Last call for comments on PA’s Marcellus rules

February 12 is the deadline to get your comments into Pennsylvania’s Environmental Quality Board on the proposed Marcellus wastewater regulations.

In an action alert to its members, the Clean Water Action says that the wastewater that results from drilling operations that tap into into the Marcellus Shale’s rich natural gas deposits :

“contains a mix of heavy metals including arsenic and lead, toxic chemicals such as benzene that can cause cancer, and salts. This wastewater is generally 3-6 times saltier than seawater, and already has changed fresh water streams in Pennsylvania into salt water environments!”

Currently, the Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Protection (DEP) has been allowing drillers to dump their wastewater with little treatment, and sometimes with none at all. However, the DEP has proposed new standards for Marcellus wastewater which would finally require real wastewater treatment prior to any discharges into our drinking water supply.

The natural gas industry, represented by the Marcellus Shale Coalition, released a Statement on Flowback Water Treatment which generally–but not specifically–addresses the proposed regulations.

A copy of the proposed new standards, and information on where to send your comments, can be found here.

Related:
Marcellus Shale tax: Time is right to begin revenue stream
The state’s gas pains: Taxing the new industry properly
Marcellus Shale proponents say tax could stunt industry’s growth
Family’s dilemma: Gas rights vs. black heritage

More state land may be offered to Marcellus drillers
Sumitomo considering Marcellus Shale purchase

Our most recent posts:
Week’s top environmental news in NJ, PA & NY

Sam Wolfe exits NJ-BPU for private sector
1600 more acres preserved in NJ Pinelands
NJ’s DEP needs radical change–yes or no?

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Week’s top environmental news in NJ, PA & NY: February 1-5, 2010



Below are just a few of the environmental and political news stories for New Jersey, Pennsylvania, New York and beyond that appeared in
EnviroPolitics during the week of February 1-5, 2010.



New Jersey Politics

Prosecution rests case in Jersey City corruption trial Federal prosecutors rested their case today in the corruption trial of a Jersey City deputy mayor after six days of testimony anchored by black-and-white videos secretly made by the informant at the center of last year’s massive FBI sting Star-Ledger

At corruption trial, ripping Solomon Dwek’s credibility After three days of combative exchanges, a lawyer for a Jersey City deputy mayor accused of bribe-taking ended his cross examination of the informant at the center of last year’s epic FBI sting today by trying to cast him as an unbridled huckster who once bilked $100 million from his own uncle Star-Ledger

N.J. residents take concerns to Statehouse hearings A favorite pastime among cranky New Jerseyans is grumbling about state government: it’s too expensive, it’s too corrupt and nobody listens. Today, residents had a chance to air their complaints directly to lawmakers Star-Ledger Inquirer SHB NJNR

Trial resumes with defense playing luncheonette video The federal corruption trial of Jersey City Mayor Jerramiah Healy’s campaign treasurer resumed this morning with the defense playing the March 13, 2009, video of government informant Solomon Dwek meeting with Healy, defendant Leona Beldini and others at a luncheonette Jersey Journal

> Dwek: A dozen politicians refused my bribes Star-Ledger

Christie comes out swinging If there has been a theme to Gov. Christie’s first two weeks in office, it has been this: Get ready for a fight, especially when it comes to money Inquirer

NJ loses billions as residents depart More than $70 billion in wealth left New Jersey between 2004 and 2008 as affluent residents moved elsewhere, according to a new report that marks a swift reversal of fortune for a state once considered the nation’s wealthiest Star-Ledger

New Jersey Environment

A change of course in Trenton on agriculture Two years ago, 500 angry farmers and their supporters paraded tractors and horses through the streets of Trenton to protest Gov. Corzine’s plan to eliminate New Jersey’s Agriculture Department. Now, Gov. Christie’s transition team makes recommendations to strengthen the department and hike Jersey Fresh marketing funds Inquirer

Gov says agency hired lobbyists to ‘tone down’ criticism The Passaic Valley Sewerage Commission regularly spends hundreds of thousands of dollars a year on lobbyists, and now Gov. Chris Christie says the agency is directing its paid advocates to get him to “tone down” his criticism of its spending SHB

Highlands preservation funds doubled in federal budget The federal budget unveiled this week includes $5M for Highlands preservation, double what was approved last year and halfway towards a hoped-for $11 million annual allocation Star-Ledger

N.J. Senate panel considers plan to transfer housing The state Senate began work today on a bill to transform the way affordable housing is handled in New Jersey, including transferring control to towns and abolishing a council that has been criticized as ineffective SHB Inquirer

> Opinion: Gut affordable housing? Gov. says whoa! S-L

Governor’s team report on DEP draws flack Supporters say it’s a badly needed overhaul of a troubled agency that acts as one of the biggest deterrents to economic growth. Enviros say it’s a giveaway to developers and polluters The Record EP Blog

Calls for stricter oversight ring out at Statehouse Gov. Chris Christie’s reaction to a report that the $313,000 annual salary of Bryan Christiansen, the director of the Passaic Valley Sewerage Authority, is outrageous, has led legislators to call for a state takeover of the operation NJNR

Pennsylvania Environment

Gas drilling meeting draws lots of interest Members of the gas-drilling industry acknowledged on Thursday evening a failure to inform the public about their procedures, and the audience at the WVIA call-in show reminded them of that often Times Leader

Penn State probe into climate-change researcher’s work Fearing erosion of public confidence in research climate-change scientist Michael Mann conducted, university officials say they will formally investigate the co-winner of the 2007 Nobel Peace Prize Tribune-Review Gant Daily

>Groups blast PSU investigation of Mann Centre Daily Times

Drilling prompts DEP to get Scranton office For some time, local legislators and environmentalists have complained that local oversight of natural-gas drilling is too difficult because the closest inspectors are in Times Leader

Pa. among top in tackling waterway pollution An Environmental Protection Agency list has the state as second nationally in the sections of waterways that have been restored to health, behind only Tennessee. With seven separate waterways on the list, Pennsylvania is tied with Wyoming Times Leader

Fortuna fined for gas drilling violations in Pennsylvania Pennsylvania’s Department of Environmental Protection has fined Fortuna Energy of Big Flats $3,500 for violations discovered last year at three of the company’s natural gas wells in Troy Township, Bradford County Elmira Star-Gazette Williamsport Sun-Gazette

Energy firms pumped money into gas tax fight Energy companies spent at least $1 million on lobbying and contributed thousands of dollars to various state lawmakers last year, partly in an effort to extinguish a proposed tax on the natural gas extracted from the Marcellus Shale in rural PA, state records show Morning Call

Pennsylvania Politics

Bonusgate witness tried “to hide things” The star witness against former state Rep. Mike Veon admitted today that he once deleted files from his state computer “to hide things,” and used his clout to put a girlfriend in state job Inquirer

Through e-mails, witness links Veon to Bonusgate As star witness Michael Manzo wound down his testimony for prosecutors in the Bonusgate theft trial of his onetime role model yesterday, a ragged heap of papers grew behind witness stand Inquirer

Casino association’s not a lobby? For more than two hours, two dozen legislators grill veteran Philadelphia lawyer Richard A. Sprague, wanting to know just what his group – the Pennsylvania Casino Association – was up to Inquirer

Veon trial opens with DeWeese blamed for Bonusgate It was all Bill DeWeese’s fault. That was what a lawyer for former State Rep. Mike Veon, DeWeese’s longtime second-in-command, spent the better part of three hours telling jurors yesterday as Bonusgate trial got under way Inquirer

Former Pa. legislator to pay $10,000 in ethics case Matthew Wright, 51, a Republican who served in the House from 1991 to 2006, allegedly used legislative staffers, equipment, and material to help run three reelection campaigns Inquirer

New York Nation World

Activists want cleanser contents revealed Environmental advocates want to know, and they asked a court Thursday to use a 1971 New York State law to force such manufacturers as Procter & Gamble and Colgate-Palmolive to reveal just what makes up household staples like Ajax, Ivory soap and Tide AP

Judge says state must pay farmer’s legal fees State judge ruled that the Adirondack Park Agency will have to pay the legal fees and expenses of Salim B. Lewis, a former Wall Street executive who is one of the state’s largest organic farmers NYT

A boom in ‘distributed’ solar projects In recent weeks, some 1,300 megawatts’ worth of distributed solar deals and initiatives have been announced or approved NYT

Gov. Paterson vetoes ethics bill, saying it’s not reform NYT

High lead levels found in IBM water Kingston Freeman

Nike makes environmental strides A new report issued by the shoe and apparel manufacturer highlights the progress the company has made in reducing its environmental footprint NYT

Solar brokering firm assesses first year A co-founder of the San Francisco solar-purchasing brokerage One Block Off the Grid, or 1BOG, says his business model is proving effective NYT

Our most recent posts:

Sam Wolfe exits NJ-BPU for private sector

1600 more acres preserved in NJ Pinelands

NJ’s DEP needs radical change–yes or no?

Enviro-Events in NJ & PA – February 2010


Recycled tires: Where the rubber is the road




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Sam Wolfe exits NJ-BPU for private sector


Viridity Energy, which bills itself as “a smart grid company that transforms large energy consumers into virtual energy generators,” today announced today that it has appointed Samuel A. Wolfe as Director of Legal & Regulatory Affairs.

Viridity said Wolfe will work with RTOs/ISOs, state and federal regulatory agencies and legislators, and key stakeholders to improve the energy market environment for customers who actively manage their energy needs.

Wolfe served since 2006 as the Chief Counsel to the New Jersey Board of Public Utilities where he advocated for the state’s energy interests and supported renewable energy and energy efficiency programs. He wrote parts of NJ Energy Master Plan on electric generation and worked with FERC/PJM/USDOE to link transmission planning with NJ energy & environmental goals.

He also worked with NJ energy utilities on $250 million investment in energy efficiency and economic stimulus, worked with PJM to include energy efficiency in PJM capacity market, and helped to develop regulations to transition BPU solar program from rebates to market-based incentives and to support long-term contracts for sale of solar RECs.

From 2002 to 2006, Wolfe was Assistant Commissioner of the New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection where he managed Air Quality, Water Quality, and Environmental Safety programs.

He represented PSEG Services Corporation, from 1998 to 2002, as Environmental Policy Manager.

Wolfe has testified extensively on energy, climate change, and air pollution issues before the U.S. Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee, the U.S. House Committee on Energy and Commerce, and state legislative committees.

He has a J.D. from University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and an A.B. from Cornell University.

Headquartered in Conshohocken, PA, Viridity Energy was founded in 2008 by former executives of PJM Interconnection.

Our most recent posts:
1600 more acres preserved in NJ Pinelands
NJ’s DEP needs radical change–yes or no?
Enviro-Events in NJ & PA – February 2010

Recycled tires: Where the rubber is the road

Could a revised State Plan save NJ money?


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Sam Wolfe exits NJ-BPU for private sector Read More »

1600 more acres preserved in NJ Pinelands


The New Jersey Pinelands Commission reports big environmental news today–the dedication of more than $1.9 million to preserve 1,612 acres in Atlantic, Burlington, Cape May and Ocean counties.

John Stokes, the commission’s executive director, said the purchases are for “outstanding natural resources such as habitat for rare Pinelands plants and animals, and they connect large, adjacent properties that also have been permanently preserved.”

The 13 properties purchased for preservation include:

* The Medford and Evesham Sub-regional Planning Area in Burlington County: (one property totaling 688 acres, up to $115,000 allocated to the Burlington County Farmland Preservation Program);

* The Toms River Sub-Regional Planning Area in Jackson Township, Ocean County: (two projects totaling 357 acres, up to $17,325 to the Ocean County Natural Lands Trust and up to $1,000,000 to the Trust for Public Land);

* The Forked River Mountain Area in Ocean Township (one project totaling 268 acres, up to $363,000 to the Ocean County Natural Lands Trust)

* The Preservation Area of Bass River Township, Burlington County: (three projects totaling 112 acres, and a total of up to $65,825 allocated to the New Jersey Conservation Foundation);

* The Special Agricultural Production and Infill Development areas of Woodland Township, Burlington County: (one project totaling 61 acres, up
to $74,250 allocated to the New Jersey Conservation Foundation; Requires concurrent approval by the Pinelands Commission);

* The Preservation Area of Woodland Township, Burlington County: (two projects totaling 56 acres, and a total of up to $67,500 allocated to the New Jersey Conservation Foundation);

* The Batsto River Headwaters in Shamong Township, Burlington County: (one project totaling 39 acres, up to $200,713 allocated to Shamong Township);

* The Forest Area of Dennis Township, Cape May County: (one project totaling 25 acres, up to $57,750 allocated to The Nature Conservancy); and

* The Forest Area of Estell Manor, Atlantic County: (one project totaling 5 acres, up to $5,445 allocated to The Nature Conservancy)

The 13 properties represent the fourth round of funding that the Commission’s Permanent Land Protection Committee has allocated for land acquisition. In the previous three rounds, 18 properties totaling 3,027 acres were allocated funding at a total fair market value of more than $18 million.

Funding for the purchases results from a 2004 agreement with the New Jersey Board of Public Utilities to permit the construction and upgrade of an electric transmission line through eastern portions of the Pinelands. Under the agreement, a special fund was established to further protect the unique resources of the Pinelands Area.

The utility that built the transmission lines, Atlantic City Electric (formerly Conectiv), provided $13 million to establish the Fund.

Our most recent posts:
NJ’s DEP needs radical change–yes or no?

Enviro-Events in NJ & PA – February 2010

Recycled tires: Where the rubber is the road

Could a revised State Plan save NJ money?

EPA setting new Nitrogen Dioxide air limit
Bad news for PSE&G power line foes in NJ

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NJ’s DEP needs radical change–yes or no?

A transition team deputized by New Jersey’s new governor to review operations at the state’s Department of Environmental Protection has produced a report with recommendations that have businesses shouting ‘Yes indeed’ and at least one environmental group muttering ‘Oh, no you don’t.’
The first two sentences in the report’s opening paragraph signals that this is not your typical bureaucratic exercise.
” When the Department of Environmental Protection Transition Subcommittee began its intensive investigation five weeks ago into how the Department operates, based on our collective experiences we were skeptical if it could possibly be reinvented and survive. The Department has created cumbersome, confusing and often conflicting regulations that in some cases go beyond legislative intent, and in other, have no enabling legislation at all.”
In an overview section addressing DEP performance, the report unsparingly notes:

” … there is a widely held view that DEP’s mismanagement and ineffectual leadership both compromises the Department’s ability to protect the environment and hinders economic growth. This stems from a variety of factors including the failure to adhere to the Rule of Law, the misuse of science, the lack of real economic impact analysis, and the lack of transparency in the rulemaking process.”

The 21-page document goes on to make specific recommendations under the general categories of : Leadership and Management; Regulatory Reform; Land Use Management; Site Remediation and Natural Resource Stewardship.

Some of the recommendations include:

* Eliminate the Office of Policy Planning and Science
* Establish an advisory panel of external experts
* Reinstate the Alternative Dispute Resolution program
* Review all existing guidance documents
* Create a business/project ombudsman in Governor’s Office
* Allow for expanded use of Permits-By-Rule
* Establish electronic permitting
* Create a single Land Use Permit
* Eliminate duplicative reviews
* Suspend use of Landscape Project for species habits
* Revise Public Access rules
* Rescind Administrative Orders for 300-foot stream buffers

The Sierra Club responded with swift condemnation, calling the report “an outright attack on environmental protections and regulations ” and declaring that the document was written, “for the most part” (another environmental organization participated on the subcommittee) “by special interests for special interests.”

The recommendations are just that, recommendations, but they’ll no doubt play a big role in the questions that Bob Martin, the governor’s pick to lead the DEP, will encounter when his nomination is considered in the state Legislature.Have you read the report? What do you think?

Use the comment box below to share your views. If you don’t see one, click on the tiny ‘comment’ link.


Related environmental news:

Transition team’s harsh words about environmental department
NJDEP under fire in Christie Administration report

Transition team calls Highlands Council ‘a disaster’

Christie may ‘rethink’ Highlands Act

Our most recent posts:
Enviro-Events in NJ & PA – February 2010

Recycled tires: Where the rubber is the road

Could a revised State Plan save NJ money?

EPA setting new Nitrogen Dioxide air limit

Bad news for PSE&G power line foes in NJ
Environmental Events in NJ and PA

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NJ’s DEP needs radical change–yes or no? Read More »

Enviro-Events in NJ & PA – February 2010

Lots of environmental business meetings, seminars, forums and nature events on
our February
Enviro-Events Calendar


February Events

 Feb 3 – Environmental Business Council Roundtable
Feb 4 – The Environmental Business Council of CIANJ
Feb 8-12 – AESP 20th National Conference & Expo

Feb – LEED Core Concepts & Strategies
Feb 12 –IMAGINE a Sustainable World


Feb 13 –Survival: Gimme Shelter



Feb 18
Penn State Marcellus Shale Webinar

Feb 18 – Crisis in New Jersey’s Forests
Feb 20 – Holding on to Nature: The Art of Natural Specimens
Feb 23 – Transitioning to Green – A Forum
Feb 23-25 – Renewable Energy World Conference & Expo
Feb 23 – Developing in New Jersey’s Urban Centers
Feb 26 – NJ Future’s Fifth Annual Redevelopment Forum
Feb 27Winter Wilderness Survival

Feb 27 – New Jersey Bicycle Summit
Feb 27 – Animal Tracking – The Basics

Get full details on all events at Enviro-Events Calendar


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