Look Close at Fracking and You'll Say "No Way"
December 10, 2012
- Fracking's severe, documented impacts on health and the environment.
- The admitted "industrialization" of fracked communities.
- Fracking's frighteningly harmful effects on our climate. And,
- The availability of alternative energy options that would create new jobs and eliminate the need to frack.
- Dr. Lynn Goldman, one of the three health experts hired to review the draft environmental impact statement told a reporter that the deadline to complete her review was Dec. 3. She hadn't even received the documents she was charged with reviewing, as of Thanksgiving. Nor have these documents been made public.
- Of the three experts, one is working pro bono and the other two will be compensated for only 25 and 50 hours of work respectively. Relevant studies on fracking and health runs well into the thousands of pages.
- Rather than wait until they'd received and considered the experts' analysis of the health issues, state officials went ahead and released a new set of draft fracking regulations last Friday.
- Christopher Portier, director of the National Center for Environmental Health at the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, recently warned that we don't understand fracking's impact on human health and called for studies that "include all the ways people can be exposed, such as through air, water, soil, plants and animals." Yet New York State Environmental Commissioner Joe Martens said this week that he hopes the state will finish its work on fracking by March.
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