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Dimock, Pennsylvania Residents Will Stop Receiving Water From Fracking Company

MICHAEL RUBINKAM   10/19/11 07:14 PM ET   AP

ALLENTOWN, Pa. — Pennsylvania environmental regulators said Wednesday they have given permission to a natural-gas driller to stop delivering replacement water to residents whose drinking water wells were tainted with methane.

Residents expressed outrage and threatened to take the matter to court.

Cabot Oil & Gas Corp. has been delivering water to homes in the northeast village of Dimock since January of 2009. The Houston-based energy company asked the Department of Environmental Protection for approval to stop the water deliveries by the end of November, saying Dimock's water is safe to drink.

DEP granted Cabot's request late Tuesday, notifying the company in a letter released Wednesday morning. Scott Perry, the agency's acting deputy secretary for oil and gas management, wrote that since Cabot has satisfied the terms of a December settlement agreement requiring the company to remove methane from the residents' water, DEP "therefore grants Cabot's request to discontinue providing temporary potable water."

Residents who are suing Cabot in federal court say their water is still tainted with unsafe levels of methane and possibly other contaminants from the drilling process. They say DEP had no right to allow Cabot to stop paying for replacement water.

Bill Ely, 60, said the water coming out of his well looks like milk.

"You put your hand down a couple of inches and you can't see your hand, that's how much gas there is in it. And they're telling me it was that way all my life," said Ely, who has lived in the family homestead for nearly 50 years and said his well water was crystal clear until Cabot's arrival three years ago.

If Cabot stops refilling his 550-gallon plastic "water buffalo" that supplies water for bathing and washing clothes, Ely said it will cost him $250 per week to maintain it and another $20,000 to $30,000 to install a permanent system to pipe water from an untainted spring on his land.

Ely and another resident, Victoria Switzer, said their attorneys had promised to seek an injunction in the event that DEP gave Cabot permission to halt deliveries. The attorneys did not immediately return an email and phone call seeking comment.

Regulators previously found that Cabot drilled faulty gas wells that allowed methane to escape into Dimock's aquifer. The company denied responsibility, but has been banned from drilling in a 9-square-mile area of Dimock since April of 2010.

Along with its request to stop paying for deliveries of water, Cabot has asked the department for permission to resume drilling in Dimock, a rural community about 20 miles south of the New York state line where 18 residential water wells were found to be polluted with methane. DEP has yet to rule on that request.

Philip Stalnaker, a Cabot vice president, asserted in a Monday letter to DEP that tests show the residents' water to be safe to drink and use for cooking, bathing, washing dishes and doing laundry. He said any methane that remains in the water is naturally occurring but that Cabot is willing to install mitigation systems at residents' request.

Months' worth of sampling data provided by DEP to The Times-Tribune of Scranton show that methane has spiked repeatedly this year in the water wells of several homes, reaching potentially explosive levels in five, the newspaper reported Wednesday.

Cabot cited data from 2,000 water samples taken before the commencement of drilling in Susquehanna County that show that 80 percent of them already had methane.

"The amount of methane in a water supply is neither fixed nor predictable," and depends on a variety of factors unrelated to drilling, Cabot spokesman George Stark said in an email Wednesday.

Methane is an odorless, colorless, tasteless gas commonly found in Pennsylvania groundwater. Sources include swamps, landfills, coal mines and gas wells. Methane is not known to be harmful to ingest, but at high concentrations it's flammable and can lead to asphyxiation.

The December 2010 agreement between DEP and Cabot required the company to offer residential treatment systems that remove methane from the residents' water, and to pay them twice the assessed tax value of their homes. A half-dozen treatment systems have been installed, and Cabot said they are effective at removing the gas.

But residents who filed a federal lawsuit against Cabot are appealing the December settlement. They favor an earlier, scuttled DEP plan that would have forced Cabot to pay nearly $12 million to connect their homes to a municipal water line.

Switzer said it's inappropriate for the state to allow Cabot to stop the water deliveries while the appeal is pending – and while there still are problems with residents' water.

"They keep changing the rules to accommodate this gas company. It's so blatantly corrupt," she said.

DEP spokeswoman Katherine Gresh said the December settlement gave Cabot the right to halt the deliveries once the company funded escrow accounts for the homeowners and is "independent of the water quality results."

Cabot plans to inform each homeowner by Nov. 1 that it will discontinue deliveries of bulk and bottled water by Nov. 30. The company also offered to pay for a plumber to reconnect residents' water wells. Cabot said it will stop delivering replacement water "at its earliest opportunity" to homeowners who refuse to allow testing of their well water.

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ALLENTOWN, Pa. — Pennsylvania environmental regulators said Wednesday they have given permission to a natural-gas driller to stop delivering replacement water to residents whose drinking water w...
ALLENTOWN, Pa. — Pennsylvania environmental regulators said Wednesday they have given permission to a natural-gas driller to stop delivering replacement water to residents whose drinking water w...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Chris Salmon
Geologist and Computer Scientist
07:31 PM on 10/21/2011
"Months' worth of sampling data provided by DEP to The Times-Tribune of Scranton show that methane has spiked repeatedly this year in the water wells of several homes, reaching potentially explosive levels in five, the newspaper reported Wednesday."

You kinda left out that this is consistent with what Cabot has been claiming all along - that the methane in this aquifer has nothing to do with them. I'm not saying their right, DEP is right, or complainant well owners are right, I'm just saying THIS bit of data is actually consistent with it being a naturally occurring problem, which is common in PA.
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03:43 PM on 10/21/2011
There is an article about "fracking" in the November issue of Scientific American magazine, written by Chris Mooney, which I recommend to anyone interested in the subject.

It is a slightly complicated article, not designed for the cable news channels, but after reading it I conclude that the scientists on the payrolls of the various oil companies are, at best, incorrect about their findings, and at worst, intentionally so.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Chris Salmon
Geologist and Computer Scientist
07:36 PM on 10/21/2011
Which article is that? I read the fracking articles in Scientific American today and found them to be completely awful and incredibly inaccurate. One even had the long-disproven "Halliburton Loophole" lie and canard in it! (gawd I'm sick of seeing that lie propagated!!) The only one I saw by Mooney was about 2 paragraphs long and only said "Ingraffea went to a meeting with some oil company scientists at the EPA."

Maybe I missed something - can you post a link to the story you're talking about?
Genders
Love, Tolerance, Enlightenment
09:43 PM on 10/28/2011
"Halliburt­on Loophole" Lie? which one is that?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Ezio
How can we win when fools can be kings?
09:37 AM on 10/21/2011
It would be cheaper for the company to buy everyone out and move the whole town somewhere else. Then they could drill all they wanted.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
casaroonc
Your micro-bio is empty
10:10 PM on 10/20/2011
ah...Corporations. Just got love how they want to make a better life for you & me. It really is a shame how people just don't see that.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
gtp
I was in the smoke filled room.
08:31 AM on 10/21/2011
People are blind to it, because like all those young people in OWS, they let themselves get sucked into that evil vortex of resenting, rather than worshiping, the "success" of others.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
nomadrdw
Zen Druid
11:53 AM on 10/22/2011
ah, so you are ok with the golden bull that rules the life of the world? where greed is the only virtue? seems to me that i remember a story from the bible about that same golden bull and the 10 commandments.
it is amazing to me how a "christian nation" has totally forgotten that entire idea from the bible.
your humanity and greed are very much a show of the times the teabaggers have given us.
and if you would open your eyes, there are people of all ages at OWS. we are all sick of greed and profit being the only motivation that rules this country.
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batguano
As Long As Grass Grow, Wind Blow & The Sky Is Blue
08:24 PM on 10/20/2011
All of us who live in NY must fight fracking here (and everywhere), or we will be the next victims of corporate greed and environmental poisoning at our expense. The operators don't give a damn about other people's lives or health or of the land.

We should send copies of this report to Gov Cuomo so no-one can say they weren't warned and knew the truth. The fracking companies will drill, pollute, hide the facts, and skip town with their profits while the poor suckers and victims of their environmental terrorism will be left holding the bag. Any talk of "jobs" being produced by this poisonous process is just rubbish; what good are "jobs" when your land and water are poisoned? Oh, right, the people who profit from polluting your land and water and got the "jobs" don't live there!

This entire process of poisoning land, air and water with the blessings of gove "regulators" is another example of the corruption/subversion of gov by corporate big-money. The revolving-door from corporate polluter, to gov regulator, and back to the industry you once "regulated" is a criminal process and abomination that must be smashed!

http://www.propublica.org/series/buried-secrets-gas-drillings-environmental-threat

OWS!
05:19 PM on 10/20/2011
You people are uninformed freaking morons. The DEP ordered Cabot to pay millions in fines, to plug several wells, which cost 5 million a pop, to pay these affected landowners double the value of their property (which amounted to another 4.1 million), they TRIED to make Cabot pay 12 million dollars to run them a new water line but the local residents shouted the idea down. The DEP completely re-wrote the book on drilling standards because of Dimock, and they have ordered Cabot to deliver these people clean water for nearly three years now. And finally, after hundreds and hundreds of tests, tens of millions spent by Cabot to fix the issue, and just compensation to the landowners, they have proven the water to be back to normal.

And you mental giants call it "BLATANT CORRUPTION."

And the best part of this is, METHANE ISN'T EVEN TOXIC!!! It's naturally occurring in that area. Over 2,000 baseline water tests in that area have revealed that over 80% of the water wells, even in areas where no drilling has taken place, have detectable levels of methane in the water.

Read this Penn State University publication (from before the Marcellus boom) about water in methane, and how it's not toxic.

http://pubs.cas.psu.edu/FreePubs/pdfs/XH0010.pdf
12:25 PM on 10/21/2011
And have you looked into where PSU gets its funding for these studies?

Also, the fact of the matter is that the water did get tainted, as referenced by the gentleman with the milky water. No amount of money can bring that water back, nor can money bring back any water that could be tainted in the future. The amount of millions spent is immaterial compared to the water that gets tainted.
11:11 AM on 10/25/2011
I hope YOU are on one of the lists people are making.
Power does not corrupt. The corrupt are already corrupt when they seek power. They are not normal humans - more like a bunch of pod people living in disquise pretending they are as human as the rest of us.
Do you think we don't know that academia has been purchased, just like our government and that they will write and support whatever you tell them to?! I wouldn't waste my time reading an article recommended by a fracker like you.
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moonwolfph
Open the Doors, See All the Sheeple.
04:26 PM on 10/20/2011
If a foreign entity came in and permanently POISONED billions of gallons of America's water, that would be properly identified as ECO-TERRORISM.
PROSECUTE all those ECO-TERRORISTS complicit in poisoning America.
Our Benedict Arnold politicians look the other way for MONEY- a.k.a. BRIBES.
These are acts of pure TREASON.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
BlueFloyd
Aldus Shrugged. The Antidote to Ayn Rand.
03:32 PM on 10/20/2011
Oh, let them drink methane!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
flowereater
Proceed, Governor . . .
03:00 PM on 10/20/2011
The Bushes have shored up their families wealth for the next few centuries with the purchase of close to 100,000 acres of land in South America. Just below the land sits the largest aquifer on the planet, The Guarani Aquifer.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
flowereater
Proceed, Governor . . .
02:49 PM on 10/20/2011
Where are all the water bottle companies? Shouldn't they be protecting their resources?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
sylvia wadlington
Kindle Writer
02:07 PM on 10/20/2011
Welcome to Flaming Water. Because people are turning their back on oil, big oil needs a new way to keep getting those daily billions, so they decided to switch to natural gas that GE will use to generate electricity to power our new green cars. Then they will smother the other green engery industries until they are the only transportation energy available. Seen all those ads on TV lately about Natural Gas being your best friend and what about those SELF CONTAINED WELLS? What exactly does that mean? Maybe just whatever rock they drilled through to get where they wanted to be? Natural Gas is just Big Oil with a new name and a new spin and now they've wrecked the air, they are going to burn up the water. Our new friends, helping to kill millions everyday.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Cayce58
01:23 PM on 10/20/2011
Its a republican conspiracy. Lots of democratic cities downstream of the fracking use those rivers for water. If you can't disenfrachise the poor by requiring voter ID's, give em cancer. One way or the other, they don't get to vote.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Cayce58
01:05 PM on 10/20/2011
Was in the paper this week. About 80% of the local leaders who are resposible for their areas are the first ones to get contracts.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
PennLawyer
12:59 PM on 10/20/2011
"BLATANTLY CORRUPT"
Those two words from the article say it all about Pennsylvania politics.
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rocksage7
sustainability rocks
12:11 PM on 10/20/2011
you can see what they are doing.....start a chapter of earth first...take the fight to them...its your country they are destroying...use the OWS for a voice.....do something...if they come my way I will..that is a promise.....EARTH FIRST.....its the only home we have