Marcellus Shale EF!ers Held at $57,000 Bail

Posted on the 20 March 2014 by Earth First! Newswire @efjournal

from Earth First! Newswire

After 4 hours of halting operations, the 3 folks locked down across the road to halt Anadarko’s hydraulic fracturing operation in the Tiadaghton State Forest have been removed. Protestors blocked the only access road to a wellpad by locking themselves to barrels of concrete, preventing workers from entering the site. The traffic jam we made won’t be cleared up for another couple of hours! Meanwhile, dozens of other activists are bringing the fight to Anadarko’s doorstep at their offices in Williamsport.

The 5 arrestees from this morning’s blockade of an Anadarko fracking site face misdemeanor charges and a total bail of $57,500 for defending the wild what is wild. Visit their WePay account to contribute to the liberation of these brave ecodefenders!

Michael Badges-Canning, retired school teacher from Butler County said: “The public lands of Pennsylvania belong to all Pennsylvanians.  It is my obligation as a resident of the Commonwealth and a grandparent to protect our wild heritage, our pristine waters and the natural beauty for my grandchildren, Dougie and Lochlin.”

Gov. Corbett has recently issued an executive order to open Pennsylvania’s remaining public lands for hydraulic fracturing. This includes state forests that have been off limits to gas companies since 2010, when then Governor Ed Rendell declared a moratorium on any new leases.  The moratorium came in the wake of a Pennsylvania DCNR study that concluded no remaining state owned lands were suitable for oil and gas development without significant surface disruptions. Corbett’s current move to lift the multi-year ban ignores the negative effects that new leases will have on Pennsylvania’s most ecologically sensitive forests, including those where species are at risk.

Anadarko’s proposed development of the Clarence Moore tract, part of the Loyalsock Forest, has become the center of the grassroots campaign to defend Pennsylvania’s remaining wild places. Local residents packed DCNR hearings in protest of Anadarko’s plans, leading to the ousting of former DCNR secretary Richard Allan. According to PA DEP’s Oil and Gas Compliance Report, Anadarko has been cited with nearly 250 violations over the last five years, ranking the company in the top three percent of violators statewide.

Danielle Dietterick with Marcellus Shale Earth First! said: “As a lifelong resident of Pennsylvania, I feel a moral responsibility to protect my home from the malicious onslaught of an industry with a track record of environmental degradation and human rights violations. Our Governors complicity has proven he is an industry pawn who can ignore the words of our state constitution and the desires of those who he is supposed to represent.”

Residents of Pennsylvania have shown that they will not give up their wild places without a fight.  In July 2012, nearly 100 activists with Marcellus Shale EarthFirst! Forced a 70-foot-tall EQT hydrofracking drill rig to suspend operations for 12 hours in the Moshannon State Forest.  Last fall, students from around the country rallied with Allegeny County residents in Pittsburgh to oppose County Executive Rich Fitzgerald’s plan to open up county parks to hydrofracking.  Marcellus Shale EarthFirst! has vowed to prevent any new shale gas development in the Loyalsock State Forest.