New Report Reveals Toxic Air Near Natural Gas Operations
Citizen Samples Confirm Neighboring Communities at Risk
The full report can be downloaded at: Gassed! Full Report
Gassed! Media Coverage
FOR
RELEASE 7/12/11
Contact:
Denny
Larson, Global Community Monitor, 415-845-4705
Josh
Joswick, San Juan Citizens Alliance, 970-259-3583
Shirley
McNall, San Juan County, NM Residents Worried About Our Health, 505-334-6534
Paul
Light, Battlement Concerned Citizens, 970-285-7791
New
Report Reveals Toxic Air Near Natural Gas Operations
Citizen
Samples Confirm Neighboring Communities at Risk
El Cerrito, CA-- Citizen sampling of air quality
near natural gas production facilities has identified highly unsafe levels of
toxic chemicals near homes, playgrounds, schools and community centers in
Colorado and New Mexico. A new report issued by Global Community Monitor, GASSED! Citizen Investigation of Toxic Air Pollution from Natural Gas Development,
details the air sampling results, environmental and public health threats with
living amid the natural gas boom.
A coalition of environmental and community based
organizations in Colorado and New Mexico collected nine air samples that were
analyzed by a certified lab. The lab detected a total of 22 toxic
chemicals in the air samples, including four known carcinogens, as well as
toxins known to damage the nervous system and respiratory irritants. The chemicals detected ranged from 3 to 3,000
times higher than what is considered safe by state and federal agencies.
Sampling was conducted in the San Juan Basin area of Colorado and New Mexico,
as well as Garfield County in western Colorado.
“Carcinogenic chemicals like benzene and
acrylonitrile should not be in the air we breathe – and certainly not at these potentially
harmful levels," said Dr. Mark Chernaik, scientist. “These results suggest
neighboring communities are not being protected and their long-term health is
being put at risk.”
"My husband, pets, and I have experienced
respiratory and other health related problems during the twelve years we have
lived on Cow Canyon Road in La Plata County, Colorado. We believe these
health issues are related to the air quality in our neighborhood and in the
area,” said Jeri L. Montgomery, neighbor of natural gas development. Through
the course of the pilot study, neighbors of natural gas production facilities
documented chemical odors and sampled the air. Neighbors have appealed to local,
state and national government agencies to investigate their air quality
complaints, to limited recourse.
"We are very concerned about the total
disregard for the health and welfare of the people "existing" near
the sickening toxic oil and gas industry dumps located in neighborhoods such as
the land farm on Crouch Mesa and the waste disposal facility in Bloomfield that
are permitted and approved by the State of New Mexico and Federal EPA,” said
Shirley McNall, member of San Juan County, NM Residents Worried About Our
Health.
"Experts and agencies recognize more air
monitoring is needed, but it's not happening," said Paul Light, co-chair
of the Battlement Concerned Citizens. "Rather than wait for the
government, we used the Bucket Brigade to collect much-needed air quality
information."
The community and environmental groups in the San
Juan Basin and western Colorado worked with Global Community Monitor, which
trains community members living near industrial operations to run their own
“Bucket Brigade” to sample their air. The Bucket Brigade has been used in 27
countries internationally. The bucket uses EPA methods for testing and an
independent lab for air sample analysis.
Complaints about air quality have also surfaced in
other states around the country, including West Virginia, Arkansas,
Pennsylvania, Texas, and Wyoming. Little information exists to educate and
inform citizens about the chemicals being stored, emitted into the air, ground
or water in close proximity to their homes. “People are getting gassed, and they don’t even know what is coming at
them. The air monitoring provides crucial information in understanding what
families are being exposed to on a day-to-day basis,” said Denny Larson of
Global Community Monitor.
Federal loopholes in the Clean Air Act allow major
corporations to circumvent basic protections that put public health first. US
EPA is currently drafting new regulations to control and monitor air pollution
from natural gas development. Congress is debating new legislation, such as the
Bringing Reductions to Energies Air Born Toxic Health Effects (BREATHE) Act.
As regulation moves forward, GASSED! states that
solutions are possible. The natural gas industry should invest in pollution
controls to increase efficiency and reduce the amount of chemicals in the air.
The report also calls for mandatory air monitoring at all natural gas
operations and disclosure of chemicals used in the process to local residents.
In addition, the proximity of neighbors and wells is
often too close. The report recommends a minimum quarter mile buffer zone
between homes, schools and natural gas operations. This is similar to regulations enacted by
Tulare County, CA on pesticide spray and St. Charles Parish, LA on industrial
development. The report further states, “As the natural gas industry continues
to grow, so will the number of families neighboring and affected by the
emissions. Industry and government leaders have a unique opportunity to address
public health and environmental issues. For coexistence between communities and
gas industry to be possible, chemical exposure has to be immediately
addressed.”
Download the Appendix:
Complete Air Samples Results Spreadsheet
Full Air Sample Data Interpretation Letter from Mark Chernaik, Phd
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