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Ohio Fracking: State Agency Proposes Rules For Drilling In State Parks

First Posted: 04/12/2012 2:18 pm Updated: 04/13/2012 8:13 am

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) — An Ohio natural resource agency's proposed guidelines for drilling in state parks would require natural gas and oil companies to stay at least 300 feet — the length of a football field — from campgrounds, certain waterways and sites deemed historically or archaeologically valuable.

Documents on proposed guidelines were released by the state Department of Natural Resources this week after the Ohio chapter of the Sierra Club filed a lawsuit claiming the agency ignored repeated requests by the group to review them.

The 89-page report lists the "best management practices" on site restoration and other topics, and guidelines for emergency and pollution incidents. Other proposals include state approval before companies could store drilling waste in pits and an agreement on the locations of all drilling equipment.

The agency also released proposals for drilling leases. They show possible arrangements for companies interested in drilling directly below or drilling horizontally from land adjacent to property with oil and gas deposits.

Agency spokesman Carlo LoParo, who said the 300-foot buffer proposal would be applied above ground, said there are no specific policy decisions yet on what state land will be put up for competitive bids for drilling. But he emphasized that hundreds of other state properties besides state parks would be considered. He said a five-member commission that will be appointed later this summer will select the properties and lease the mineral rights, though the state can move forward with plans before the commission is appointed.

Natural gas drillers in Ohio are active in the eastern part of the state, going after deposits in the underground Utica Shale. The state passed a law in September that opened its parks and other state-owned lands for drilling, and officials have been developing leasing terms for drilling companies.

Jed Thorp, the Sierra Club's Ohio chapter manager, said the proposals are inadequate. He said he's hopeful state lawmakers will eventually reverse the law.

"When people go to a state park, they don't want to see fracking, or hear fracking, or smell fracking," he said in a statement. "They want to relax."

Thorp also said the Sierra Club, which filed its lawsuit Monday, won't drop its suit. He said the agency failed to follow the state's public records law by ignoring requests for the documents as far back as October.

LoParo called the group's reaction premature because the documents are draft proposals that don't apply to a particular circumstance. He said the documents were only completed this week.

"Public records are something that we take very seriously," he said. "You can't provide something that you don't have. And these documents were provided as soon as they were available."

Opponents say they're concerned about the environmental impact of the drilling, which includes hydraulic fracturing, or "fracking." The process involves drillers blasting millions of gallons of water, sand and chemicals deep underground to break up rock deposits.

Supporters of the law say there's a potentially vast reservoir of oil and gas in the Utica Shale, which lies below the Marcellus Shale, where oil companies in Pennsylvania have drilled thousands of wells in search of natural gas and oil.

But natural gas drilling has become a contentious issue in Pennsylvania, where public health advocates have criticized a new law that will limit accessible medical information on illnesses that may be related to gas drilling. It takes effect April 14.

According to the National Conference of State Legislatures, more than 130 bills have been recently introduced in 24 states to address fracking. It includes a range of topics like waste treatment, disposal regulations and requirements to publicly disclose the composition of fracturing fluid chemicals. At least nine states have proposed fracking suspensions or studies on their impact.

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COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) — An Ohio natural resource agency's proposed guidelines for drilling in state parks would require natural gas and oil companies to stay at least 300 feet — the length of a foot...
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) — An Ohio natural resource agency's proposed guidelines for drilling in state parks would require natural gas and oil companies to stay at least 300 feet — the length of a foot...
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02:39 PM on 04/26/2012
Fracking fear, drummed up by the EPA - as told to us by a regional administrator.

I would sleep like a baby next to a fracking well - bring them on - EVERYWHERE.
10:07 AM on 04/25/2012
funny they set aside parks to avoid development and to protect the crittors using eminent domain and other tactics then turn around and lease it cheaply to foreign investors for gas and oil. sounds like fraud to me. I would live near fracking if my water is secure, my air and minimal noise.and no magma is going to come to the surface lol. as one poster said that oil and gas will probably not go to lowering our prices but sold to china and other places where they can get a better price. so while we bear the costs, subsides (give access to parks cheaply is a subsides) we will not reap the benefits. that is how greed and selfishness works. as the native americans would say to betrayal of treaties by white man, he speaks with fork tongue.

rose
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banana republican
Next in line for crumbs from the King's Table
10:28 AM on 04/15/2012
Heck yeah! Two years ago we camped amidst the oil wells at Oil City, PA. Here we are, two years later, alive and well. Didn't even need to be hospitalized and also, never got any oil under our fingernails (not that oil under the fingernails represents a life threatening condition.)
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vetxcl
11:08 PM on 04/14/2012
Hey kids! Next let's tour three mile island!! Doesn't that sound like fun?
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vetxcl
11:08 PM on 04/14/2012
To answer the question posed by the hook: no, no way.
06:12 AM on 04/14/2012
Finding oil here in the US. Won't make gas prices cheaper. It won't. We'll export it all. It's not like a new well is found in Texas and its shipped to a refiner in the US. Not how it works. People want to say its supply and demand, and it's just not. All based on money.
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grappler1987
Heaven is a gift, not a reward
03:23 PM on 04/15/2012
"We'll export it all."

Funny, thanks. Hyperbole is good for entertainment.
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olitenup
11:05 AM on 04/13/2012
No fracking way! But, as floridan56 points out, what is up with the state law that prohibits doctors talking about illnesses relating to fracking with their patients? And why isn't the AMA in an uproar about that?

WTF!!!
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floridan56
Irony: it's what's for dinner.
09:08 AM on 04/13/2012
Heck with the 'camping by the well' concept.
The real kicker in this article is the "new LAW to limit accessible medical information on illnesses that may be related to gas drilling". Takes effect TOMORROW! AMAZING!
D-Driller
my micro-bio is empty
03:51 AM on 04/13/2012
"It's unclear whether the 300-foot buffer rule in Ohio will be applied above ground or below."

At first I thought that was a joke... Then I realized, no, that is actually the intelligence level of the author of this, uh, article, I guess you could call it... On top of that, since all of the journalists are yellow on here, is this state parks or state land? It says parks, yes, I read it, but just want to make sure.
10:23 PM on 04/12/2012
Let's see...we have an NG glut and the prices dropped through the $2.00 floor and Ohio is still trying to drill MORE WELLS?
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
wtf is this
It depends.
11:46 PM on 04/12/2012
They're trying for larger earthquakes.
08:32 PM on 04/12/2012
Communities and other areas engaging in Fracking can kiss tourism goodbye.
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Celt Glen
11:52 PM on 04/12/2012
and their asses!
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Chris Salmon
Geologist and Computer Scientist
10:59 AM on 04/24/2012
I guess Louisiana, Texas, Oklahoma, etc., haven't gotten the word from you yet.
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06:12 PM on 04/12/2012
I wouldn't camp 300 feet from there unless it was a chance to go in there and blow the place up.
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Roosevelt Democrat
08:28 PM on 04/12/2012
Been a member of the Earth Liberation Front (ELF) long?
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earthotter
micro-bio is a science course
11:58 PM on 04/12/2012
they don't exist anymore, but nice try.
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05:18 PM on 04/12/2012
Frack it OH! Turn the rustbelt into the next N Dakota!

Mindblowing....
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Roosevelt Democrat
08:29 PM on 04/12/2012
"The Rustbelt will Rise Again!"

Has a nice ring to it, don't you think?
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09:03 PM on 04/12/2012
I don't think people realize what is coming. The infrastructure and zoning issues are all ready and waiting. Just add cheap natty gas (subsidized by high oil prices) - boom!

I mean the good kind of boom - the opposite of gloom and doom.