The Oneida Daily Dispatch (Oneida, NY)

Fracking activists want Obama on their side

President has taken a pro-fracking stance

- By Michael Gormley

When President Obama visited upstate for two days this week, he wanted to talk about higher education and gain support for his efforts to make it affordable.

But activists of both sides of the fracking issue had their own ideas of what should be on his agenda.

On Friday, more than 500 chanting and signtoting supporters and opponents of natural gas drilling through hydrofrack­ing got their say Friday along President Barack Obama’s bus tour route into the Southern Tier, where the debate over whether the state should expand fracking is hottest.

Not in attendance on Obama’s visit to the state University at Binghamton was Democratic Gov. Andrew Cuomo, who’ll decide whether to allow fracking. Although a decision on the dicey political issue has been promised for months, Cuomo says he awaits a public health study by his administra­tion.

Cuomo had met Obama in Buffalo on Thursday but didn’t join him in stops through central New York.

Among the crowd were members of New Yorkers A ga inst Fracking, who aimed to sway Obama’s pro-fracking position and inf luence Cuomo’s decision. The orga n i zation feels the process, which involves injecting water, sand and chemicals deep underg round to unlock gas deposits, is a threat to the environmen­t and public health.

“We hope to show the president that he needs to look at the science and ban fracking across the nation,” group member John Armstrong said. “Governor Cuomo is no stranger to anti-fracking protests, and we hope he sees momentum building against fracking.”

Julia Walsh, of Frack Action and New Yorkers A ga inst Fracking, said Obama “clearly put politics and gas interests over every- day Americans.”

Their signs referenced Obama’s famous “yes we ca n” campaign slogan: “Yes, we can ban fracking.”

Neil Vitale, an organic dairy farmer for 45 years with 80 cows in Steuben, was among those along Obama’s route. His farm is 5 miles from Pennsylvan­ia, which allows fracking and has seen it flourish beyond projection­s, according to a report this month by Bentek, a company that analyzes energy trends.

Vitale said he has two sons who want to continue his business and drilling would help them buy equipment, which is “almost impossible for a small dairy to do anymore.” He said a drilling well on his farm “will secure a family’s finances for a generation, if not more.”

Many other pro-fracking residents of the long economical­ly distressed Southern Tier and groups of business leaders were holding a rally and urging Cuomo to take Obama’s lead. Obama has pushed the hydrofrack­ing of natural gas trapped in deep shale deposits as a way to boost the economy and make the country more independen­t from energyprod­ucing nations. The relatively recent boom in drilling in other states that share the same shale deposit as New York — Ohio, Pennsylvan­ia and West Virginia — has led to jobs and economic gains.

“President Obama’s visit to Binghamton today could have been in celebratio­n of the revival of the Southern Tier,” said Brad Gill, executive director of the Independen­t Oil & Gas Associatio­n of New York. “He has often spoken of the importance of natural gas exploratio­n as being critical to our nation’s environmen­t and economy. Instead, we must join together again and ask the governor to lift the five-year moratorium here in New York. There is no reason for this abusive delay.”

Cuomo met Obama on Thursday in Buffalo for the beginning of the president’s two- day tour but didn’t venture to the Southern Tier, roiled by the fracking issue.

The strongest supporters of what he calls safe drilling for natural gas include the Southern Tier’s powerful Senate Deputy Majority Leader Thomas Libous, a Republican whose district includes the Binghamton area. He is a close ally of Cuomo, who has spent the summer pushing job- creation measures in upstate New York but has focused mostly on tourism.

Libous, who was invited to the event, said if he got a chance to talk to Obama, “I will tell him I’m appreciati­ve of his stance on fracking.”

 ?? JEFF MILLER — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Y SUN-BULLETIN ?? Demonstrat­ors rally as the presidenti­al motorcade passes by Otsiningo Park on Friday in Binghamton. Supporters and opponents of fracking lined the route being taken Friday by visiting President Barack Obama.
JEFF MILLER — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Y SUN-BULLETIN Demonstrat­ors rally as the presidenti­al motorcade passes by Otsiningo Park on Friday in Binghamton. Supporters and opponents of fracking lined the route being taken Friday by visiting President Barack Obama.

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