Letters to the Editor

Concern for Environment Good

4 min read

Editor, News-Register:

Recently, Energy in Depth, a pro-fossil fuel publication, published a piece about the Ohio citizens who are trying to stop the leasing and fracking of Ohio's public lands (Save Ohio Parks). The EID author specifically targeted a June meeting of the Ohio Oil and Gas Land Commission where Dr. Ted Auch, Youngstown Battalion Chief Silverio Caggiano and I presented fact-based evidence as to why fracking on or near Ohio's parks would be disastrous for the parks, park visitors, and local residents. Throughout the EID article, experts and citizen members of Save Ohio Parks were referred to as "activists."

People who care about the environment are often labeled by the opposition. We've been called tree-huggers, hippies, snowflakes, and protestors. The fossil fuel industry is especially fond of the label "activists." The definition of an activist is: a person who engages in social or political actions to make the world a better place.

It is not uncommon for environmental activists to be the target of ridicule and legal actions from corporations they are challenging. Rachel Carson, the author of "Silent Spring," was viciously attacked by the pesticide industry. Citizens are also the target of SLAPP suits. SLAPP stands for a strategic lawsuit against public participation. Unlike the majority of states, Ohio does not have anti-slapp laws to protect free speech.

Ironically, citizens' taxes go towards subsidizing fossil fuels. Yet, when it comes to cleaning up their environmental messes, the taxpayers are left with that tab, too. One can still see the lasting impact strip-mining has had on the counties of southeast Ohio. Streams still run orange from acid mine drainage; the acidic, iron-sulfide-containing water that results from coal mining. Currently, federal funding is helping to pay for the cleanup of millions of miles of contaminated streams.

Ohio's citizens are still dealing with old oil and gas wells left from conventional drilling. These wells are dubbed "orphan wells" because they have been left or abandoned by an unknown company. They continue to leak methane into our atmosphere. Ohio has identified over 900 wells but some estimate the number of abandoned wells to be in the thousands.

Throughout history, Appalachian residents have had to live with the destruction left behind from extractive industries. Now the externalities of fracking will be perpetrated on our beautiful state parks. We know from experience and countless peer-reviewed studies that fracking causes health problems, produces light and noise pollution, requires enormous amounts of freshwater, creates thousands of gallons of radioactive produced water and emits dangerous water and air pollutants. Yet 81 Republican politicians and our governor went ahead and pushed through the legislation (House Bill 507) that allows fracking of our lands.

Gov. DeWine has said the well pads will not be on the park land, but Ohio has some of the most lenient set-back laws for fracked wells in the nation. The lights, noise, water and air emissions will certainly leave the well pad area.

Long after a well is fracked, the fracking infrastructure including gathering lines, compressor stations and storage containers, leak volatile organic compounds into the rural communities.

One cannot claim to want a livable planet and turn the state's parks into a fossil fuel mineral colony for an industry that is basically killing the earth. Those Ohio citizens that the fossil fuel industry labels as "activists" are moms and dads, grandpas and grandmas, fishermen, boaters, hunters, bikers, doctors, teachers, and scientists. We know what is right and wrong. Allowing out-of-state companies to come into our state parks, to forever damage them so they can extract our resources for a profit is wrong.

Preserving our state lands for generations to come and protecting our planet from climate change is right.

In the words of Utah Phillips, "The Earth is not dying, she is being killed, and those that are doing it have names and addresses."

Randi Jeannine Pokladnik

Uhrichsville

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