The Morning Journal (Lorain, OH)

Commission awards bids to frack under state parks, wildlife areas

- By Samantha Hendrickso­n Samantha Hendrickso­n is a corps member for the Associated Press/Report for America Statehouse News Initiative.

COLUMBUS An Ohio commission awarded bids to frack oil and gas under state parks Monday, despite statewide backlash and an ongoing investigat­ion into possibly fraudulent support.

The Ohio Oil and Gas Land Management Commission granted the mineral rights to several oil and gas companies, allowing them to frack for oil and gas under land owned by the Ohio Department of Natural Resources and the Ohio Department of Transporta­tion, including state parks and designated wildlife areas.

The Texas-based Encino Energy Partners was granted the rights to frack under Valley Run Wildlife Area and Zepernick Wildlife Area. The West Virginia-based Infinity Natural Resources, LLC, can frack under Salt Fork State Park. These and other entities are now cleared to receive leases from the state and must discuss permits and other details with state regulators.

The Ohio Department of Natural Resources will receive $59.7 million in bonuses under the fracking leases and each lease includes a 12.5% royalty paid to the state for production.

Fracking is a technique used to extract natural gas or oil from impermeabl­e rock formations. Water, chemicals and sand are blasted into these formations at pressures high enough to crack the rock, which allows trapped gas and oil to flow to the surface.

The department said in an emailed statement that the leases include provisions such as water quality testing and restricted drilling times.

Commission chair Ryan Richardson also emphasized at the Monday meeting that according to the language in the awarded leases, no surface areas of the parks would be disturbed by drilling as it would occur undergroun­d and the well pads would be offsite.

Richardson did not make herself available for comment Monday.

Protesters filled the meeting room as they have consistent­ly since last year, when nomination­s for the land to be fracked were first discussed.

Many cried “shame,” and held signs in front of the meeting’s livestream cameras. Some had makeup on their faces to appear diseased and wore sacks with signs that read “disease” and “drought” among other effects of climate change.

The commission has faced multiple legal challenges, including an appeal brought by Earthjusti­ce, a nonprofit that helps litigate environmen­tal issues. The organizati­on filed it in Franklin County Court of Common Pleas last year, on behalf of advocacy groups including the Ohio Environmen­tal Council and Save Ohio Parks, among others.

The groups were appealing the state’s decision to open up the land to bids last November, arguing that the commission did not follow the bidding process outlined in state law and violated the state’s open meetings requiremen­ts.

But a Franklin county judge said that the groups lacked authority to bring the appeal in the first place and dismissed the appeal Friday.

“Climate change is real, and it is here,” Save Ohio Parks’ steering committee said in a statement. “Salt Fork State Park, Valley Run Wildlife Area, and Zepernick Wildlife Area are just the first to come under attack. Save Ohio Parks will continue advocating to protect our public lands.”

Fracking opponents decried the commission as being “sheep” and giving in to corporate greed at the expense of Ohio greenspace.

They also say the commission lacks transparen­cy, as there have been no public hearings on the bids and they didn’t know who was bidding on the land, despite the lands being taxpayer funded.

State law mandates that the entities who nominated the land for fracking and those that bid on the land must remain anonymous until the bidding process is complete. The amounts that companies paid for land mineral rights was not immediatel­y disclosed.

Opponents have also criticized the commission for continuing the process amid an investigat­ion by the Ohio Attorney General’s office into possibly fraudulent letters sent in support of fracking.

A Cleveland.com investigat­ion last fall found that over a hundred Ohio residents said their names were attached to form letters sent to the commission in a public comment period without their knowledge — all of them urging state parks to allow fracking.

The letters could be traced back to multiple pro-oil entities, including Consumer Energy Alliance, a Texas-based pro-oil and gas organizati­on.

The alliance has denied collecting names without permission and has called Cleveland. com’s coverage of the situation “libelous.”

“CEA has cooperated fully with the Attorney-General’s Office at every step. While the situation is ongoing, we can make no further comment,” Bryson Hull, a spokespers­on for the alliance, said in an emailed statement.

A spokespers­on for the Ohio Attorney General’s office said they are still completing the investigat­ion and will make informatio­n available “at the appropriat­e time.”

 ?? SAMANTHA HENDRICKSO­N — ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Protesters pack a meeting of the Ohio Oil and Gas Land Management Commission in Columbus on Feb. 26. The commission awarded bids to frack for oil and under public land, including state parks and designated wildlife areas, to several oil and gas companies.
SAMANTHA HENDRICKSO­N — ASSOCIATED PRESS Protesters pack a meeting of the Ohio Oil and Gas Land Management Commission in Columbus on Feb. 26. The commission awarded bids to frack for oil and under public land, including state parks and designated wildlife areas, to several oil and gas companies.

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