Bravo. No such bans exist in Texas. Because it’s illegal under state law to spread frack filth on roads. . .
Rita Yelda, Food & Water Watch led the way on this, bravo The Rita.
Has your town and county banned frack filth ? What are you waiting for ?
The Erie County Legislature today banned high volume hydraulic fracturing on county land and imports of any drilling waste to its water treatment facilities.
The legislation passed 9-2.
The vote comes almost three years after Buffalo became the second city in the nation to ban the controversial gas drilling practice, also called “hydrofracking.”
On Dec. 3, the County Legislature received a petition with 3,845 signatures supporting the ban.
The legislation also includes a ban on importing drilling waste to county water treatment facilities and using the waste on county roads to melt snow and ice.
Hydrofracking is a practice that injects millions of gallons of water with sand and toxic chemicals thousands of feet underground to collect natural gas reserves in rock formations. New York has a moratorium on hydrofracking while the Health Department continues a review of potential health impacts that has lagged for years.
Some of the risks of hydrofracking include groundwater contamination, methane pollution, toxic chemical exposure and gas well blowouts. The water used for hydrofracking becomes a toxic brine that either has to be treated at great cost or injected back underground, which has been tied to causing earthquakes.
Rita Yelda, of Food & Water Watch and Western NY Drilling Defense, has led the charge against hydrofracking.
“Erie County residents have gotten what they expect and deserve: protection of their fundamental rights of health and safety from the dangers offracking and fracking waste,” she said in a prepared statement. “They’ve seen the air, land and water contamination that fracking causes and are thankful that this legislature is on the side of the people.”
The state’s Appellate Court ruled earlier this year that local governments can ban the practice of hydrofracking. New York’s highest court has agreed to hear an appeal of this decision sometime next year.


[…] Last line of this report from a local gas bag cracked me up. When two towns in Otsego County passed bans and moratoriums, some local gas bag said,“We’re a good decade away from having any drilling in New York,” said Parker. “ Why waste your time on issues that are purely symbolic?” Short answer, because the frackers have an infinite supply of frack filth to dump on your roads and in your town water treatment plant. So of course, your town should ban frack waste spreading, like Erie County just did. […]