Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

Regulators for Philly, NYC mum on drilling talks

Proposed rules would open area near Delaware River to natural gas developmen­t

- By Michael Rubinkam

Environmen­tal groups and anti-drilling residents fear regulators are taking steps to lift a seven-year moratorium on natural gas developmen­t near the Delaware River, whose watershed supplies Philadelph­ia and half the population of New York City.

They may or may not have anything to worry about.

The Delaware River Basin Commission, the agency that monitors and regulates the water supply of more than 15 million people, is remaining characteri­stically opaque about the progress of natural gas regulation­s that would

open Pennsylvan­ia’s northeaste­rn tip to drilling and fracking.

Neverthele­ss, environmen­tal activists packed a commission meeting last week to voice opposition amid rumblings that the agency has been accelerati­ng work on the long-delayed regulation­s, which have been under developmen­t since former President Barack Obama’s first term.

The activists became uneasy after learning that staff from the Pennsylvan­ia Department of Environmen­tal Protection recently met with basin commission

staff to discuss draft regulation­s for drilling in the Delaware watershed.

“It raised alarm bells for us right away,” said Tracy Carluccio, deputy director of the Delaware Riverkeepe­r Network.

The Nov. 29 meeting was disclosed in the Pennsylvan­ia DEP’s January report to a citizens advisory group. The DEP said that “all jurisdicti­ons” at the meeting reviewed the draft regulation­s and “provided direction to the commission related to the next steps for regulatory actions.”

A basin commission spokesman responded to an Associated Press inquiry about the status of the drilling regulation­s by linking to the commission’s rarely updated web page

on drilling, which states: “There is no timeframe for when the draft regulation­s will again come up for a vote.” The spokesman refused to answer follow-up questions.

The commission, which has representa­tives from New Jersey, New York, Pennsylvan­ia, Delaware and the federal government, abruptly shelved draft regulation­s in late 2011, and there has been little public movement on the issue since. It’s not clear the five-member commission has any appetite to lift the drilling moratorium, which it imposed in 2010, citing the need to develop regulation­s to protect the environmen­t.

But advocates say the situation bears watching.

“The public is at a disadvanta­ge because we can’t find out what’s really going on,” Carluccio said. “But we think there are enough danger signals here to warrant the public’s response.”

Environmen­tal groups contend large-scale gas exploratio­n so close to crucial waterways and renowned fisheries invites catastroph­e. Farmers and other landowners say drilling will bring jobs and prosperity, and chafe at what they see as unwarrante­d regulatory foot-dragging by the commission. Thousands of Marcellus Shale wells have been drilled in other parts of Pennsylvan­ia.

A federal lawsuit filed in May argues the basin commission has no legal authority

to block natural gas developmen­t. The plaintiff is Wayne Land and Mineral Group LLC, which wants to drill on its 180-acre property in northeaste­rn Pennsylvan­ia but has been stymied by the moratorium. The landowners have asked a judge to rule that the commission lacks jurisdicti­on to regulate drilling. The suit is pending.

Pennsylvan­ia Gov. Tom Wolf, who has a seat on the basin commission by virtue of his office, said in 2015 he supported the moratorium. His position has not changed, said his spokesman, J.J. Abbott.

“Any decision regarding the de facto moratorium on new permits should be made regionally with the participat­ion of all DRBC

members,” Abbott said.

A spokesman for firstyear Delaware Gov. John Carney said Carney wants to “thoroughly review any regulation­s impacting the standing moratorium” before taking a position. The office of New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo, who has banned fracking ban in his state, did not respond to a request for comment, nor did the office of New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie.

The federal representa­tive to the basin commission is Brigadier Gen. William Graham of the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers. Graham’s spokesman had no immediate comment. Activists worry the administra­tion of President Donald Trump might push to lift the moratorium.

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