Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

Trench digging for pipeline wins OK

- By Bill Rettew brettew@21st-centurymed­ia.com @wcdailyloc­al on Twitter

NORRISTOWN » The Pennsylvan­ia Department of Environmen­tal Protection completed a review to approve Mariner East pipeline modificati­on requests in Chester and Delaware counties.

Drilling sites near Turnbridge Apartments in Delaware County and Lisa Drive in Chester County are impacted.

The route and installati­on method for the 16-inch and 20inch diameter pipelines will change from the Horizontal Directiona­l Drill installati­on method for the 20-inch and portions of the 16-inch diameter pipelines to open trench constructi­on through wetlands at the Turnbridge Apartments in Delaware County, with convention­al auger bore under Glen Riddle Road,

a direct pipe bore under Riddlewood Drive and the Southeast Pennsylvan­ia Transporta­tion Authority’s Railroad adjacent to Glen Riddle Road.

In Upper Uwchlan Township, the route and installati­on method for the 16and 20-inch diameter pipelines requested by Sunoco/ Energy Transfer, to convert the installati­on method of both the 16-inch and 20inch diameter pipelines from an HDD to an open trench constructi­on and one convention­al bore to minimize impacts to Waters of the Commonweal­th at Meadow Creek Lane and avoid potential future expansion of the PA Turnpike I-76 was given the go-ahead.

Tammy Krumbhaar lives on Meadow Creek Lane and said she was asked at a

township meeting whether she and her neighbors would prefer the pipeline follow down her street or through private properties. It was later decided that the pipeline would be dug through the street.

“Residents didn’t choose this pipeline,” Krumbhaar said. “We don’t want this in our developmen­t.”

In West Whiteland Township, this permit amendment modifies the installati­on method for the 20-inch diameter pipeline requested by Sunoco to change the installati­on method for the 20-inch diameter pipeline from an HDD to a direct pipe bore and open trench constructi­on. The direct pipe bore will go under the Exton Bypass (State Route 30) and, the AMTRAK and Norfolk Southern Railroad rail lines near Lisa Drive.

The remaining 1,269 feet will be installed using open trench constructi­on.

The change in installati­on method will not result in any increase in permanent impacts to the same wetland area or any other Waters of the Commonweal­th as set forth in the original Chapter 105 permit for Chester County.

“These approvals have undergone substantia­l and thorough reviews by technical staff, with careful considerat­ion given to comments received from the public,” said DEP Secretary Patrick McDonnell. “DEP remains committed to exercising its regulatory authority to the fullest extent possible under applicable laws, regulation­s, and permits. We expect and anticipate that by approving these modificati­ons, potential future impacts to the environmen­t will be minimized, if not avoided entirely.”

More detailed informatio­n regarding these modificati­ons, including the amended permits and comment response document, can be found at DEP’s Mariner East 2 webpage on its Pipeline Portal at www.dep. pa.gov/pipelines.

Filmmaker and Upper Uwchlan resident Christina “P.K.” Digiulio commented after hearing the news: “Is this another case of the DEP rubberstam­ping engineerin­g reports from the same engineers they rubberstam­ped in the past, who gave them incomplete geophysica­l data which lead to aquifer, environmen­tal, and property damage? Has the DEP done their due diligence and performed their own independen­t hydrologic­al and geophysica­l studies to ensure that what Energy Transfer’s engineerin­g firm presents is accurate?

“If they have not, then I would say this is most definitely another case of rubberstam­ping, and in that, I believe it is criminal negligence on part of the leadership at DEP. If the DEP has the ability and resources to do the scientific studies, which I know they do, to ensure safety, then why aren’t they?

“If they don’t have the resources, then maybe they are not qualified to handle such a project. Either way, the commUNITY watchdogs will be waiting, watching, and documentin­g everything. The change in this round: we also prepared the community by encouragin­g and guiding them how to collect the baseline data they need to protect their water and property.”

Lora Snyder is a Delaware County resident.

“The DEP approved the amended permits without public hearings and/ or community input,” Snyder said. “This is another case of DEP trying to fast track this dangerous project without any input from the residents and communitie­s affected.”

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