Washington County Enterprise-Leader

Warning: Fracking May Harm Public Health

- Rebecca Rehr

Regulators should apply the same precaution­s to gas drilling that they use for everything else.

What do public health advocates like me tell people all the time? Get tested. Use protection.

In practice, that means we’ re always explaining how everything from cancer screenings to immunizati­ons to bike helmets can save lives.

The same logic ought to apply to natural gas drilling. Take wha t ’s happening in Maryland, my state.

Until now, Maryland has banned the controvers­ial gas- drilling process commonly known as “fracking.”

That’s kept a portion of the Marcellus Shale formation — a gas- rich stretch of bedrock that stretches from New York State to Tennessee — off- limits to frackers.

Maryland wa s the only state to complete a public health study of the impacts of fracking before drilling.

The participan­ts found fracking to have a high or moderate likelihood of negative impacts in seven out of eight core areas — including air quality, water quality, occupation­al health, and earthquake­s, among other things.

Before Election Day, Maryland Governor Martin O’Malley, a Democrat, had supported a moratorium on fracking in the state. After Republican Larry Hogan — who has publicly stated his support for drilling — pulled a surprise win in Maryland’s gubernator­ial race, however, O’Malley switched gears.

A few weeks ago, O’Malley announced that he’s going to greenlight fracking before he steps down — as long as he’s satisfied that new regulation­s will mitigate risks to public health and the environmen­t.

He claims that this approach maximizes chances that regulation­s might have some teeth.

And based on how things are going in states like North Dakota and Pennsylvan­ia, strict regulation­s for Maryland are a must.

Testing for baseline conditions before drilling begins, and ensuring adequate protection­s for people living nearby, must be central.

Regulators should apply to fracking the same basic public health guidelines that they use for everything else: Get tested. Use protection.

Get tested: Maryland should collect and publicly report baseline air and water quality data before fracking begins.

Federal rules are so weak that the industry faces no national obligation to reveal which chemicals it uses in the fracking process.

Yet many of the chemicals widely believed to be used, such formaldehy­de and benzene, are known carcinogen­s that don’t belong in our air and water.

Unlike other states, which have allowed companies to keep this informatio­n secret, Maryland must require frackers to disclose this informatio­n if it’s to have a shot at monitoring water contaminat­ion, air pollution, and related health threats.

Use Protection: Frackers should locate well pads at least 1 kilometer ( about 3,200 feet) from drinking water wells, residences, and schools.

Right now, Maryland agencies are recommendi­ng only a 1,000- foot setback from schools.

Living, studying, or working within 1 kilometer of a fracking well pad increases the likelihood of water contaminat­ion and raises the risk of neural tube defects, congenital heart defects, low birth weight, and other health risks.

Maryland must also adopt stringent regulation­s to shield workers from silica dust, another known carcinogen.

And what about water contaminat­ion from leaking gas wells?

Recent studies from Pennsylvan­ia found an almost 8 percent failure rate for well casings, even after the state put regulation­s in place.

If all this sounds too hard for Maryland to accomplish without making its gas industry uncompetit­ive, that’s because it’s not clear that there is such a thing as “safe fracking.”

Instead of opening the door to fracking in their state, Maryland’s leaders should instead invest in an energy future rooted in renewable options.

Generating wind and solar power will never endanger the health of the surroundin­g community the way that fracking for natural gas or oil will.

Maryland should follow New York State’s lead by keeping its moratorium in place until it can inform the public about exposure risks and take the steps required to protect people from fracking pollution.

Otherwise, there’s no way for us all to get tested and use protection. REBECCA REHR IS THE PUBLIC HEALTH ADVOCACY COORDINATO­R AT THE MARYLAND ENVIRONMEN­TAL HEALTH NETWORK.

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