Rural Community Assistance Partnership

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November 2010

New York Times: When a Rig Moves In Next Door (article that surveys support for fracking)

This article was originally published on Nov. 6, 2010, in The New York Times.

By CLIFFORD KRAUSS and TOM ZELLER Jr.

In the sparsely populated pastures of De Soto Parish in Louisiana, the ability to extract gas from shale — which can involve a process known as fracking — has been welcomed as an economic windfall. Some residents call it a gift from God.

EPA to expand chemicals testing for endocrine disruption

WASHINGTON - The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) has identified a list of 134 chemicals that will be screened for their potential to disrupt the endocrine system. Endocrine disruptors are chemicals that interact with and possibly disrupt the hormones produced or secreted by the human or animal endocrine system, which regulates growth, metabolism and reproduction. Administrator Lisa P. Jackson has made it a top priority to ensure the safety of chemicals, and this is another step in this process.

CBS's "60 Minutes" looks at fracking

The Nov. 14 episode of CBS's "60 Minutes" included a segment on natural gas drilling in a process called hydraulic fracturing, also sometimes called fracking. The report focused on the discovery of vast amounts of natural gas in the U.S., which could supply all of the nation's energy needs for years to come and the people who have become wealthy after allowing natural gas to be extracted from shale rock on their property. The report focused briefly on the potential harm to the ground water that this process causes.

 

All-hazards risk-assessment and consequence-analysis tools for drinking water and wastewater utilities

The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) is releasing two software tools for risk assessment and consequence analysis:

  • The Vulnerability Self Assessment Tool (VSAT), an upgraded all-hazards risk-assessment tool
  • The Water Health and Economic Analysis Tool (WHEAT), a newly developed consequence-analysis tool

The release of VSAT and WHEAT will provide drinking water, wastewater, and combined utilities of all sizes with the capability to assess, plan for, and better respond to human-caused threats and natural disasters.

Eight of nine U.S. companies agree to work with EPA regarding chemicals used in natural gas extraction

EPA conducting congressionally mandated study to examine the impact of the hydraulic fracturing process on drinking water quality; Halliburton subpoenaed after failing to meet EPA’s voluntary requests for information

WASHINGTON – The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) announced Nov. 9 that eight out of the nine hydraulic fracturing companies that received voluntary information requests in September have agreed to submit timely and complete information to help the agency conduct its study on hydraulic fracturing.

Daily Yonder blog: Republicans Win Rural -- and the House

The explanation by many is that Democrats lost the South, but the rural losses were mostly in the north. Democrats now can ask, "What's the matter with New Hampshire?"

By Bill Bishop and Julie Ardery

Map showing the election results in the 125 most rural House districts

Republicans won the U.S. House of Representatives Tuesday largely by winning districts with high proportions of rural voters.

Fuel Fix: Adversaries try to heal fracture over hydraulic fracturing

by Jennifer A. Dlouhy

WASHINGTON — Energy companies and environmental groups have more often been adversaries than allies when it comes to hydraulic fracturing, the drilling technique used to unlock natural gas from shale rock nationwide.

But a handful of gas producers and environmental advocates are striving to change that dynamic by collaborating on a plan to step up the safety and regulation of hydraulic fracturing.

The Rural Blog: Congressman from one of poorest and most rural districts in line to head House Appropriations

The Republican congressman from one of the nation's poorest and most rural districts said yesterday that he has the votes to become chairman of the powerful House Appropriations Committee if his party takes control of the chamber as a result of Tuesday's elections, as expected.

Rep. Harold "Hal" Rogers of Kentucky's 5th District told The Rural Blog that he has 19 of the 33 votes on the Republican Steering Committee, which determines chairmanships. Rogers, an Appropriations subcommittee chairman in his 30th year in Congress, is a member of the committee.