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*Don't Trust the NYS DEC. Gas Drilling still not Banned!*

NYC Indy Media, April 25, 2010 12:23PM

By Anne Marie from Online

You may have heard or read that the NYS Department of Environmental
Conservation (DEC) has decided not to allow gas drilling within the Catskill
and Delaware watersheds, which supply water to NYC.

Don't believe it.

Don't trust the DEC

You may have heard or read that the NYS Department of Environmental
Conservation (DEC) has decided not to allow gas drilling within the Catskill
and Delaware watersheds, which supply water to NYC.

Don't believe it.

On April 23rd the DEC announced that it will exclude unfiltered water
supplies from its generic environmental impact statement. Instead gas
drilling applicants will have to go through their own environmental review
process to obtain permits. [1] In the 1992 GEIS there are other situations
which trigger an additional environmental review.

The main question is why did the DEC decided to release this statement now,
instead of including it in the final Supplemental Generic Environmental
Impact Statement (SGEIS)?

Here are three good reasons for this public relations stunt:

1. To diminish public opposition
Late last October, just before the start of the public review of the draft
SGEIS, Aubrey K. McClendon, the head of Chesapeake Energy, announced that
his company would not drill in the Catskill and Delaware watersheds.
However, he was not willing to tear up their current leases, or sign a
binding agreement never to drill there. Nor could he speak for the dozens of
other gas drilling companies. The public saw through his maneuver and
submitted over 14,000 comments to the draft.

It seems that Pete Grannis has been taking lessons from the CEO of
Chesapeake Energy. After all, he may be working for Chesapeake in a few
months.

2. To try an end run around current proposed legislation.
Over two dozen bills have been introduced in the NYS legislature about gas
drilling. One that is gaining momentum calls for a state-wide moratorium
until 120 days after the EPA finishes its report on hydrofracking. [2]
Another proposed bill calls for a state-wide ban.

The last thing the DEC and the gas industry want is an multi-year
moratorium. This press release is merely an attempt to stop these bills.

3. To try to avoid some legal requirements of their environmental review.
NYS is in a very difficult position because no matter what they do they are
going to get sued once the SGEIS is finalized. This move is an attempt to
avoid some of those legal issues. However, it's not likely to succeed since
it simply creates a new legal challenge.


The point is this: gas drilling would still be allowed in unfiltered water
supplies. The DEC's decision does not block gas drilling anyplace, and it
may not be legal.

-- 

"Democracy is a device that ensures we will be governed no better than we
deserve."
G. B. Shaw
_______________________________________________
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