http://www.pressconnects.com/article/20091010/NEWS01/910100362&referrer=FRON
TPAGECAROUSEL

October 10, 2009
Marcellus question: Who will pay to monitor gas drilling?
By Tom Wilber
[email protected]
And now for a little homework ...
The state is asking local government agencies to regulate key aspects of the
natural gas industry,
raising yet more questions about who will pay for manpower to oversee
multinational energy
companies setting up shop in Southern Tier's backyards.
The industry's effect on water resources and roads are included in a report
released Sept. 30 by the
Department of Environmental Conservation outlining environmental concerns
from full-scale Marcellus
Shale development.
Risks to water, the report says, include turbidity, methane contamination
and, to a lesser degree,
potential for hazardous chemicals to breach well-bore casings or spill while
being handled or
disposed of on the surface.
To deal with those threats, the state is calling on local health departments
to oversee a testing
program of private wells in drilling zones. Testing would begin before
drilling starts, and continue for a
year after it ends.
DEC would also require drilling companies to work out a plan with local
governments to minimize
traffic problems and cover damage to roads caused by fleets of heavy
equipment, water tankers and
drill rigs caravanning from site to site.
The industry's promise of affluence, supporters say, will help the
struggling economy and bolster the
tax base. Yet officials have yet to figure out how to pay to oversee an
onslaught of permitting and
drilling activity - mostly in the Southern Tier - that is expected to begin
next year.
The county is looking at a 3.9 percent tax hike and job cuts to help balance
next year's budget. Gov.
David Paterson has ordered state agencies to cut operating expenses 11
percent.
"How will we pay? That is a concern," said Broome County Legislator Stephen
Herz, D-Windsor, a
member of the Finance Committee.
A proposal to steer industry fees and taxes into the state's general fund
died in Albany earlier this
year. Assemblywoman Donna Lupardo, D-Endwell, favors a plan to raise permit
fees and earmark
them for regulatory staffing. So does the industry.
Yet that plan is yet to materialize.
"There will have to be money to pay for staff time, no matter where it comes
from," said Chip
McElwee, executive director of the Broome County Soil & Water Conservation
District, an agency that
works with landowners to preserve water resources.
Who pays for what?
The state suspended permitting for the Marcellus last summer in order to
take a closer look at an
industry expected to change the Southern Tier's economic and physical
landscape.
Results arrived last month via the 809-page draft called the Supplemental
Generic Environmental
Impact Statement. While the proposal lays the ground rules for Marcellus
development, it's only one
piece of a complicated regulatory puzzle.
Local governments must provide the missing pieces, including the wherewithal
to protect water and
roads.
The clock is ticking.
The public comment period ends Nov. 30. As of Friday, representatives from
industry and government
said they are still reading through it. Hard copies were not available at
public places, and the DEC
still hasn't scheduled public meetings to review it.
While the review proposes a regulatory framework, it does not address costs.
County health agencies, the plan says, would take on a "primary role" in
overseeing a program to
review water data at private wells within 1,000 to 2,000 feet of a drilling
rig, before, during and up to a
year after operations. Counties also would flag problems and investigate
complaints.
Drilling companies are responsible for testing and sending results to the
health department and
residents for interpretation.
County officials are still trying to determine how that translates into
staffing needs.
Here are the numbers they will work with:
The Marcellus is capable of supporting between 2,000 and 4,000 gas wells in
Broome County, based
on an economic development report commissioned by the legislature. Each gas
well has the potential
for producing water testing at multiple spots for years.
How much oversight would that require?
"We have to see how it fits in with our resources," said Robert Denz,
director of environmental health
for the Broome County Department of Health.
Tough sell
As a preliminary step, the county added $28,000 to the Health Department's
budget for 2010 to pay
for an additional part-time position to respond to complaints involving
drilling's effect on private water
supplies. Denz said he did not know whether this would be enough without
further evaluating the
DEC's proposal.
Any staff additions might be a tough sell, however, given the budget
problems.
"Nobody has come to grips with it yet," said Herz, who, as a member of
landowner coalition dealing
with energy companies, has been following the issue closely. "We are looking
at a budget in the
county that is pretty harsh."
While officials work on the funding puzzle, the state's regulatory proposal
is finding general support
among drilling industry leaders and bitter criticism from advocacy groups.
Adam Flint, a member of the Binghamton Regional Sustainability Coalition,
said officials are too quick
to embrace economic promises of Marcellus development without assessing the
costs.
"People are playing fast and loose with the figures," he said. "The reports
are not spelling out who
pays."
The state report lays the groundwork for drilling to begin. Industry
supporters see that as encouraging.
"It seems that the state set the conditions so that actual production could
proceed, even under tightly
defined parameters," said Chris Tucker, a spokesman for Energy In Depth, a
national trade group.
"That's why we support this and they (opponents) do not. There is no way to
split the baby on this."
Full-scale Marcellus production is on the Southern Tier's threshold. When it
arrives and how it unfolds
depends largely on how the regulations are crafted. That, in turn, depends
on how the public and
officials respond to the state's proposal.
They have homework to do in the next few weeks.
Additional Facts
Why it matters
The Marcellus shale runs from the Southern Tier of New York, through the
western portion of
Pennsylvania into the eastern half of Ohio and through West Virginia. Many
gas production companies
are now interested in the Marcellus, so they are approaching land-owners
with offers to lease the
rights to natural gas deposits below houses and farms.
The implications for residents of the region are significant. Gas-leases can
generate income for
residents, but might create costs for local governments that could be
charged with some of the
responsibilities for oversight. Gas-drilling in other areas has prompted
issues related to pollution,
noise, and safety.

------ End of Forwarded Message

_______________________________________________
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

Reply via email to