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Cuomo: State to miss fracking deadline on Thursday

The state’s environmental agency confirms it will miss a key deadline and delay approval of hydrofracking in New York once again. Anti-fracking forces see an opportunity in the new delay, while those waiting to benefit economically from the gas drilling process are feeling frustrated.

Governor Andrew Cuomo says he expects the state’s Department of Environmental Conservation will fail to meet a November 29 deadline to propose new rules for the gas drilling process known as hydrofracking.

“We are not going to be able to,” Cuomo said. “The state wont finish the review by November 29th.”

Speaking in Rochester, Cuomo says the environmental agency will have to apply for an extension, which could delay the process for up to another six months.

The Health and Environmental Departments have agreed that a health review needs to be finished before new fracking rules can be finalized.  The state Health Commissioner, Dr. Nirav Shah, just a few days before Thanksgiving, contracted with three nationally known health experts to help him examine the material.

Groups who oppose fracking say they will use the new delay as an opportunity to try to prevent the drilling from ever happening in New York . Walter Hang, with Toxics Targeting, says his group will be writing letters to the three health experts to urge a thorough health review.

“We’re going to call upon them to make sure that they address all of those concerns,” Hang said.

Hang says there have been reports of past drinking water contamination, and failure to clean up past pollution from drilling.  But he worries that the review will be narrowly focused, and not address opponents’ concerns, and he says he is frustrated that the details of the review have not been made public.

“What are they supposed to do? That has never been disclosed,” said Hang. “We don’t know what the scope of their review is.”

Pro-fracking groups say they are fed up with all of the delays. Dan Fitzsimmons is president of the Joint Landowners Coalition, a group of 77,000 landowners, who he says have been working to see that New Yorkers who sign leases with the gas companies get a fair deal. The coalition has written its own letter to the governor, saying the latest obstacle is a “breach of faith” in government. He says Cuomo, who has maintained that science would determine whether fracking goes ahead in New York, is getting cold feet in the face of growing opposition.  

“He seems to not be looking at the science anymore,” said Fitzsimmons. “He’s basing his decisions, and a lot of what he’s doing, on emotions.”

Fitzsimmons says health effects of fracking have already been studied extensively, and numerous other states and nations have fracked successfully for years. He says he and his neighbors have only to look across the southern border into Pennsylvania, to see the economic benefits that gas drilling can bring.

“It’s so frustrating,” said Fitzsimmons, who says he sees thriving businesses in Pennsylvania, and farmers repairing their homes and barns and buying new tractors.

“It’s incredible to see the benefits that this has brought,” said Fitzsimmons. “But yet, that border that’s sitting here, that invisible line, we can’t take advantage of that.”

There is one thing that pro- and anti-fracking forces can agree on. Both say there’s been a disturbing lack of transparency in the fracking review process.

 

Karen DeWitt is Capitol Bureau Chief for New York State Public Radio, a network of 10 public radio stations in New York State. She has covered state government and politics for the network since 1990.