Here are two stories that you might have missed in the past few days that deserve attention.
In Fracking takes toll in Pennsylvania, but New Jersey gets bargain, The Record‘s
James M. O’Neil writes:
"The recent boom in natural gas drilling across Pennsylvania has turned some property owners into millionaires. It also has forced some rural communities there to endure swaths of denuded forest, fumes from diesel engines, the rattle of equipment, midnight skies lit up by the lights for well pads, spills of dangerous wastewater, and the leak of explosive methane into their drinking water wells.
********************************************************************************************************
In Problems with repetitive flooding mean recurring losses for inland New Jersey, NJ Public Radio reporter Scott Gurian creates both an audio and written story (for NJ Spotlight) on a complicated problem that has no easy answers.
It is the repetitive flooding in New Jersey towns far from the shore communities that drew most of the attention in the wake of Hurricane Sandy
This eye-opening paragraph gives you an idea of how big a problem repetitive flooding is:
Recent blog posts:
NJ taxpayers came up craps on Revel casino. Right?
Win a grant to help switch your Pa. fleet to natural gas
The rebirth (we sure hope) of the famed Rutgers tomato
Trenton to Newark: Paddler finishes 9-day eco-journey