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Published January 13, 2012
Associated Press
PHILADELPHIA – Residents of a small northeastern Pennsylvania town at the center of the political fight over natural gas drilling struck out Friday when they tried to take their complaints directly to the head of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency.
A handful of residents-turned-activists from Dimock joined about 50 environmental activists from neighboring communities and elsewhere to rally outside a conference at Philadelphia’s Academy of Natural Sciences on urban environmental issues, chanting, “Lisa Jackson, take some action!” Their hope was to find a kindred spirit in EPA Administrator Lisa Jackson and to ask her directly to have fresh water delivered to them.
But they didn’t get the chance.
The moderator of the panel on which Jackson sat did not ask any of the Dimock-related questions that were submitted. And at the end of the session, Jackson did not respond when one activist shouted out a question. She also did not meet with any of the protesters who attempted to confront her afterward. She did speak to the media, but didn’t give exactly the answer the Dimock contingent was seeking.
The Dimock residents among the protesters remained optimistic that Jackson will come to their aid — something they say state officials are refusing to do.
“We’re here to make sure that she knows we appreciate that and putting a face to what’s going on,” said Julie Sautner, a Dimock resident whose well is contaminated.
A state investigation found that 18 wells in the Susquehanna County village were contaminated after natural gas drilling began there in 2008.
About a dozen residents have sued Cabot Oil & Gas Corp., claiming the energy company caused the contamination when it extracted natural gas using a process known as hydraulic fracturing, or fracking, a method that has spurred a boom in natural gas drilling in several states while raising concerns about the toll on the environment and public health.
Cabot denies contaminating the wells, saying most wells in the region were laced with methane long before the arrival of drilling. Nevertheless, the company trucked in fresh water for the residents to use for bathing and washing clothes and dishes. The deliveries stopped Nov. 30 after state regulators determined that Cabot had fulfilled its obligations to the residents under a 2010 consent agreement. The residents say their aquifer is still contaminated.
The federal government has wavered about its role over the last two months, initially saying the water posed no health risk, then that it merited more study, then in the span of 24 hours last week promising to deliver water and reneging.
Pennsylvania’s environmental chief, who works for a pro-drilling governor, has criticized his federal counterparts, writing that the EPA has only a “rudimentary” understanding of the contamination.
During a news conference Friday, Jackson criticized the state official, Michael Krancer, saying his letter was “puzzling” and not helpful to the people of Dimock.
She said she needs more data from Krancer to decide whether to send in water but that he has not provided it.
“If we can get the data, or if he can assure us that they’re looking at the data,” Jackson said, “then I would be fine.”
That didn’t satisfy the Dimock residents who have been pushing for federally supplied water. “We have no time to wait for test results to come back. We need water now,” said Craig Sautner.
In a move that was partly symbolic and partly a practical goodwill gesture, several of protesters brought with them bottles and jugs of water for the Dimock residents to take home.
“It’s a ridiculous redefinition of life to have to get bottles of water and to have to live by the graciousness of others,” said Victoria Switzer, a Dimock resident who sold gas drilling rights under the 5 acres she owns.
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