Responsible Drilling Alliance
Seeking truth about the consequences of shale gas development   
RDA e-Newsletter, November 2012 v.2      

In This Issue
The Life We Loved Is Gone
Support The Keep It Wild Campaign
Our Dream Home Is A Nightmare
Local News
 
 
State News

  
  
 
 
National News
 
 
 
 
 
Upcoming Events
 
November 8th
7-8pm
Hughesville Public Library
 
November 10th
8:30am-3pm
Equinox Sale
Pajama Factory
(Keep It Wild T-shirts will be available)
 
November 13th
5:30-6:30pm
RDA Annual Membership Meeting


The Life We Loved Is Gone 
by Lauren Deering

Since the gas industry began developing near our home... 
  •  No longer peaceful outdoors.
  • Awakened in the middle of the night by truck back-up alarms
  • Light pollution
  • Uncertainty about leaving the mountain and arriving on time for work and appointments 
  • Using Truman Run Road now requires extra gas and time to wait
  • Extra gas when alternate route has to be used due to gas truck problems
  • Devalued real estate
  • Air Pollution
  • Noise pollution
  • Subsurface and surface water contamination
  • Creek pollution
  • Extra wear and tear on vehicles due to large trucks and poor road conditions
  • Protected species such as eagles no longer being seen
  • Migratory birds no longer being seen
  • We no longer walk our dog on township roads due to trucks and spillage of liquids
  • The life we wanted is gone
Support The Keep It Wild Campaign!  
 
Responsible Drilling Alliance is a 501(c)(3) non-profit organization funded entirely by donations. Running the Keep It WILD campaign costs money and we need your help to recuperate funds. Please considering donating.   
 
We accept money through PayPal via the
RDA website. Donations may also be sent by mail: 

Responsible Drilling Alliance 
PO Box 502 
Williamsport, PA 17703



Thank you for your support!

 

CORRECTION

  

The e-mail listed for DCNR Secretary Richard Alan in last week's newsletter was incorrect. Sorry for any confusion this may have caused.

 

Secretary Alan should be contacted through his secretary,

Cynthia Thomas.

Her e-mail is cyntthomas@pa.gov  

 

If you would like DCNR to

spare Rock Run from industrialization, please send an e-mail to the above address.

More info on the Keep It WILD blog.

 
RDA is planning a series of regional membership meetings; the kick off scheduled for the southern tier this Tuesday in Montgomery.

The RDA Board of Directors and Working Group will bring you up to date on our activities, and more importantly, listen to your concerns and ideas. Our goal is to build connection and community, and to give you a greater voice in creating the platform on which the RDA mission and message can evolve, based on the needs and opinions of RDA members.

Please plan to come network with us and to enjoy light snacks. The Mulligan's bar will be open during the meeting, and the full dinner menu available afterward. We expect the meeting to last about an hour.


We hope to see you Tuesday night at Mulligan's Restaurant on the White Deer Golf Course, 352 Allenwood Camp Lane, Montgomery PA 17752. We would appreciate your RSVP via email to: morgan@responsibledrillingalliance.org  
Our Dream Home has become a Nightmare 
Cedar waxwing in flight; it is one of two migratory bird species that no longer pass through the Deering yard. 
Image: Erick Brock 
by Bob Deering

  

About 5 years ago land men started showing their faces on our mountain. They talked to all the landowners, showing us different contracts for leasing our grounds. Very few of us had any idea what the ramifications of signing that lease would be.

 

Most of the contracts were for 5 years with an option for renewal. The leases ranged from $5-$50 per acre per year. Most of the hunting camps in the area saw this as a little extra money to help pay property taxes. Some signed and the fun began.

 

First, seismic testing crews showed up. They carved paths through the woods, drilled holes all over the place, helicopters flew overhead from morning until night, and flags were tied everywhere. It probably would not have been to bad if it was once and done, but we are now on are third time around for testing. Every time it seems to go a different direction: NE-SW, N-S, SE-NW, etc. Each new round of testing wore more paths through the woods. Soon (1st quarter of 2013) they will be starting again.

 

Truck delivering equipment.
Image: Bob Deering

 About 3 ½ years ago the first trucks made a visit. I didn't invite them, the state did. The trucks carried massive construction equipment: graders, track-hoes, bulldozers, tree cutting equipment, tree shredders. Our rural area started to change: our 15 foot gravel road is now like a highway.

 

To top it all off, the gas companies took over the road repair and traffic control. Now they tell us when it's safe for us to use our own roads, that is when they're not using it for their trucks. When winter comes you never know if you'll be blocked off the roads by a broken down or stuck truck.

 

The first well pad site. It has since expanded to include more permanent structures. Image: Bob Deering

Now for the gas drilling operations. The first several sites were so deep in the State Forest no one knew exactly what was being done. As the sites expanded closer to view, the scope of them was revealed. Each site is approximately 10-15 acres or larger if they have a frack pond. Some of the pad sites are almost adjacent to each other with interconnecting roads and pipelines.  

 

The gas industry schedules their workers day and night. Between the noise, dust, and fumes from the trucks, simple things like enjoying a Saturday cookout on the deck have been ruined.  

 

The drilling companies are now in the process of what they call "adding infrastructure": pipelines, water lines, roads and storage areas. Current laws allow some of these features to be built almost on top of your property. Where we once had darkness we now have stadium lighting. At night it looks as though a shopping center has been added to our neighborhood.

 

I have been in this area since I was 2 years old. In 2001 my wife and I started to build our retirement home - our dream home really. Well, our dream home is turning into a nightmare. What if conditions deteriorate to the point where we're forced to move?

 

The Deerings built this home when Bob retired. Image: Bob Deering

 

 

Our latest change? The local gas drilling company is building an open-pit frack wastewater retention pond. The site is on ground purchased adjacent to our property.   

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Demolition of a property adjacent to the Deerings' to prepare for the construction of a frack wastewater pit. Image: Bob Deering

 

 My wife and I are not "tree huggers," but we do like wildlife and nature. It might be a coincidence, but bird patterns have changed since the industry came. We've kept records of migratory birds passing through our yard for 8 years. For the past 2 years we haven't gotten grosbeaks or cedar-waxwings. These birds usually show up in the fall like clockwork, within a calendar day or two each year. Evidently the birds are smarter than the people: they moved on.

 

 

I won't get into much about hunting, there are other variables causing changes as well; DCNR and Game Commission rule changes. All I can say, this is the first year since 1965 that I haven't purchased a hunting license. I would feel guilty shooting any of the few animals we have left. 

 

Some people feel gas drilling is a great thing. Personally, I have reservations. First, the shale gas isn't going anywhere, it has been there for hundreds of years. Why the rush? If technology had time to catch up, I think the drilling could be completed much more efficiently and have less environmental impact.

 

I hear stories about the lumber and strip mining days of over 100 years ago, stories about the total devastation of the forests. Well, we certainly haven't learned much from our past mistakes.