Thursday, March 17, 2011

An open letter to Journalists on the Comparison of GASLAND to Nazi Propaganda by a member of the Corbett Administration by Josh Fox / GASLAND

March 16, 2011

This week, Teddy Borawski, the chief oil and gas geologist for the Pennsylvania Department of Conservation and Natural Resources (DCNR) and a member of Pennsylvania Governor Tom Corbett’s administration, serving in an official capacity, and on the record, compared my Sundance award-winning and Oscar-nominated documentary film GASLAND to Nazi propaganda stating "Goebbels would be proud."  The slander was the latest in a series of smears and misinformation about the film and character attacks on me. This kind of hateful speech shows a contempt for history, for truth, for science and sets a dangerous precedent in our state's government.  Such slanderous mudslinging has no place in any rational or adult debate on ANY topic, let alone the most important issue facing the state in decades – natural gas drilling in the Marcellus Shale.

Tuesday, March 8, 2011

Communal Fracture: Concerned Citizens of Western Pennsylvania React to the Various Impacts of Marcellus Shale Fracking on their Communities

The 141 acre farm in rural Washington County was a fixer-upper. 
The challenge of clearing the 80 overgrown acres on this property suited Ron Gulla just fine. So did the prospect of renovating the farm’s pond, tenant house and barn- all of which he did.
Gulla loves to work, he also loves to hunt and fish. “When I was hungry, I used to catch fish right out of my pond,” said Gulla. His property was perfect for all of these pursuits. 
That was until his 2.5 acre pond turned black, killing everything in it- including the fish. 
That was until a dream piece of property turned into a nightmare. 

Dad to Ride Bike to Harrisburg to See the Governor

A press release from our friend Peter, who is going for a ride...

“The Corbett administration's actions for the gas industry are out of
control.”

Pine Grove Mills, PA.  On Wednesday, March 9,  Peter Buckland will
ride his bike 110 miles from his home in Pine Grove Mills [Centre
County] to Harrisburg to arrange a meeting with the Governor.

Date: Wednesday, March 9, 2011

Departure:  from Pine Grove Mills [Centre County]

Destination: the Governor’s office, Harrisburg

Arrival time:  Approximately 1:00 p.m.

Who:  Peter Buckland – [peter.evolves@gmail.com]

Tuesday, February 15, 2011

Fracking: The Great Uniter?

On the surface, the Marcellus Shale natural gas boom is the classic free market success story. The kind that rank and file Republicans unite behind. 
The typical GOP mindset would tell us that the market allowed Halliburton to create the technology and the government should not regulate how this technology is used. 
The industry is exempt from the 2005 Safe Drinking Water Act (SDWA) and the Clean Water Act.  Aside from the obvious Halliburton/Vice President Cheney connection, this loophole fits the GOP’s traditional stance on domestic energy. 
Who will ever forget “drill, baby drill”? 
The politics behind the sentiment are simple- jobs, less dependency on foreign oil and an increase in national security. This is all great, unless of course you are a fisherman in  Louisiana or have poisonous tap water in Pennsylvania. 
Party history is one reason that the natural gas industry contributed millions of dollars to Pennsylvania Republican candidates in 2010. 
Pennsylvania is funny state politically. We have the “T”. Pittsburgh and Philadelphia traditionally go Democrat while the rest of the state, in the shape of a “T”, goes Republican. 
This trend held in the last three Presidential elections. The Democrats only won 25% of the counties in each of the elections, but that candidate won the state each time. The counties where most of the fracking is happening typically went Republican.
Interestingly enough, Washington County never went for President Bush and did not go for President Obama either. I guess if you want to be President, you don’t want to win Washington County. 
What Unites is Stronger than What Divides
So what does all of this energy history and political geography have to do with uniting us? Let me tell you. 
I was watching Gasland the other day and I kept thinking about the political leanings of all the people affected by drilling in the film. Just about everywhere Josh Fox went was rural. Rural Wyoming. Rural Colorado. Rural Pennsylvania. All typical Republican strongholds. 
Guess what? These folks weren’t singing the praises of energy independence. They weren’t telling government to get off their property. Instead they were wondering where their government was and they were cursing the “liars” who “raped” their land because of greed. 
Air and water. We need it. We can’t live without it. We the people are tired of corporate interests destroying these lifelines in order to the line their pockets. 
We are not fooled by their smokescreens of being safer from terrorists and promises of new jobs. We know why they want this gas and we are beginning to see what they are willing to do to get it. 
To really understand the potential for uniting that this topic has, check out this extraordinary letter written by The Association of Pittsburgh Priests.
Progressives and priests. Evangelicals and environmentalists. Hippies and good old boys. Politically, these groups may not see eye to eye very often, but they all need air and water. Even more that that, beneath the surface, the belief that we should leave the planet inhabitable for our children and grandchildren. 
Who knows, one day we may have to thank the natural gas industry for uniting our country. 

Sunday, February 13, 2011

Hickory, PA


Called the epicenter of MS gas, this is just a piece of Hickory's story....more to come

The Money Trail: The Texas Connection

Just over half (21 of 40) of the Marcellus Shale Coalition's members are Texas based companies. With natural gas pollution in the Dallas/Ft. Worth area equalling that of pollution caused by vehicles, the time has come to time to take the business out of their backyards.

Total campaign contributions from Marcellus Shale interests out of Texas for 2010 was just under $550,000. Here are the details (alphabetized by recipient):

Saturday, February 12, 2011

The Money Trail: Tom Corbett in 2010









In the Pennsylvania gubernatorial campaign, then candidate Tom Corbett was labeled "Toxic Tom" by critics of his close ties with the natural gas industry. Candidate Corbett received approximately 270 Marcellus Shale related campaign contributions totaling $1,169, 546.41 


Big money buying influence in a state without limits. 
Follow the trail here: