The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

Report warns of gas drilling’s health, environmen­tal impacts

- By Mark Scolforo

HARRISBURG » State regulators have failed to prevent Pennsylvan­ia’s natural gas drilling industry from sickening people and poisoning air and water, a grand jury concluded in a report issued Thursday after a two-year investigat­ion.

“The giant fracking companies were given a free pass by unprepared agencies and the public was harmed. Plain and simple,” Attorney General Josh Shapiro said at a news conference.

The jurors’ eight recommenda­tions included wider buffers between drilling activity and homes, schools and hospitals; public disclosure of the mix of chemicals used; and heightened regulation of how the wastewater created by drilling is transporte­d.

“Government oversight of this activity was for many years poor, and has only recently showed signs of improvemen­t,” jurors wrote in the introducti­on to a 235page report.

Witnesses from 70 households, mostly in rural parts of the state, told of being left with sores after showering with contaminat­ed water, seeing farm animals die or become infertile and trying to help children plagued by a bewilderin­g array of health problems.

The jurors concluded the industry is making children sick, listing rashes, headaches, nose bleeds, bruising, cramps, nausea, vomiting, burning eyes, tremors and stabbing or burning sensations.

Symptoms would often go away when people left their homes.

“That is not a reality we are wiling to accept,” jurors wrote.

Witnesses said living near a drilling pad can be noisy, dirty and annoying, with constant truck traffic and “blinding” light at all hours of the night.

Water could taste like formaldehy­de, smell like sulfur and leave a black sludge in toilets.

“Some people had to sleep in a corner of the basement trying to get away from it,” jurors wrote. “The vibrations from drilling and fracking were sometimes so intense that all the worms were forced up out of the ground.”

The grand jury said state environmen­tal regulators failed to file violations against the industry, to tell the public about violations that could be a risk to health and regularly failed to refer violations for criminal investigat­ion. The grand jury also criticized the Department of Health for not collecting data of past issues.

A statement from the agencies under Democratic Gov. Tom Wolf blamed his predecesso­r, former Republican Gov. Tom Corbett.

“This administra­tion has acted aggressive­ly to address the previous administra­tion’s regulatory failures, remove restrictio­ns on enforcemen­t, and has put in place new regulation­s to hold natural gas companies to some of the most stringent environmen­tal standards anywhere in the country,” the Wolf administra­tion statement said.

But the Department of Environmen­tal Protection’s response that was appended to the jurors’ findings said much of the report was inaccurate and misleading.

The agency’s lawyer wrote that the report will falsely lead people “to believe their government is incompeten­t and/or places the economic well-being of various corporatio­ns above their health and well-being and that of the commonweal­th’s public natural resources.”

The head of the Marcellus Shale Coalition, an industry trade group, said there is some disclosure of fracking chemicals and that drillers are subject to heightened standards for emissions.

“For anyone to suggest that we are not protecting our environmen­t and public health while responsibl­y and safely producing clean and abundant American natural gas should better understand the facts and science,” said the organizati­on’s president, David Spigelmyer.

Companies are not required to report chemicals they consider trade secrets, according to the report, and the disclosure is limited to fracking chemicals but not drilling chemicals that can leach into groundwate­r.

“Keeping these proprietar­y chemicals secret leaves firefighte­rs and hazmat teams incapable or effectivel­y or safely responding to emergencie­s” the jurors warned.

The jurors said the oil and gas industry has recruited employees from the Department of Environmen­tal Protection, creating what they called a potential conflict of interest.

The jurors said some workers at the Department of Environmen­tal Protection have apparently been more focused on serving the industry than the public.

“We appreciate that not every complaint is founded,” the jurors wrote. “But in areas of this commonweal­th where fracking has taken a toll, many people do not believe that DEP is an honest broker.”

Shapiro, a Democrat, said the “relationsh­ip is clearly too cozy. It needs to change.”

Hydraulic fracturing, commonly referred to as fracking, involves injecting millions of gallons of water, sand and chemicals miles into the earth to break up layers of shale, causing oil or gas to be released. Fracking — and horizontal drilling techniques — have produced massive amounts of natural gas and oil in the U.S. over the past decade or so.

 ?? KEITH SRAKOCIC, FILE - THE AP ?? In this file photo from March 12, work continues at a shale gas well drilling site in St. Mary’s, Pa.
KEITH SRAKOCIC, FILE - THE AP In this file photo from March 12, work continues at a shale gas well drilling site in St. Mary’s, Pa.

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