For
Immediate Release
July 22,
2014
Contacts:
Steve
Hvozdovich, Clean Water Action, 412-765-3053 x 210 cell - 412-445-9675
Karen Feridun,
Berks Gas Truth, 610-678-7726 berksgastruth@gmail.com
Maya van
Rossum, the Delaware Riverkeeper, 215-369-1188 x 102 (rings through to cell)
Tracy
Carluccio, Delaware Riverkeeper Network, 215-369-1188 ext. 104
Nadia
Steinzor, Earthworks Oil and Gas Accountability Project, 845-417-6505
Thomas Au,
Sierra Club Pennsylvania Chapter, 717-234-7445
Nick
Kennedy, Mountain Watershed Association, 724-455-4200 x 6 www.mtwatershed.com
Kristen
Cevoli, PennEnvironment, 215-732-5897 ext. 4
Auditor General Issues Critical PA DEP
Audit
Pennsylvania Environmental
Organizations Applaud Investigation’s Goals
Report's
findings mirror concerns raised by Pennsylvanians dealing with water
contamination
Harrisburg,
PA – Pennsylvania’s Auditor General office released a highly anticipated audit
of the Department of Environmental Protection’s performance regarding shale gas
development today.
Auditor
General Eugene DePasquale stated that the audit “…shows that the meteoric
growth of the shale gas industry caught the Department of Environmental
Protection unprepared to effectively administer laws and regulations to protect
drinking water and unable to efficiently respond to citizen complaints”. The report is
available here.
"The
Auditor General's inspection is not just a capture of deficiencies within the
agency in present time but a call to the future to take actions that will
improve agency policies &
operations
so that public confidence in the agency can be restored & we can better
protect
drinking
water & public health", said Steve Hvozdovich, Marcellus Shale Policy
Associate,
Clean
Water Action.
"For
countless Pennsylvanians in the Marcellus and Utica, the Auditor General's
findings come as no surprise. His frank assessment of the deficiencies within
the DEP accurately tells the story of an agency that was unprepared to deal
with shale gas development's impacts on our water supply and, by extension, our
communities. The tenor of the agency's response included in the report is
discouraging in its denial of many of the problems the Auditor General has
cited and its misguided belief that it has satisfactorily addressed some of the
other issues, particularly those dealing with transparency and public access to
critical data," said Karen Feridun, founder of
Berks Gas
Truth.
“PADEP
owes it to the people of Pennsylvania and its water, air, and communities to take
forthright action to adopt all the findings and recommendations of this
comprehensive
performance
audit by the Auditor General. The Auditor General has made it clear there is an
expectation
that this audit will result in change. The fact that DEP is already contesting
the
findings
of the report as well as some of the 29 recommendations is a troubling sign
that we hope public attention will quickly change,” said Maya van Rossum, the
Delaware Riverkeeper.
“The
Auditor General’s report is a sorely needed reality check by an independent
office
that knows
how to perform a straightforward audit. This professional analysis of PADEP
exposes the failings of the agency to effectively regulate the industry during
this unprecedented shale gas rush that has gripped the Commonwealth. When you
delve into the audit’s details of how and why the industry got ahead of
government in Pennsylvania, lessons emerge that provide the guidance needed for
critically needed reform at PADEP,” said Tracy Carluccio, Deputy Director,
Delaware Riverkeeper Network.
"The auditor
general has confirmed what Pennsylvania residents have long been saying and
experiencing: the impacts of gas development are real, intense, and not being
addressed,"
says Nadia
Steinzor of Earthworks' Oil & Gas Accountability Project. "DEP and the
legislature
can start
putting the public interest first by adopting the report's recommendations,
dedicating
more
resources to enforcement, and working more closely with communities to solve
problems
than they
do with industry," said Nadia Steinzor, Eastern Program Coordinator, Earthworks.
“The
Auditor General confirmed what many outside observers have been saying --
Pennsylvania
residents who live in drilling areas face a significant risk because DEP, the
agency tasked to protect them, is Ill-equipped to do so. Pennsylvanians deserve
better,” said Tom Au, Conservation Chair, Sierra Club Pennsylvania Chapter.
“Finally
the fundamental flaws in the DEP’s management of the impacts from shale gas
development
have come to light. The Auditor General’s report vindicates the ever growing
chorus of
voices that have been calling on the DEP for years to reform its practices, and
for sufficient funding for adequate staffing. Having devoted significant
resources to combat the impacts of water contamination, bureaucratic delay, and
flawed information on the communities
we serve,
we hope this report sparks real change in shale extraction oversight,” said
Nick
Kennedy,
Community Advocate, Mountain Watershed Association.
“Sadly,
this report just validates what most Pennsylvanians already knew,” stated Kristen
Cevoli, Fracking Program Director of PennEnvironment. “When it comes to fracking,
the Keystone state deserves environmental cops on the beat, instead
Pennsylvania’s environment has been left with Keystone cops on the beat. This
is just more piece of evidence about why Pennsylvania must take a timeout from
fracking until we can ensure the protection of the state’s residents and
environment.”
For the
last 18 months, environmental and citizens groups have been in touch with DEP
regarding
our grave concerns about procedures and policies for water quality monitoring,
testing, and response in the face of the shale gas boom. It has long been clear
that they lack transparency; result in the withholding of vital data from
affected households and the public; force residents to undergo prolonged
exposure to contaminants that can impact health; and delay action necessary to
correct pollution and ensure that operators provide clean drinking water to
those who need it.
The audit
confirms that basic reforms are needed to address the harms communities are
experiencing
from shale gas development in the Commonwealth.
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