July 11, 2011
Marcellus drilling opponents demand regulation
Chip Ellis
About 100 people gathered on the state Capitol's north steps on Monday to protest Marcellus Shale drilling practices in West Virginia.
Chip Ellis
Chuck Wyrostock from the West Virginia Sierra Club (right) encouraged people attending Monday's rally to go inside the Capitol to talk to their legislators.
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CHARLESTON, W.Va. -- Rose Baker and Bonnie Hall came to Charleston on Monday from their homes in Silver Hill, a rural area outside New Martinsville in Wetzel County, to tell people about what Baker calls "a total life change."

"We live in a small farming community 15 miles from town," she said. "Chesapeake Energy started drilling in November 2007. They have already set up 32 well pads and have planned 48 more pads.

"We have little narrow roads. If you went to town a few years ago, you might pass one car. Today, there are hundreds of tractor-trailers," Baker said. "What used to be a 30-minute drive could now take between one and six hours."

About 100 people gathered on the north steps of the Capitol on Monday morning, demanding that state lawmakers regulate and control pollution from Marcellus Shale natural gas wells. They say chemicals used by drillers in hydraulic fracturing, or "fracking," causes all sorts of environmental side effects.

The group West Virginians for a Moratorium on Marcellus, or WV4MOM, organized the rally to urge a moratorium on all drilling until stricter regulations are enacted.

"Fracking is not new," Hall said before the rally began. "It has been going on out west for years. But our leaders didn't investigate it. I hope they regulate it. If they don't regulate it, I hope they ban it."

She carried a sign reading, "How Can Ecological Harm Bring Real Economic Growth?"

Marcellus Shale natural gas reserves are some of the world's biggest gas deposits. They range from western New York and Pennsylvania, down through eastern Ohio and most of West Virginia.

Mountain State deposits, typically between 6,000 and 8,000 feet underground, are concentrated in the state's northern counties.

Three West Virginia cities -- Lewisburg, Morgantown and Wellsburg -- have already banned drilling for Marcellus Shale gas within their borders.

"We are asking [legislators] for a moratorium, a waiting period until we get more regulations. Without this, it should be banned altogether," said Kathy Cash, a WV4MOM coordinator.

"We are not here to take jobs away from West Virginians," Cash said. "But we will not become collateral damage to this industry. ... Clean drinking water, clean air and uncontaminated land -- this is our birthright and we are prepared to defend and protect it."

 Cash quoted the late Sen. Robert C. Byrd, D-W.Va., who said, "It is money, money, money! Not ideas, not principles, but money that reigns supreme in American politics."

Delegate Mike Manypenny, D-Taylor, supports a moratorium on new Marcellus well permits.

"We need protection for our mineral and surface owners," Manypenny said. "We need to work to protect our citizens, our environment and the health of our communities."

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