Americans Against Fracking Stop the Frack Attack, EcoWatch, 6, 2013
Residents personally harmed by gas drilling and fracking
held a press conference in front of the White House yesterday and
delivered 250,000 petition signatures from concerned citizens across the
U.S. to Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) Administrator Gina McCarthy
at EPA headquarters. The residents—including Ray Kemble from
Pennsylvania, Steve Lipsky and Shelly Perdue from Texas and John Fenton
from Wyoming—were all part of the EPA fracking investigations in their
respective states that the EPA abandoned despite evidence of water contamination.
The petitions were collected by Stop the Frack Attack and Americans Against Fracking and its advisory committee member, actor Mark Ruffalo.
The petitions demand that the U.S. EPA reopen investigations into
fracking-related drinking water contamination in Pennsylvania, Texas and
Wyoming and provide residents with safe drinking water in the interim.
“Today, I stand with affected community members from Dimock, PA,
Pavilion, WY, and Parker County, TX, to call on President Obama and the
EPA to re-open the investigations on the link between fracking and
drinking water contamination,” said actor and advocate Mark Ruffalo.
“The American people expect and deserve a transparent EPA that makes
science-based decisions, free from political interference.”
This event comes a month after Dimock, Pennsylvania resident Ray Kemble and Susquehanna County resident Craig Stevens delivered more than 50,000 petitions to the EPA asking it to reopen its investigation into the possible connection between gas drilling and water contamination in Dimock.
“Last month, we told EPA officials that we would be back in a month
with more petitions,” said Craig Stevens. “Today, we are here to deliver
five times our original number of petitions, and we stand here with
affected community members from Pavilion,WY, and Parker County, TX, who
have been through the same nightmare we have in Pennsylvania.”
“For years now, I have had to live with toxic, poisoned fracked water
in my home,” added Ray Kemble, a former gas industry employee and an
affected Dimock area resident, who was part of the EPA investigation.
“When the EPA finally stepped in and tested my water, I thought ‘Thank
God. Someone is finally here to help us.’ But then it became apparent to
those of us on the ground that they were playing politics. EPA
officials officially told us that our water was safe to drink but then
told us off-the-record not to drink it. Now the truth is out and we want
justice.”
In late 2010 in Parker County, TX,
the EPA’s investigations led it to issue a rare emergency order because
at least two homeowners were in immediate danger from a well saturated
with flammable methane. More than a year later, the agency rescinded its
mandate without explaining why. A subsequent Associated Press story
reported that although the EPA had scientific evidence connecting the
driller, Range Resources, with drinking water contamination, they
changed course after political pressure from the company and its
lobbyists.
“President Obama told us that we would only extract natural gas if it
didn’t pollute our water,” said Steve Lipsky of Parker County, TX. “The
EPA knows my water was polluted by fracking, their own investigator
told them so. Now I have to truck in my drinking water. President Obama,
you need to tell the EPA to reopen its investigations.”
“The purpose of the EPA is to protect us all from these types of
health and safety hazards,” said Shelly Perdue, of Parker County, TX,
whose water and air have also been contaminated with methane. “The
methane at my house is 18 times the explosive level. It’s time for
President Obama and Gina McCarthy to stand up for our communities.”
More recently, the EPA abandoned its fracking study in Pavillion, WY,
which found benzene, a known carcinogen, at 50 times the level that is
considered safe. However, even with this evidence, the EPA handed its
investigation over to the state of Wyoming, whose lead politicians have
vocally supported fracking. Moreover, this research will be funded by
EnCana, the very company whose drilling and fracking operations may have
caused the groundwater contamination in question.
“The EPA conducted an investigation into the contamination of our
aquifer, and discovered that drilling was responsible,” said John Fenton
a rancher from Pavillion. “But rather than finish, they knuckled under
to political pressure and turned the investigation over to the very
state and company that denied there was a problem in the first place.
President Obama needs to tell the EPA to reopen its investigations.”
This action follows the one million public comments delivered to Obama Administration against fracking on public lands
as part of a growing movement demanding that the Obama Administration
do its job in protecting Americans from dangers of fracking.
Organizations involved in the EPA petition delivery include: Berks Gas Truth, Catskill Citizens for Safe Energy, Catskill Mountainkeeper, Center for Biological Diversity, Delaware Riverkeeper Network, Earthworks, Energy Action Coalition, Environmental Action, Food and Water Watch, Frack Action, Gasland, MoveOn.org, Public Citizen and Western Organization of Resource Councils.
Visit EcoWatch’s FRACKING page for more related news on this topic.
http://ecowatch.com/2013/fracking-victims-demand-epa-reopen-investigations-into-drinking-water/
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