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Coalition Letter requests that NYSDEC issue a Supplemental Findings Statement to prohibit all types of High-Volume Hydraulic Fracturing

We, the undersigned, write respectfully to request that your Department of Environmental Conservation issue a Supplemental Findings Statement to revise its definition of high-volume hydraulic fracturing (HVHF) to prohibit all forms of shale fracking in New York, not just HVHF based on "300,000 or more gallons of water."

Our request is critically important because DEC received a gas well permit application on April 24, 2015 to frack Marcellus shale using gelled propane instead of water in Tioga County. Since then, there have been many exchanges between DEC and the applicant.

See: http://www.toxicstargeting.com/MarcellusShale/documents/2015-09-23/propane-fracking-proposed-tioga-co

Your administration clearly knew that its HVHF definition was inadequate to implement the No-Action decision in the Findings Statement issued on June 29, 2015.

Given that shortcoming, we request that you take immediate action to fulfill the shale fracking prohibition specified in the Findings Statement:

"Based on unavoidable adverse environmental impacts and uncertainty regarding the science surrounding high-volume hydraulic fracturing and its potential impacts to public health and the environment, the Department finds that the best course of action is to select the No Action alternative. Selection of the No Action alternative means that the Department will not establish a high-volume hydraulic fracturing permitting program; that no individual or site-specific permit applications for wells using high-volume hydraulic fracturing will be processed; and that high-volume hydraulic fracturing will be prohibited in New York State (emphasis added)."

See PDF page 42 at: http://www.dec.ny.gov/docs/materials_minerals_pdf/findingstatehvhf62015.pdf

DEC's No-Action decision reflects a determination that non-water HVHF associated with the “environmentally-friendly chemical approach," including "Liquid CO2," "Nitrogen-based foam" and " Liquefied Petroleum Gas (LPG)," "all fail to limit unavoidable adverse environmental impacts and fail to address the risks and uncertainties of high-volume hydraulic fracturing."

Yet, the Findings Statement's HVHF definition excludes those fracking methods because it is limited to:

"the stimulation of a well using 300,000 or more gallons of water (emphasis added) as the base fluid for hydraulic fracturing for all stages in a well completion, regardless of whether the well is vertical or directional, including horizontal."

We request that the definition of HVHF prohibit the use of gelled propane proposed in Tioga County by specifically barring the use of "water or any other substances" as the base fluid for hydraulic fracking proposed for Marcellus Shale in New York.

We also request that the definition of "high-volume" hydraulic fracking be revised from 300,000 or more gallons for all stages of a well completion to 5,000 or more gallons for any stage of a well completion.

Given those concerns, New York's definition of HVHF should be:

"High-volume hydraulic fracturing is defined as the stimulation of a well using 5,000 [300,000] or more gallons of water or any other substances as the base fluid for hydraulic fracturing for any [all] stage[s]in a well completion, regardless of whether the well is vertical or directional, including horizontal, in Marcellus Shale and other low-permeability gas reservoirs. The 5,000 [300,000]-gallon threshold is the sum of all water or any other substances, fresh and recycled, used for any [all] stage[s] in a well completion. Well stimulation requiring less than 5,000 [300,000] gallons of water or any other substances as the base fluid for hydraulic fracturing for any [all] stage[s] in a well completion is not considered high-volume, and will continue to be reviewed and permitted pursuant to the 1992 GEIS, and 1992 and 1993 Findings Statements, but not for Marcellus Shale and other low-permeability gas reservoirs."

Adopting this revised definition is critical to implementing your administration's final conclusion regarding HVHF:

"Consistent with the social, economic and other essential considerations from among the reasonable alternatives available, the No-Action alternative avoids adverse environmental impacts to the maximum extent practicable; including impacts disclosed in the supplemental environmental impact statement..."

We trust that you will find our request self-explanatory, but please do not hesitate to contact us if you have any questions that we might be able to answer.

Thank you very much for your consideration.

Very respectfully yours,

Total Signatory Count: 1455

Linda Keeler
719 N Aurora St
Ithaca, NY
Penny Baron
445 Ferguson Road
Freeville, New York
robert laurentz
Psychologist
9 yardley Green
Ithaca,, NY
Staci Nugent
242 Floral Ave
Ithaca, New York
Julia Ganson
1144 Old Stage Road
Cortlabd, NY
Tracy Mitrano
20 Chase Lane
Ithaca, New York
Eileen McCorry
Ms.
35 W. 81 St
New York, NY
Jeannine Laverty
115 Lawrence St
Saratoga Springs , NY
Louis Sebesta
Mr.
100 Grand Blvd. FL 2
Binghamton, New York
Laurie Salzberg
25 Mount Airy Rd. #1A
Croton on Hudson, NY
Gail Goldsmith
82 FORSYTH ST.
NEW YORK, NY
Katherine Klingensmith
PO Box 549
Alfred, NY 14802
Roseann Marrero
322 Virginia Avenur
Jersey City, New Jersey
Hana Rab
124 rachel Carson way
Ithaca , Ny
anne ferguson
4573 syracuse rd
cazenovia, NEW YORK
Nancy Hutto
NANCY
10052 416th Ave. SE
North Bend, Washington
Lisa Ripperton
PO Box 339
Ithaca, NY
John Fry
13 Briarwood Lane
Newfiwld, NY
Betnadette Fiocca
327 s Titus ave
Ithaca , NY
Lisa Montanus
Ms.
105 Cardinal Court
Woodstock, Alabama
Joseph holdner
Sierra Club, 350,MoveOn,
443 2nd Street Apt 3R
Brooklyn, New York
Susan Lisk
Concerned Citizens of the Town of Maine
P.o. Box 285. 2625 Main Street
Maine, NY
Dennis Anello
214 Rachel Carson Way
Ithaca, New York
Jill Ullian
214 Rachel Carson Way
Ithaca, New York
Richard Ottinger
Dean Emeritus
Pace Law School
Pace Law School, 78 North Broadway
White Plains, NY
Stanley Lisk
Concerned Citizens of Rural Broome
2625 Main Street. PO Box 275
Maine, NY
Karen Glauber
NYRAD
140 Oak Drive
Middlebury, VT
Mark R Peacock
Systems Analyst
employed at University of Rochester Medical Center
149 Colonial Rd
Rochester, New York
Vicky Southall
5611 Godfreys Pond Rd
Bergen, ny
Daniel Belliveau
Mr.
95 Lafayette Ave
Geneva, New York
Stacey McNeill
213 N. Tioga St. #201
Ithaca, NY
Marcia Jacobson
925 Mitchell St., #3
Ithaca, NY
Anne Lazarus
Ms
Ms.
524 East 20t St. 2G
New York, New York
Katherine Funk
retired
2789 Forest Hill Drive
Corning, NY
Nancy Pollak
125 Giles St.
Ithaca, NY
Christopher Reed
59 Main Street
Philmont, NY
Robert Lederman
555 Bway
NY, NY
Max Schmid
46-07 28th Ave
Astoria, NY
Sara Schaffzin
Ms.
313 Utica Street
Ithaca, New York
Jerone Gagliano
VP, Energy Engineering Services
Performance Systems Development
217 Park Pl
Ithaca, New York
Scott Teel
710 N. Cayuga St., Apt. 3
Ithaca, NY
Noreen Stevenson
Mrs.
16 Elm Street
Chester, NY
Mitchell Lavine
Dryden Resource Awareness Coalition
719 Ringwood Rd
Ithaca, NY
Elaine Hardman
Riverside Drive
Wellsville, NY
Ann Ellis
LMSW
member-RAFT
2140 Long Creek Road
Apalachin, NY
Rosalie Richter-Goldberg
118 Lake AVe
Ithaca, NY
Walter Goldstein
2922 Morgan Drive
Wantagh, NY
annie campbell
Ms.
33 Cayuga St.
trumansburg, New York
Pamela Stanley
Dr
380 Riverside Rive
New York, n
Catherine Lewis
14882
242 Cedar Cove
Lansing, NY

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