15 Candidates Running for PA House/Senate Want to Ban Fracking

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The left-most contingent in the Pennsylvania Democrat Party wants to ban all fracking in the state. It’s fringe, but all such oddball movements start out as fringe. Of particular note in this election season is that a group of these ban-fracking nutters have gotten themselves on the ballot in 15 PA House and Senate races around the state. As you might expect, most of the ban-frackers are running in counties in the Philadelphia orbit (Delaware, Chester, Montgomery, Philly itself). There are some from outside (but still close to) Philly, in Northampton and Carbon counties. There are a few in Allegheny County (Pittsburgh area). There’s even one running in Centre County. We have the full list of 15 people that our friends in PA should be sure to NOT vote for in tomorrow’s very important election.

The Democrat group Proud Pennsylvania, in conjunction with the odious, extreme Food & Water Watch, have endorsed the following 15 ban-fracking nutters:

IN PARTNERSHIP WITH THE FOOD & WATER ACTION PAC, PROUD PENNSYLVANIA ENDORSES CANDIDATES FOR THE STATE LEGISLATURE WHO SUPPORT:

  1. MORATORIUM ON FRACKING, PIPELINES AND OTHER FOSSIL FUEL INFRASTRUCTURE.

  2. LEGISLATION TO MOVE PENNSYLVANIA TOWARDS 100% RENEWABLE ENERGY BY 2050

  3. AN ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT PLAN THAT BRINGS JOBS, COMMUNITY WEALTH AND ECONOMIC SELF-RELIANCE TO OUR STATE

  4. EXPANDING PENNSYLVANIA’S BURGEONING INDUSTRIAL HEMP INDUSTRY

ALL CANDIDATES HAVE PLEDGED NOT TO ACCEPT CONTRIBUTIONS FROM THE FOSSIL FUEL INDUSTRY.

Kristin Seale– House District 168, Delaware County Kristin is a lifelong public servant, advocating for equal access to affordable healthcare, energy and a living wage. She has worked to advance energy efficiency in our state through her work at the Keystone Energy Efficiency Association’s Energy Education Fund. She has also played an active role in the fight against the Mariner East 2 pipeline. If elected, Kristin would become the first LGBT woman to serve in Pennsylvania’s legislature, bringing a strong, community-informed voice to the important decision making that impacts our public safety, public education, civil rights and social equity.
DFO.jpg Danielle Friel Otten– House District 155, Chester County Danielle Otten is a mother, businesswoman, and fierce leader of Chester County’s anti-pipeline movement. When Danielle learned that the dangerous Mariner East 2 pipeline would run just 40 feet from the yard where her two young children play, she stood up to protect the rights of her family and community against lobbyists in Harrisburg . She plans to prioritize education, healthcare, and good stewardship of our environment.
EM.jpg Erin McCracken– House District 171, Centre County Erin is a community advocate, mother, and small business-owner based in Centre County’s Millheim Township.  She runs a restored community event space and catering company with her husband, specializing in barbecue made with locally sourced meat. Erin has been involved in her community’s fight against Nestle’s proposed water bottling plant. She plans to fight on behalf of hard-working families across Pennsylvania.
SL.jpg Summer Lee– House District 34, Allegheny County Summer was born and raised in North Braddock, a community which has historically suffered from pollution caused by the the Edgar Thomson Steel Mill. She will prioritize defeating a fracking well proposed at the steel mill, and pushing for a statewide ban on fracking. She is a dedicated organizer, activist, and advocate for social justice. She will work to improve air and water quality in Allegheny County.
EF.jpg Elizabeth Fiedler– House District 184, Philadelphia Elizabeth is a former reporter for WHYY where she covered community affairs and politics — she’s spent ten years asking tough questions of people in power and listening to Pennsylvanians who’s voices are not being heard in Harrisburg. A mother of two, Elizabeth knows that fighting climate change is the most important thing we can do to ensure the health and well-being of our children and grandchildren.
KS.jpg Kara Scott– House District 122, Carbon County Kara is a Council President for Bowmanstown Borough in Carbon County, mother of four, and community leader. She supports incentivizing municipal sustainable energy policies such as locally owned and operated solar and wind projects, and ending subsidies for unsustainable/non-local projects and investments. She supports full bans on all fracking infrastructure.
MS.jpg Melissa Shusterman– House District 157, Chester County Melissa is a Phoenixville-area small business owner who would advocate strongly for women’s rights and equal opportunities. She supports increased funding to the Department of Environmental Protection, a moratorium on fracking in the Delaware River Basin, and stricter laws to protect our air, water, and land.
KM.jpg Katie Muth– Senate District 44, Chester and Montgomery County Katie is one of the founders of Indivisible Mid Montco, working to bring the change communities around Pennsylvania are advocating for to the hallways of Harrisburg. The Mariner East 2 pipeline cuts through her district, and she supports calls to stop the pipeline and all other fossil fuel infrastructure.
MD3.jpg Mike Doyle–  House District 170, Philadelphia Mike is challenging Representative Martina White, the only Philadelphia Republican in the Pennsylvania House other than retiring Rep. John Taylor. Mike will protect Philadelphia’s status as a sanctuary city, advocate for Medicare for all, and push for a ban on fracking in the Delaware River Basin.
DB.jpg Daryl Boling– House District 152, Montgomery County Daryl Boling has worked in the Montco/Bucks area nonprofit community, supporting arts organizations for 20 years. He plans to bring his experience of community building and cooperation to the State House in Harrisburg, where he sees dysfunction and waste standing in the way of the true priorities of Pennsylvania families. He supports creating grants for small business development and taking aggressive measures to prevent oil and gas companies from damaging our environment.
LKB.jpg Leanne Krueger-Braneky– House District 161, Delaware County Since she was first elected four years ago, Rep. Krueger-Braneky has been one of the few environmental champions in Pennsylvania’s legislature. She has questioned subsidies for fossil fuel during budget hearings, pushed policies that invest in cleaner industries, and served as an advocate for small businesses.
AC.jpg Amy Cozze– House District 137, Northampton County A mother and small business owner, Amy Cozze has seen the positive impact of strengthening local supply chains on community health and wealth. She has served on the board of the Nazareth Business Council and is the liaison for the Greater Lehigh Valley Chamber’s Public Policy Committee. She is running for State Representative to advocate for small business owners and protect Pennsylvania’s natural resources.
SJR.jpg Sara Johnson Rothman– House District 151, Montgomery County Sara has fought for safe drinking water in her community, where a chemical plume threatens residents’ wells. Now she’s running to protect the drinking water of people around the state. She recognizes that environmental degradation, racial discrimination, and poverty are interrelated issues and must be addressed as such.
SI.jpg Sara Innamorato– House District 21, Allegheny County Sara started a company to work with the local and city government in Lawrenceville, developing events and initiatives around technology, food access, social justice and women’s rights. She runs SWPA, empowering women to run for elected office. She will prioritize the health of our environment to address air and water pollution in Allegheny County.
TimKearney.jpg Tim Kearney– Senate District 26, Delaware County Tim Kearney is the mayor of Swarthmore, and an experienced public servant, a husband, a father, and a small business owner and architect. Thanks to Tim, Swarthmore is a leader in environmental protection and sustainability practices, fair and equitable policing practices, and LGBTQ equality.

Here’s how Democrat house organ In These Times reports on the effort to elect these 15 radicals:

In Pennsylvania, a rush is on to extract gas and other fossil fuels from the Marcellus and Utica Shales. Both Democratic and Republican state officials have been quick to give the green light to the oil and gas industry to drill, frack and build pipelines. But local backlash against pollution, explosions and seizure of property is firing up a new crop of state legislative challengers who vow to stay clean of industry money and put a halt to the gas rush.

Grassroots environmentalist campaign Proud Pennsylvania has collaborated with Food and Water Action PAC to endorse 15 candidates for Pennsylvania Senate and House of Representatives on the November 6 ballot who support a ban on fracking and a moratorium on all new fossil fuel infrastructure. All have pledged not to accept industry money. Twelve of the 15 are women, reflecting the wave of women running for office in 2018.

These races could serve as a test of whether residents of Pennsylvania, like many in the Appalachian region, are tired of seeing their state embrace resource extraction with a high environmental toll.

The fracking boom

Since the nation’s first oil well went up in 1859 near Titusville, Pa., dirty energy has been a driver of the Pennsylvania economy. Starting with Gov. Ed Rendell (D) in roughly 2007, Pennsylvania has given the green light to the fossil fuel industry to drain natural gas from the Marcellus and Utica Shales through fracking. The Marcellus and Utica Shales also produce the colorless, odorless, highly explosive Natural Gas Liquids (NGL) used, among other things, to make plastic. Once natural gas and NGLs are extracted, they are moved through pipelines, trains and trucks to ports where they are typically sent to international markets. Sunoco, for example, has repurposed Mariner East 1 (ME1), built in the 1930s to carry gasoline, to carry up to 70,000 barrels daily of NGLs to the Marcus Hook refinery near Philadelphia. Two more Sunoco pipelines in construction, Mariner East 2 (ME2) and ME2X, will respectively increase the carrying capacity of ME1 by 275,000 barrels and 250,000 barrels of NGL daily.

Fracking and the Revolving Door in Pennsylvania, a 2013 report by watchdog group the Public Accountability Initiative, details just how close state regulators and officials are to the oil and gas industry. Governors, legislators and employees of state regulatory agencies—from high-ranking officials down to well inspectors—have consulted for, lobbied, worked for, received campaign contributions from or provided legal services to a wide assortment of fossil fuel companies. Since the creation of the state Department of Environmental Protection (DEP) in 1995, every head of the agency has had ties to the energy industry.

New fracking wells require permission from a variety of regulatory bodies, but they’ve still proliferated. According to the statewide environmental advocacy organization PennFuture, as of late 2016, 10,000 gas wells had been drilled in the state since the boom began in 2007, and permits were issued for another 18,000. In 2017, Pennsylvania was second only to Texas in gas production, with nearly 5.5 trillion cubic feet of natural gas production, primarily from the Marcellus Shale.

Leaks, explosions and land seizure

The harm to the residents and environment has been enormous. According to research and advocacy organization FracTracker Alliance, federal regulators have logged reports of 108 pipeline “incidents” in Pennsylvania since 2010, including 15 explosions. These incidents have killed eight people, injured 21, displaced 1,118 and caused $67 million in damages. Most recently, on September 11, a fireball from Energy Transfer Partner’s Revolution Pipeline destroyed a house in Beaver County, Pa. No one was injured, but residents within a half mile were evacuated and a local school was temporarily closed.

The DEP has given out 60 notices of violation to Sunoco since construction on ME2 began in February 2017. These range from spills of drilling fluids to sinkholes, which environmentalists say is a hazard of drilling and constructing pipelines through karst, an unstable topography found throughout Pennsylvania. Sunoco has simply paid the resultant fines, many of which are so tiny as to amount to a slap on the wrist, and continued construction. Even the largest penalties, like $12.6 million settlement for what the DEP called “egregious and willful violations,” are a fraction of Sunoco’s $2 billion ME2 budget.

ME2 is not yet carrying NGLs, but ME1 has already had at least three leaks. None have resulted in explosions, according to State Impact, a reporting project of NPR. But if a leak is ignited by something as commonplace as a cellphone, a car or doorbell, these substances can wipe out an entire area, with a blast radius ranging widely due to factors such as weather.

The Pennsylvania Public Utility Commission granted Sunoco the power to exercise eminent domain to develop ME2, leaving landowners with little legal recourse to stop the pipeline from being built across their land. Among those landowners are Ellen and Steve Gerhart, a retired special education teacher and artist, respectively, who own 27 acres in rural Huntingdon County and say Sunoco has spilled 4,000 gallons of drilling fluids in the vicinity of their property. The Gerharts have taken numerous steps, including lawsuits, to protect their home from the devastating effects of resource extraction.

Rolfe Blume of Cumberland County says he has been without clean water since construction of ME2 began on his land in 2017. He and his wife have to go out once a day for a hot meal and can’t wash dishes or take a shower at their home without an overwhelming smell of sulfur.

Sunoco did not respond to requests for comment for this article.

A different form of danger

Along with water and health issues, some residents are concerned about the high prevalence of rape around pipeline projects.

Oil and gas companies set up mancamps—temporary campsites with hundreds or even thousands of transient workers, predominantly men—near project sites. Sexual and physical violence and other crimes increased during the Bakken Shale boom, prompting the FBI to set up a permanent field office in Williston, N.D. Joye Braun of the Cheyene River Sioux, whose reservation is close to Keystone XL pipeline, believes that crimes like sexual assault “are tied directly to these extractive industries.” She adds, “Standing up against fracking and tar sands is so much more than just fighting climate change—which we as First Nations feel the effects of right now—it’s also about protecting our women and children and Two Spirit Nation.”

Barbara Robinson of Chester County, Pa., who has a pipeline being constructed directly behind her house, says that she doesn’t feel safe being in her backyard or pool when the pipeline workers are around. Her 15-year-old granddaughter won’t go out either.

A two-party problem

The pro-fracking stance of many elected and appointed officials in PA crosses party lines. “When it comes to fracking, the only difference between Republicans and Democrats is that Republicans want to give away our health, safety, and environment; Democrats want to sell those things” by taxing them, says Karen Feridun, a founding member of the Better Path Coalition, an advocacy group that hopes to eliminate fracking and shale gas infrastructure.

Current Democratic Gov. Tom Wolf received $1.5 million in campaign and in-kind contributions from the fossil-fuel industry when he was first elected in 2014. Under Wolf, the state has moved $24 million from a renewable energy fund to its PIPE program, which makes the money available for grants to institutions to install last-mile infrastructure to facilitate their use of natural gas. In reference to a 2017 report aiming to “enhance Pennsylvania’s opportunities in petrochemical manufacturing,” Wolf said that “Pennsylvania has a once-in-a-generation opportunity to develop and implement a strategy that will cultivate a manufacturing renaissance.”

Not all campaign-finance filings are available for 2018, but Wolf has accepted at least $5,000 from ETP, the company behind the Dakota Access Pipeline and Sunoco’s parent company. ETP has one of the worst safety records in the industry, with spills averaging one every 11 days. The company has also hired private security to surveil and aggressively suppress pipeline activists in multiple states, according to an investigation by The Intercept. In the Gerhart’s legal battles with Sunoco, one evidentiary supplement provided by Sunoco Logistics was a detailed surveillance log by Leighton Security. It included physical descriptions of people and vehicles coming and going from the property.

The governor’s office refused comment for this story.

Proud Pennsylvania is not trying to oust Wolf, who’s up for reelection in November. “We have no choice but to reelect Gov. Wolf,” says Judy Wicks, founder of Proud Pennsylvania. “I’m disappointed about his position on fracking, but he is good on other issues that I care about such as public education and woman’s rights, and far superior than another Corbett, who was a disaster on all counts.”

Instead, with their endorsements of Pennsylvania state legislative candidates, Proud Pennsylvania and Food and Water Action are trying to assemble a legislature that will truly stand up to industry.

The challenger

Among their 15 endorsees is Erin McCracken, a Democratic candidate in the 171st District, who has agreed to back a ten percent increase in solar energy production, as well as refusing industry contributions to her campaign and supporting a moratorium on fracking. “It doesn’t matter what your party is,” she says. “There is no denying that climate change is already impacting our communities and our lives, especially our farming communities.”

She’s also concerned about the pipelines contaminating the water supply. “Clean water is something that we all have a right to, and we need to protect that,” she says.

Another matter that may come before the legislature is the question of protest suppression. Pennsylvania’s Senate has already passed a bill, SB652, based on the pro-oil and gas American Legislative Exchange Council’s critical infrastructure bill, which aims to enhance penalties for people who criminally trespass on infrastructure of a “critical infrastructure facility”—which include oil and gas projects. A similar bill in Louisiana has been written into law and several people resisting ETP’s Bayou Bridge Pipeline have been charged with felonies. The bill was recently tabled in the state House.

When asked how she would vote on SB652 if it comes up, McCracken said that she’s “extremely opposed to that. Protest is a part of our First Amendment rights that are non-negotiable. … We need to take it further. We need to provide protection to people who are expressing their opinions.” (2)

Here’s how the author of the article above describes herself in the byline: “Jen Deerinwater is a bisexual, Two Spirit, disabled and mixed-race Tsalagi—a citizen of the Cherokee Nation of Oklahoma. Her website is www.JenDeerinwater.com.” If you check out her website, you’ll find Jen hates America, calling it ameriKKKa. Enough said.

(1) Proud Pennsylvania (accessed Nov 5, 2018) – Candidates We Support

(2) In These Times (Oct 31, 2018) – A New Crop of Candidates, Refusing Industry Money, Vows To Halt Fracking in Pennsylvania