gas released from these formations is not under much pressure, diesel pumps may be run at the surface day and night, sounding like an idling semi-truck. Since hydrofracking can be repeated several times, the life of the well may be more than twenty years. While risk of air and water pollution increases, quality of life and resale value of property decrease, sometimes down to zero. Just ask a realtor in an area where leases have been signed. If hydrofracking were as safe as the industry claims it is, there would be no need for an exemption, and repeal of it would not be of concern. What we are not being told is that there have been unacceptable levels of hydrogen sulfide in Alabama, ground-level ozone in the open spaces of Colorado, cattle dropping dead in Louisiana, industrialization of the landscape in Wyoming, a house blown off its foundation in Ohio, contamination of water wells in Pennsylvania and cases of fires in faucets, fish kills, goats and mares being unable to reproduce, people losing their hearing and some developing brain lesions. What links these tragedies together is that all have occurred on properties near hydraulic fracturing. You can learn more from www.ogap.org, www.endocrinedisruption.org, and www.propublica.org/feature/natural-gas-politics-526 . You can see interviews with people negatively affected at www.damascuscitizens.org. But you don't have to in order to speak up on this subject. The bottom line is simply this: to not regulate the oil and gas industry the way all others are regulated with respect to the Safe Drinking Water Act is unconscionable. For the health and safety of everyone, please take action to repeal the exemption now. ENERGY POLICY ACT OF 2005 Public Law 109-58 109th Congress Title III - Oil and Gas Subtitle C - Production SEC. 322. HYDRAULIC FRACTURING. Paragraph (1) of section 1421(d) of the Safe Drinking Water Act (42 U.S.C. 300h(d)) is amended to read as follows: "(1) Underground injection.--The term 'underground injection'-- "(A) means the subsurface emplacement of fluids by well injection; and "(B) excludes-- "(i) the underground injection of natural gas for purposes of storage; and "(ii) the underground injection of fluids or propping agents (other than diesel fuels) pursuant to hydraulic fracturing operations related to oil, gas, or geothermal production activities. US House Committee on Energy and Commerce AR Mike Ross AZ John B. Shadegg CA Lois Capps Anna G. Eshoo Jane Harman Mary Bono Mack Doris O. Matsui Jerry McNerney George Radanovich Henry A. Waxman, Chair CO Diana DeGette CT Christopher S. Murphy FL Kathy Castor Cliff Stearns GA John Barrow Nathan Deal Phil Gingrey IA Bruce L. Braley IL Bobby L. Rush Jan Shakowsky John Shimkus IN Steve Buyer Baron P. Hill KY Ed Whitfield LA Charlie Melancon Steve Scalise MA Edward J. Markey MD John P. Sarbanes MI John D. Dingell, Chair Emeritus Mike Rogers Bart Stupak Fred Upton MO Roy Blunt NC G. K. Butterfield Sue Wilkins Myrick NE Lee Terry NJ Frank Pallone, Jr. NY Eliot L. Engel Anthony D. Weiner OH Zachary T. Space Betty Sutton OK John Sullivan OR Greg Walden PA Mike Doyle Tim Murphy Joseph R. Pitts TN Marsha Blackburn Bart Gordon TX Joe Barton, Ranking Member Michael C. Burgess Charles Gonzalez Gene Green Ralph M. Hall UT Jim Matheson VA Rick Boucher VI Donna M. Christensen VT Peter Welch WA Jay Inslee WI Tammy Baldwin _______________________________________________ For more information about sustainability in the Tompkins County area, please visit: http://www.sustainabletompkins.org/ RSS, archives, subscription & listserv information for: [email protected] http://lists.mutualaid.org/mailman/listinfo/sustainabletompkins Questions about the list? ask [email protected] free hosting by http://www.mutualaid.org
