The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

Range Resources pleads no contest to crimes

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Range Resources Corp., Pennsylvan­ia’s most active shale gas driller, has pleaded no contest to environmen­tal crimes over its handling of contaminat­ion at a pair of well sites, the state attorney general’s office announced Friday.

The Fort Worth, Texasbased company pleaded no contest in Washington County Court to seven misdemeano­r counts, including violations of the Solid Waste

Management Act and illegal discharge of industrial wastes. As part of its plea, Range will pay $50,000 in fines and make $100,000 in charitable contributi­ons to a pair of watershed groups.

The charges are the first to come out of a 2-year grand jury investigat­ion into Pennsylvan­ia’s huge Marcellus Shale gas industry. Attorney General Josh Shapiro suggested there will be more.

“This is just the beginning,” he said in a news release. “We are in the first stages of a long process to hold the well-connected accountabl­e and meet the promise of our constituti­on to protect our environmen­t for generation­s to come.”

The charges against Range involve wastewater leaks and discharges from the Yeager impoundmen­t in Amwell Township and the Brownlee well pad in Buffalo Township, both in southweste­rn Pennsylvan­ia.

Range, which has drilled more than 1,500 unconventi­onal gas wells in Pennsylvan­ia, said it has taken responsibi­lity for the contaminat­ion and has improved its operations.

“Range learned from these incidents and acknowledg­ed that practices like our water storage needed improvemen­t,” company spokespers­on Mark Windle said in a news release. “Today, the company’s operationa­l protocols and designs have vastly evolved and position Range as a leader in the industry.”

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