by Walter Brasch
At the time New
Jersey established a ban on fracking, it seemed symbolic, much like the
moratorium in Vermont, which has no economically recoverable natural gas; the
Marcellus Shale, primarily in New York and Pennsylvania, doesn’t extend into
New Jersey. New York has a moratorium on fracking until a health impact
statement is completed. Pennsylvania. rushing to compete with groundhogs in
digging up the state, has no such moratorium. Nor does the state have any plans
to conduct extensive research into the health effects of fracking—Gov. Tom
Corbett, the gas industry’s cheerleader, cut $2 million from the Department of
Health to provide for a public health analysis.
As it is, New
Jersey Gov. Chris Christie exercised his authority and partially vetoed his
state’s moratorium to reduce it to a one-year ban. That moratorium expired in January.
During this past
year, more evidence became public. Beneath New Jersey and extending into
southeastern Pennsylvania lies the Newark Basin.
But, even
then, New Jersey residents may believe they are safe. Although there was
economically recoverable gas in the South Newark basin that lies beneath five
counties in Pennsylvania, most of New Jersey is barren of recoverable gas in
the North Newark Basin.
But, New
Jersey isn’t safe, and there are four major reasons:
● (1) Independent scientific studies reveal
both environmental and health effects from fracking. As every elementary school
child knows, air and water pollution don’t stop at Pennsylvania’s borders.
● (2) Part of
the Utica Shale lies below the Newark Basin, primarily beneath Sussex and Warren
counties. To get recoverable gas would require significantly more water and
toxic chemicals to be sent into the deeper shale, and would produce
significantly more toxic wastewater, along with the resulting health and environmental
problems. If drillers can see a way to profitably take natural gas from the
Utica Shale, they will.
● (3) Even if
there is no fracking in the state, New Jersey is a prime location for
compressor stations and the large underground transmission lines from the
Marcellus Shale to New York. At least
once a day, somewhere in the country, is a pipeline leak or gas explosion.
● (4) New
Jersey is open to receiving toxic waste. Several hundred thousand gallons of
frackwaste and drillings that were too toxic or radioactive to be left in
Pennsylvania have been trucked into New Jersey to be processed and disposed.
“These plants
aren’t designed to safely process this waste before dumping it into our rivers
and landfills,” says Tracy Carluccio, deputy director of the Delaware
Riverkeeper Network.
The New
Jersey senate voted 30-5, and the assembly voted 56-19, to ban frack waste. The
vote appeared strong enough to be veto proof, but, Gov. Christie vetoed it in
June. The legislature hasn’t brought up a vote to override the veto, probably because
some Republicans believe such an action could be politically embarrassing for
themselves and the popular governor. That lack of action has left New Jersey
open to being Pennsylvania’s dumping
ground—and the continued butt of jokes from New York
comics.
Gov.
Christie’s veto wasn’t justified, says Carluccio, because “the main responsibility
of the State is to protect residents’ health and safety and a ban on toxic
frack waste would do exactly that. The Governor’s veto is an inexcusable
cop-out without legal foundation, exposing New Jersey’s communities and drinking
water to just what we don’t need—more pollution.”
Just as
Pennsylvania residents who live outside the Marcellus Shale shouldn’t believe
they are safe from fracking’s effects, neither should the people of New Jersey
believe that just because wells don’t dot their landscape they also are safe.
[Dr. Brasch is an award-winning social
issues journalist, and the author of 18 books. His latest book, Fracking Pennsylvania: Flirting With
Disaster, is available at local bookstores, www.greeleyandstone.com, and
amazon.com.]
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