Union Township, Washington County, Pennsylvania. Population 5,600. It was the kind of place that some people might have dreamed of raising their children; the kind of place where a photo of a winter’s eve, with snow covered hills might have graced someone’s Christmas card.
For Gary Baumgardner and his wife, Union Township was that kind of place, until EQT moved in and began drilling. Quiet nights have been replaced with the sounds of fracking. The fresh air replaced with plumes of smoke and sulfuric odors.
Nine months ago, the Baumgardners celebrated the birth of their first grandchild, a little girl. The first Christmas with a first grandchild is a very special occasion. The Baumgardner family had a tradition of hosting Christmas dinner in their home surrounded by family and friends.
This year the tradition will be broken.
Their nine-month old granddaughter is not permitted to be near active drilling sites per doctor’s orders, and there is an active EQT drill site next door.
A number of times, Baumgardner and other residents had complained about noise and odors emanating from EQT’s well site, located on property owned by Trax Farm.
In December of 2013, the Pennsylvania Supreme Court declared unconstitutional parts of Act 13, which limited local zoning control in favor of a statewide standard guiding where natural gas wells could be drilled.
Georgann and Gary Baumgardner had seen the ruling as a turning point in their struggle against EQT Corp., which began drilling in early November on nearby Trax Farm in Washington County, just over the Allegheny County line. The process has been wafting diesel fumes, noise and vibrations into their home — and seems to be consuming their lives.
One day, their bedroom air monitor flashed orange and the odor drove the family out of their Cardox Road house for hours. Another day, their daughter Rachel Cecchini, then eight months pregnant, moved out of the house next door and into a rental home several miles away — abandoning the painted nursery and her 93-year-old grandfather.
EQT has built sound walls, put residents up in hotels and offered cash settlements, while Union Township has debated the merits of residents’ complaints and the company’s efforts to address them at many public meetings since drilling began.
EQT claimed they were also frustrated and were attempting to resolve the problem. “This is not a blip on our radar,” said Linda Robertson, manager of media relations with EQT. “We have spent a lot of time and energy, and I think there are some people who have understood the attempts we’ve made.”
Ringle-Ringle , Coins when they Mingle
EQT did resolve some of the problems. EQT’s approach was not to change or improve their activities and thus stop the noise, dust, light, smoke, odors, fumes, soot or other air pollution, vibrations, and/or adverse impacts, but rather to throw money at the residents who were complaining.
EQT offered approximately 19 property owners a total of $50,000 each for signing a Noise and Nuisance Easement. (The original offer was $40,000.)
In signing the Noise and Nuisance Easement, these property owners granted EQT easements for noise, dust, light, smoke, odors, fumes, soot or other air pollution, vibrations, adverse impacts or other conditions or nuisances which may emanate from EQT activities.
Additionally , the property owners gave away their right files any claims against EQT, agreed to being gagged.
The Noise and Nuisance Easement is attached to the property forever, no matter who may own it in the future.
Baumgardner said he had attorneys review the Noise and Nuisance Easement offer and decided not to sign for fear of having his freedom of speech suppressed.
Silent Night?
At a Union Township Supervisors Meeting on December 8, 2014, Baumgardner inquired about EQT’s fracking plans for Christmas.
Would EQT stop fracking operations for Christmas?
No.
Stephanie Paluda, an EQT spokeswoman who attended the meeting, said the company will most likely continue fracking operations on Christmas. She said hydraulic fracturing started Friday, and the site is an around-the-clock operation.
For the Baumgardners, their Christmas celebration will be bittersweet. The first Christmas with their first grandchild held in the family tradition has been fracked and lost forever.
Wish EQT a Merry FRACKmas
If you, Dear Readers, would like to send a big Merry FRACKmas to EQT, contact info is below:
- EQT Facebook page
- EQT website
Corporate Headquarters: EQT eMail Contact form
EQT Corporation, EQT Plaza
625 Liberty Avenue, Suite 1700
Pittsburgh, PA 15222
Pennsylvania Offices:
EQT Corporation
474 Jeffers Street
DuBois, PA 15801
EQT Corporation
2A, Main Street
Mansfield, PA 16933
EQT Corporation
455 Racetrack Road
Washington, PA 15301
Board of Directors:
• David L. Porges, Chairman
• James E. Rohr
• Vicky A. Bailey
• Philip G. Behrman, Ph.D.
• Kenneth M. Burke
• Bray Cary, Jr.
• Margaret K. Dorman
• George L. Miles, Jr.
• David S. Shapira
• Stephen A. Thorington
• Lee T. Todd, Jr., Ph.D.
EQT Executives:
• David L. Porges, Chairman, President and Chief Executive Officer
• Philip P. Conti, Senior Vice President and Chief Financial Officer
• Randall L. Crawford, Senior Vice President and President, Midstream & Commercial
• Steven T. Schlotterbeck, Executive Vice President and President, Exploration & Production
• Lewis B. Gardner, Vice President and General Counsel
• Charlene Petrelli, SPHR, Vice President and Chief Human Resources Officer
©2014 by Dory Hippauf



I am very touched by the caring people who are trying to help us. My faith is restored by your kindness and you have given me hope that my family and I may carry on our tradition!
Please help by telling eqt to stop drilling on christmas day. I’m certain their employees would be happy to be with their families also.
I would like to say the statements written are absolutely true and not intended to harm anyone.
Thank you all for the time and help you offer us.
Sincerely, Georgann Baumgardner
EQT is just following its greed addiction to maximize profits and cut costs. Can’t have any “burdensome regulation” or consideration for neighbors, workers, leasers or the environment, because it reduces their profits. How much profit is enough? EQT’s answer is never enough, drill baby drill, pump baby pump and screw the environment, the workers, the leasers and the public.
Dory,
Thank you for bringing me up to speed on this development. I was not aware of this situation and my heart is sick to read it..
I will be contacting and letting them have a dose of my wrath, in as professional way as possible. Might have to calm down the a bit to do that, though.|
Thank you again,
Judy