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Friday, April 29, 2011

The extent to which we rely on plankton for our lives is the extent to which we are plankton.

Friday, April 22, 2011

New Yorkers United to Ban Fracking

New Yorkers United to Ban Fracking

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
April 20, 2011

Statewide Grass-Roots Leaders Meet,

Agree a Fracking Ban Is the Only Acceptable Outcome

Nearly 70 grass-roots activist leaders from around New York State met in Binghamton on Saturday, April 16, to confer on ways to institute a statewide ban on hydraulic fracturing, or fracking, and form a powerful alliance.

The polluting, industrializing, and energy-intensive method of extracting petro-methane, aka “natural” gas, has been causing water pollution and health problems in other states where it has taken place. This group, which includes entrepreneurs and business leaders, wants to stop it from harming New York—not to follow the usual regulatory route of mitigating harm after it happens.

The New Yorkers were joined by allies from Pennsylvania, Ohio, West Virginia, and Michigan, all states currently under siege from the gas exploitation industry.

Mike Bernhard is a member of Chenango-Delaware-Otsego Gas Drilling Opposition Group (CDOG), whose website has been tracking drilling issues for two-and-a-half years. “The more we’ve learned,” said Bernhard, “the more we know it’s impossible to extract shale gas from the Marcellus or any other formation around the country without catastrophic effects on our quality of life, property rights, property values, communities, individuals and traditional industries, as well as on the environment.”

Gloria Mattera, who traveled from Brooklyn for the all-day series of workshops and presentations, stressed the statewide unity of the group. “Although New York City politicians seem to think that the watershed that supplies 90 percent of city water is at least nominally protected,” she said, “it is not. We’re all in this together.”

Carl Arnold, of Delaware County, echoed Mattera’s thoughts. “We recognize that if the clean fresh waters of the Delaware, Susquehanna, Finger Lakes and other watersheds are contaminated by this dangerous and destructive industry, we all lose. We won’t let industry or anyone drive a wedge between ‘upstaters’ and ‘downstaters.’ We’re all New Yorkers, and we all want a healthy environment and safe water, clean air and a healthy food supply.”

The group was united in feeling that New York taxpayers should not be forced to bear the financial burden of cleaning up the toxic mess the gas industry leaves wherever it goes.

The day was filled with sessions on legal and issues related to fracking, and attendees networked over lunch catered by Binghamton eatery Cyber Café, supplemented with local foods brought by conveners.

The group recognizes there’s a hard fight ahead. “It’s not easy for a bunch of ordinary citizens to fight a megatrillion-dollar industry that obviously has a lot of local, state, and national politicians in its pocket,” said Maura Stephens of Tioga County, a cofounder of Coalition to Protect New York (CPNY), which also sent representatives from Chemung, Oneida, Schuyler and Yates Counties to the conference.

Fellow Tioga County resident Cecile Lawrence, a member of several organizations working for peace and a greener economy, added, “Other besieged areas of this country, as well as other parts of the world, are looking to New York State for leadership in ending the corporate invasion and toxic occupation of their communities. We aim to provide that leadership.”

LuAnne Kozma, who drove nine hours from Michigan to attend the conference, said, “More and more of us in Michigan recognize that a pro-regulatory approach simply allows fracking to continue and that only a ban will prohibit it.”

Kozma is with Don’t Frack Michigan, which seeks a statewide ban on fracking. She was glad to connect with many experienced New York activists who shared their ideas for educating the public and getting the ear of honorable legislators.

Attendees stressed that attaching the disclosure of fracking chemicals to only the public water supply, as the FRAC Act now languishing in the U.S. Congress would do, is not enough.

“That abandons tens of millions of rural people around the country who rely on well water,” pointed out Jack Ossont of Yates County, a member of the Committee to Preserve the Finger Lakes and CPNY. “Besides, the FRAC Act requires only that companies disclose what chemicals they’re using—it doesn’t protect our water from contamination by industry in the first place. That’s not acceptable.”

All conference participants agree that only a full ban on fracking for methane, a potent greenhouse gas, will protect the clean fresh water, air quality, food supply, community infrastructure, property values and quality of life now enjoyed by people in beautiful New York State.

Robert Jereski of New York City put it bluntly: “Shale gas is a dead end. The transition to a green economy must begin now. That makes sense for jobs and for a sustainable economy.”

On May 2, New Yorkers United to Ban Fracking will join thousands of other New Yorkers in Albany to demand a statewide ban on this industrial nightmare. Find more information at http://www.un-naturalgas.org.

Tuesday, April 05, 2011

With spring 2011 comes......


Photo of the opening plenary at Left Forum in NYC in March.

Increasing number of events on fracking. Events downstate and upstate. Concerns about injection wells for ramming toxic fracking waste deep into the ground, in OH and AK. Do earthquakes result? Mining sand for fracking, causing lung scarring in WI and elsewhere. The horror of the earthquake/tsunami/multiple nuclear plants breaking down in Japan continues. Radiation released into the atmosphere floating across the ocean eastward to the North American continent. Increased radiation levels found in rainwater and surface water in areas of the U.S. but the EPA assures us it's not of concern. Reading that the EPA has raised the level of "safety."
With spring comes plants pushing up out of the ground and the planting of crops. The combined threats of fracking, Fukushima radiation, existing fracking south of the border releasing toxins into the air, trucking frack waste to landfills this side of the border and spreading radioactive frack waste salt on roads in winter now to blow around. How to remain hopeful as Mr. Hope Obama touts the need for un-natural gas to save us all.