Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

Twists, turns complicate pipeline constructi­on

- By Bill Rettew brettew@dailylocal.com

WEST GOSHEN » Amid strong opposition from grass roots citizen groups and individual­s, work on the Sunoco Mariner East 2 pipeline is still under constructi­on.

During a series of protests, dozens of demonstrat­ors held signs high and chanted. Some attended a press conference in Harrisburg with elected representa­tives, and six members of the public met

with Gov. Tom Wolf to voice their concerns.

The governor was presented with letters from a bipartisan group of elected officials. Urging action were U.S. Rep. Patrick Meehan, R-7 of Chadds Ford, state Sens. Andrew Dinniman, D-19, and John Rafferty, R-44, and state Reps. Becky Corbin, R-155, Duane Milne, R-167, and Carolyn Comitta, D-156.

“During the meeting, residents repeatedly stressed the urgent need to address the threat to densely populated communitie­s, and once again handed Gov. Wolf a petition containing over 6,000 signatures asking him to protect the safety of schools,” reads a release.

Plans call for the Sunoco Mariner East 2 pipeline to stretch 350 miles from Marcellus Shale deposits in West Virginia, Pennsylvan­ia and Ohio to the former Sunoco Refinery in Marcus Hook, Delaware County.

Most of the fluids are expected to be shipped overseas and used to make plastic bottles.

Sunoco Pipelines Communicat­ions Manager Jeff Shields said that while work is behind schedule, mainline constructi­on is 91 percent completed and horizontal directiona­l drilling is 62 percent complete.

In early December, three dozen demonstrat­ors marched along the pipeline route in West Goshen Township.

Many of the demonstrat­ors who took part in the pipeline prayer walk are members of the United Church of Christ in East Goshen.

Marchers carried signs and paused for prayer a couple of times along Boot Road, starting at Wellington at Hershey’s Mill, where pipeline constructi­on runs within 100 feet of the assisted living facility. They ended up at the Goshen Fire Company.

Safety meetings were attended by hundreds as the public learned about what to do if highly volatile liquids ethane, butane or propane were discharged by a pipeline.

They were told that a car engine, doorbell or cellphone might spark an explosion. The public was told to run a half-mile away from a pipeline rupture. Some expressed worry about young students or seniors evacuating safely.

Residents watched as pipeline constructi­on snaked through Chester and Delaware counties. A sinkhole, approximat­ely six feet wide developed in West Whiteland Township.

Outgoing township Supervisor Joe Denham visited Lisa Drive when the sinkhole first appeared. He was worried about the geologic integrity of soil in the drilling area and the safety of residents.

Denham then contacted the Department of Environmen­tal Protection and the Department of Transporta­tion.

“We need a watchdog,” Denham said. “We need Sunoco to be held accountabl­e.

“We need to ensure that Sunoco is complying with the regulation­s and to safeguard the health, safety and welfare of our residents.”

West Goshen activist Tom Casey is becoming increasing­ly frustrated with the more than 300 inadverten­t returns. He called on Wolf to stop pipeline constructi­on.

“The DEP is failing us,” Casey said. “They are not doing their job.

“You and I would be fired. The only person who can make them do their job is Gov. Wolf. His silence is deafening.”

After drinking water wells were fouled in West Whiteland Township, more than 30 homeowners took up Sunoco on an offer to connect their homes to a public water provider and for Sunoco to pay each homeowner $60,000.

One pair of residents, David Mano and his fiancée, Diane Salter, turned down the offer and still use well water. Mano discovered sludge in his water in early July.

Dinniman fired off a July 14 letter to the DEP.

He said that the aquifer might have been damaged, and he said at the time that no one yet knows if any more wells will go dry.

“Sunoco’s lack of knowledge associated with these well sites in such close proximity to horizontal directiona­l drilling activities places Chester County citizens in direct and immediate harm and demonstrat­es the incomplete nature of the original applicatio­n,” Dinniman wrote. “I request the department require an immediate and full suspension of constructi­on activity until the safety of our commonweal­th ground water is assured.”

Several first-time candidates for local office won big on Election Day in November, and many attributed their victories to voters opposed to pro-pipeline representa­tives.

Many residents fought against pipeline constructi­on in high-density areas and within 100 feet of schools, churches and senior centers.

Residents were concerned when four inadverten­t returns of drilling fluid were discharged during a four-day time period in East Goshen.

Sunoco also suggested digging trenches instead of using horizontal directiona­l drilling, which earlier plans called for near the Chester County Library and Exton Mall.

Pipeline constructi­on became a legal matter.

On July 26, a judge halted all drilling statewide. The ban lasted more than a week.

In West Goshen, Sunoco also changed its mind. After the PUC voted in July to halt constructi­on in the township, Sunoco said during November that there was no need to build a controvers­ial safety valve near Route 202 and Boot Road.

Also, Uwchlan and East Goshen townships adopted strongly worded non-binding resolution­s.

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 ?? PETE BANNAN — DIGITAL FIRST MEDIA ?? The Sunoco pipeline along Route 352 near Eldridge Drive in East Goshen.
PETE BANNAN — DIGITAL FIRST MEDIA The Sunoco pipeline along Route 352 near Eldridge Drive in East Goshen.
 ?? SUBMITTED PHOTO ?? Sunoco workers respond to an inadverten­t return during pipeline work in a Lisa Drive backyard in West Whiteland.
SUBMITTED PHOTO Sunoco workers respond to an inadverten­t return during pipeline work in a Lisa Drive backyard in West Whiteland.

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