The Real Story of Why Forced Pooling Bill Failed in WV
Yesterday MDN reported a story that (so far) few others have bothered to report: West Virginia’s House Bill (HB) 2688 failed to gain passage at literally the eleventh hour–one hour before the annual 60-day session ended (see Republicans (!) Help Defeat WV Forced Pooling at 11th Hour). We believed, and repeated, the reporting we saw on the final vote–that Republicans were largely responsible for the last minute defeat of the bill. That was inaccurate. We were contacted yesterday by Ron Hayhurst, head of the West Virginia Royalty Owners Association, who was himself very much a part of brokering what he believes is the best possible bill (HB2688) to protect mineral rights owners in the Mountain State. Ron told us the last minute change in the House vote had nothing to do with Republicans defecting–and he is right. Although House Del. Pat McGeehan (a Republican) voted “no” both times, he was not the hero of the day, as reported in some media accounts. The truth is this: WV Democrats got their knickers in a twist over losing several other votes last Saturday and they decided to punish the Republicans by denying them passage of this bill. The original House vote was 60-40 in favor of HB2688. The final vote was 49-49 tie (with 2 people missing in action for the final vote). Of the 11 who changed their votes (names below) from “yes” the first time to “no” the second time–all 11 were Democrats. There were two Republicans who changed from an original “no” to vote “yes”–but it wasn’t enough to eke out a win. Hayhurst says when forced pooling is passed (a question of when, not if) the bill may not be as favorable to mineral rights owners as this one was…
Read More “The Real Story of Why Forced Pooling Bill Failed in WV”

This is not an easy story to write. It’s about employment in the Marcellus Shale industry–and about age discrimination. Until late last year, by all accounts the Marcellus Shale industry was, from a jobs perspective, going great guns. Yes, sometimes it was/is necessary to import workers from other states to handle specialized jobs. But increasingly the jobs have been going to local workers and not out-of-staters. Yesterday we received a heartfelt letter (below) from an MDN subscriber. This gentleman is a mechanical engineer with degrees from Penn State and Lafayette College. He has loads of experience in a variety of areas–engineering, contracting, even running a small business. He wants to get involved with the greatest industry on the planet–the Marcellus Shale energy industry. He can paper every room in his house with the number of resumes and job applications he’s filled out. He’s applied for everything from technician to field hand to roustabout (he’s physically fit). In the last five years that he’s been trying, he hasn’t been called for a single interview. Not one. He’s now 52 years old. We don’t like calling attention to stories like this one, but MDN doesn’t shy away from sharing the “bad news” about our beloved industry along with the overwhelming good news…