Pennsylvania’s clean drinking water may be in jeopardy without regulations

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Pennsylvania’s clean drinking water may be in jeopardy without regulations
By Patriot-News Editorial Board
February 01, 2010, 7:10AM

Drinking water could become tainted if more regulations on Marcellus Shale drilling are not implemented.
water-glassClean water is something most Americans take for granted. When we turn on the tap, we expect a steady flow of clean water at whatever temperature we have indicated on the faucet dial.
Pennsylvania can no longer take drinking water for granted. The state faces a new threat to our water supply in the form of Marcellus Shale gas drilling. The process to extract the gas is called hydraulic fracturing, and as the name implies, it is hugely water intensive.
Fracturing has been around for a long time, but Marcellus drilling requires deep wells and even more water usage to break the shale and force the gas up.
The problem isn’t so much the initial quantity of the water. Pennsylvania is blessed with an abundance of fresh water. The issue is all the wastewater after it has been through this intensive industrial process.
At the moment, the resulting wastewater from operating Marcellus Shale wells is treated for basic contamination and then released back into the state’s streams and rivers.
But wastewater from Marcellus Shale isn’t normal. It often contains higher than average “total dissolved solvents,” some of which are toxic in high concentrations and can lead to conditions such as bladder cancer.
The state must set regulations on total dissolved solvents to protect our drinking water.
Some in the gas industry oppose harsher water regulations as draconian and “anti-competitive.” They argue that these solvents dilute away in the rivers.
That sounds nice, but there’s a basic math problem here. Our streams, while numerous, are not enough to dilute the quantities of water expected when Marcellus Shale drilling is up and running.
It was actually two natural gas drilling companies (Atlas and Range) that approached the Department of Environmental Protection and warned that if Marcellus Shale hydraulic fracturing explodes in number, then stream dilution is not going to be enough. Several rivers and streams are likely not to make the federal drinking water acceptability threshold.
In other words, our drinking water could become tainted.
The state already has experienced this once in the Monongahela River in 2008. That year, 17 water intake points from Pittsburgh to West Virginia were deemed unsafe from elevated bromide solvent levels (the cause was a number of factors of which gas drilling is thought to be one). We were behind the curve in solving the problem, and we do not want to be there again.
New “wastewater treatment requirements” have been proposed by DEP Secretary John Hanger. The easily accessible 10-page document is up on the department’s Web site for public review through Feb. 12. If enacted, the new rules would make Pennsylvania one of the leaders in this area.
Before anyone balks, let’s remember that Pennsylvania’s Marcellus Shale has been widely projected to be the largest shale gas bed in the world, outstripping even the Barnett Shale in Texas.
We’re going to have a lot more wastewater to deal with than everyone else, and DEP is right to be proactive.
The regulations set new levels of acceptability. For the first time, all companies would have to treat the wastewater for total dissolved solvents.
For bottom-line types, it boils down to this: Companies would have to pay slightly more to clean the wastewater before it goes back into Pennsylvania’s waterways. DEP estimates no more than 25 cents per gallon.
It’s a small price to pay for safety of future Pennsylvanians.
Watering the regulations down would be a mistake.

2009 Second Warmest Year of Warmest Decade on Record

NEW YORK, New York, January 25, 2010 (ENS) – The year 2009 was tied for the second warmest year in the modern record, shows a new analysis of global surface temperature from the National Aeronautics and Space Administration. Conducted by NASA’s Goddard Institute for Space Studies in New York City, the analysis also shows that in the Southern Hemisphere, 2009 was the warmest year since modern records began in 1880.

http://www.ens-newswire.com/ens/jan2010/2010-01-25-03.html

Safe water, ponds and septic systems in 2010 water-quality webinars

Safe water, ponds and septic systems in 2010 water-quality webinars

Water quality and water conservation will be the focus of five Web-based
seminars produced by Penn State Cooperative Extension this spring. Topics will
include water testing, septic systems, managing ponds and lakes, and safe
drinking water. The first webinar will cover strategies to monitor water
wells, springs and streams that are near gas-drilling sites. That presentation
will air at noon and again at 7 p.m. on Jan. 27.

Read the full story on Live: Webinar

EPA Announces “Eyes on Drilling” Tipline

David Sternberg (215) 814-5548 sternberg.david@epa.gov

PHILADELPHIA (January 26, 2010) – The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency today announced the creation of the “Eyes on Drilling” tipline for citizens to report non-emergency suspicious activity related to oil and natural gas development.

The agency is asking citizens to call 1-877-919-4EPA (toll free) if they observe what appears to be illegal disposal of wastes or other suspicious activity. Anyone may also send reports by email to eyesondrilling@epa.gov. Citizens may provide tips anonymously if they don’t want to identify themselves.
Read more

Senior CDC Official Reassigned

http://www.propublica.org/feature/senior-cdc-official-reassigned-howard-frumkin

Senior CDC Official Reassigned

by Joaquin Sapien, ProPublica – January 22, 2010 5:56 pm EST

Dr. Howard Frumkin, the embattled director of a little-known but important division of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, has been reassigned to a position with less authority, a smaller staff and a lower budget.

Frumkin had led the CDC’s Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry (ATSDR) and the National Center for Environmental Health since 2005. For the past two years he had endured scathing criticism from Congress and the media for ATSDR’s poor handling of public health problems created by the formaldehyde-contaminated trailers that the government provided to Hurricane Katrina victims. The agency, which assesses public health risks posed by environmental hazards, also was criticized for understating the health risks of several other, less-publicized cases.

An internal CDC e-mail sent by Frumkin on Jan. 15 and obtained by ProPublica said he was leaving his position that day and would become a special assistant to the CDC’s director of Climate Change and Public Health. His old job will be temporarily filled by Henry Falk, who led ATSDR from 2003 to 2005.

In the e-mail, Frumkin praised his staff and described more than 20 ATSDR accomplishments during his tenure. They include strengthening the agency’s tobacco laboratory and creating the Climate Change and Public Health program.

A CDC spokesman said Frumkin’s transfer shouldn’t be considered a demotion but rather a change of function and responsibilities that the CDC’s director, Dr. Thomas Frieden, said would benefit both the agency and Dr. Frumkin, who is a recognized expert on climate change. But Frumkin’s authority has been sharply reduced, even though his salary won’t change. Previously, he oversaw two departments  with a combined budget of about $264 million and 746 full-time employees. Now he will be an assistant to the director of a new program that has a budget of about $7.5 million, five full-time employees and five contractors, two of whom are part time.

Through a CDC spokesman, Frumkin declined a request to be interviewed for this story.

In 2008, ProPublica reported [1] that Frumkin and others failed to take action after learning that ATSDR botched a study [2] on the trailers provided to Katrina victims. The Federal Emergency Management Agency used the study to assure trailer occupants that the formaldehyde levels weren’t high enough to harm them. ATSDR never corrected FEMA, even though Christopher De Rosa, who led ATSDR’s toxicology and environmental medicine division, repeatedly warned Frumkin that the report didn’t take into account the long-term health consequences of exposure to formaldehyde, like cancer risks.

Frumkin eventually reassigned De Rosa to the newly created position of assistant director for toxicology and risk analysis. De Rosa went from leading a staff of about 70 employees to having none. He has since left the agency and is starting a nonprofit that will consult with communities close to environmental hazards.

The involvement of Frumkin and ATSDR in the formaldehyde debacle was the focus of an April 2008 Congressional hearing held by a subcommittee of the House Science and Technology Committee. A report [3] by the subcommittee’s Democratic majority, released that October, concluded that the failure of ATSDR’s leadership “kept Hurricane Katrina and Rita families living in trailers with elevated levels of formaldehyde…for at least one year longer than necessary.”

About six months after the report came out, the same panel, the Subcommittee on Investigations and Oversight, held another hearing [4] that touched on other problems at ATSDR.

Before that hearing, the Democrats on the subcommittee released a report [5] that revealed other cases in which the agency relied on scientifically flawed data, causing other federal agencies to mislead communities about the dangers of their exposure to hazardous substances.

For example, an ATSDR report about water contamination at Camp Lejeune, a Marine Corps base in North Carolina, said the chemically tainted drinking water didn’t pose an increased cancer risk to residents there. The report was used to deny at least one veteran’s medical benefits for ailments that the veteran believed were related to the contamination.

A month after the subcommittee hearing, ATSDR rescinded [6] some of its findings, saying it didn’t adequately consider the presence of benzene, a carcinogen that it found in the water.

Eight months later, the agency said it would modify another report that was criticized at the hearing, about a bomb testing site in Vieques, Puerto Rico. For decades, the U.S. military used the site to test ammunition that contained depleted uranium and other toxins. In a 2003 report, ATSDR said that heavy metals and explosive compounds found on Vieques weren’t harmful to people living there. But Frumkin decided to take a fresh look at those findings because ATSDR hadn’t thoroughly investigated the site.

Subcommittee investigators acknowledged that Frumkin inherited many of the problems in the report from previous ATSDR directors — the original Vieques and Camp Lejeune reports were both done before Frumkin was named director in 2005. But the investigators said he was aware of the agency’s problems and did little to fix them unless he was under political pressure. A CDC spokesman said that Frumkin’s reassignment had nothing to do with the congressional inquiries.

“Americans should know when their government tells them that they have nothing to worry about from environmental exposure that they really have nothing to worry about,” Rep. Brad Miller, D-N.C.,  the subcommittee’s chairman, said in a statement to ProPublica regarding Frumkin’s reassignment. “The nation needs ATSDR to do honest, scientifically rigorous work. There are many capable professionals at ATSDR who are committed to doing just that.”

Write to Joaquin Sapien at joaquin.sapien@propublica.org [7].

Fracking Safe For Now, Clean Bill of Health Still Pending

http://www.glgroup.com/News/Fracking-Safe-For-Now-Clean-Bill-of-Health-Still-Pending-46072.html

Fracking Safe For Now, Clean Bill of Health Still Pending
Friday, January 22, 2010

*  Analysis by: GLG Expert Contributor
* Analysis of: Analysts says frac rules unlikely
* Published at: www.upstreamonline.com

Summary:

A bad economy and the unfavorable political environment for Democrats put the Exxon XTO merger and fracking as a whole out of reach this year. As the economy improves, and if local bad press coverage of water problems near fracking sites continues (regardless of whether fracking is to blame) could lead emboldened Democrats to act, most likely to force companies to reveal to regulators (if not the public) the chemical content of the hydraulics they use. Potential action is at least a year away.

Analysis:

The House Energy Committee hearing this week went well for ExxonMobil, XTO, and fracking overall. Given the state of the economy and a fairly successful messaging campaign portraying climate change legislation as a job killer, Democrats realize that it would be dangerous to their careers to appear to be more concerned with the environment than the economy this year.

Fracking produces relatively clean domestically produced energy, two qualities that give it a leg up among politicians of all stripes. With these political considerations, the merger and fracking are both safe for the moment.

Fracking is not in the clear yet, however. Election year politics will make action difficult for opponents, and the stand alone bills introduced this summer are unlikely to move. There will be a jobs bill in the Senate this spring with some energy titles in it, and it’s possible but unlikely that some of anti-fracking language will find its way in.

The real threat comes in the medium to long term. As the economy starts to improve over the next 18-24 months, Democrats will become further emboldened. In the meantime, the EPA should complete it’s next look at shale fracking and drinking water. Anything less than a 100% safety finding leaves the door open for Congressional action.

If local news stories about brown water flowing from taps and gas leaking into basements continue (whether fracking is to blame or not), retail politics could lead to Congressional action. With Chuck Schumer (co-sponsor of the Senate anti-fracking bill) ascendant in the Democratic party, continued bad press in upstate New York, rural Pennsylvania, and Texas could spell trouble for the industry.

EPA Conference Focuses on Greener Cleanups

Contact: Roy Seneca seneca.roy@epa.gov 215-814-5567

EPA Conference Focuses on Greener Cleanups

PHILADELPHIA (Jan. 21, 2010) – The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency is holding a two-day conference Feb. 10-11 at Drexel University in Philadelphia to explore the most environmentally safe methods to clean up and revitalize contaminated properties.

The Green Cleanup Symposium will feature presentations from the nation’s top thinkers on how to properly clean up abandoned or contaminated properties so that the land can be reused as a safe and sustainable community resource.

“By conducting cleanups with innovative green techniques in mind, we can further reduce our footprint and demonstrate how we value our land as a natural, cultural, and economic resource,” said Shawn M. Garvin, administrator for EPA’s mid-Atlantic region.

Cleaning up sites can be viewed as “green” from the perspective of the cleanup improving environmental and public health conditions.  However, cleanup activities use energy, water and materials that create an environmental footprint of its own.  Over time, EPA has learned how to optimize environmental performance and implement protective cleanups that are greener by taking steps to minimize that footprint.

Some examples of utilizing greener cleanup techniques include using equipment that emits less particulate matter to the air, sizing equipment accurately to avoid wasted energy, water, and material, and using renewable energy or recycled material to decrease greenhouse gas emissions and conserve resources.

More information on the conference and registration forms is available at: http://www.drexel.edu/cities/greencleanupsymposium.html .

Heightened Concern Over BPA

http://www.nytimes.com/2010/01/21/opinion/21thur2.html
Editorial
Heightened Concern Over BPA
Published: January 21, 2010
Consumers should choose products without BPA until regulators determine whether exposure to the chemical found in baby bottles is harmful.

Sen. Bob Casey Jr. (D-Pa.) on fracking

http://thehill.com/business-a-lobbying/76719-congress-returns-to-full-plate
01/18/10

Sen. Bob Casey Jr. (D-Pa.) on fracking

In the House on Wednesday, Rep. Edward Markey (D-Mass.), through the Energy and Commerce Energy and Environment subcommittee he chairs, will review a plan by ExxonMobil to buy XTO Energy for $31 billion.

The hearing is also likely to delve into the topic of hydraulic fracturing, or “fracking,” a technique to blast water, chemicals and sand underground to create cracks for natural gas to flow through. Energy companies have used the practice for decades, but as huge natural-gas reserves have been discovered in shale deposits underlying populated areas in New York and Pennsylvania, new concerns have been raised about whether fracking is properly regulated.

Rep. Diana DeGette (D-Colo.) and Sen. Bob Casey Jr. (D-Pa.) have introduced bills that would end the exemption fracking now has from the Safe Drinking Water Act and require companies to disclose the chemicals they use in the process.

ExxonMobil included a clause in its bid to buy XTO that it could back out of the deal if Congress moves to regulate hydraulic fracturing. Industry contends federal regulation is unnecessary, given state regulations. Energy companies also say more regulation will slow production of an important “bridge fuel,” so labeled because natural gas emits less carbon dioxide than do other fossil fuels, allowing time for renewable energy resources to develop.

Polycythemia Vera CAC workshop meeting

http://www.tnonline.com/node/47692

Polycythemia Vera CAC workshop meeting
Reported on Wednesday, November 18, 2009

The Polycythemia Vera Community Action Committee of Schuylkill, Carbon and Luzerne Counties will have a workshop meeting this Thursday, Nov. 19, at 7 p.m. at the Hometown Fire Company in preparation for a support group and myeloproliferative disorder education summit in early 2010.

The focus of Thursday’s meeting will be to share ideas for what patients need in a support group.

The types of information that polycythemia vera and other MPD patients would find beneficial for the education summit in 2010 will also be discussed. The Myeloproliferative Disorder Foundation is sponsoring both activities.

Patient’s, families, caregivers and the public are welcome to attend Thursday’s meeting. For more information, contact Joe Murphy at (570) 668-9009.