Videos Now Available From PA League Of Women Voters, University Of Pittsburgh School Of Public Health Shale Gas & Public Health Conference; Dept. Of Health Pushing For Changes To Reduce Adverse Health Impacts
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The PA League of Women Voters and the University of Pittsburgh School of Public Health have made videos of the panel discussions, presentations and Q/A sessions from the 2023 Shale Gas and Public Health Conference held on November 14. The videos cover these topics and more-- -- Exploring Risk Factors of Human Exposure to Environmental Risk Factors - Birth Impacts, Radiation & Waste -- 9th Compendium of Scientific, Medical and Medial Findings on Risks and Harms of Fracking and Associated Gas and Oil Infrastructure -- Blue Hydrogen Click Here to view and share the videos. Dept. Of Health Pushing For Changes At the Conference, Kristen Rodack, Executive Deputy Secretary at the Department of Health said her agency is using the results of recent studies of health impacts of natural gas development to push “governments and other folks to take action on some of the potential exposures that’s happening from the industry.” In August, the University of Pittsburgh School of Public Health released three studies of health impacts of natural gas development in Southwest Pennsylvania which found shale gas wells make asthma worse, children have an increased chance of developing lymphoma cancer and cause slightly lower birth weights. Read more here. “I think these studies really help advance our understanding of the potential health impacts of hydraulic fracturing, and they really add to a growing body of research in this space,” said Rodack. “The results were not necessarily surprising to folks who pay attention to this type of work. “I think they were consistent with a lot of the research that has happened in this space and really just add to the push to governments and other folks to take action on some of the potential exposures that's happening from the industry.” “[We] understand that we're playing the long game here and there's a continued need for the Department of Health to continue to raise these issues in all of our spaces that we sit at,” said Rodack. “A lot of our focus is on education for healthcare providers and also making sure that residents understand where to reach out to us, how to get help from the Department, and making sure that we're working across agencies, with good collaboration with our sister agency, the Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Protection, and others,” explained Rodack. Health Care Worker Education “One thing that we did start in October is an educational opportunity for local healthcare providers,” said Rodack. “One of the goals of that work is to make sure that local healthcare providers understand what questions to be asking of their patients and making connections between symptoms that folks are experiencing and the environment in which they live.” Reduce Asthma Risks At Schools Near Gas Facilities “We're also working with our sister agencies and stakeholders to educate school districts, particularly school districts that are close to [the gas] industry, on the asthma risks for children,” said Rodack. “[We are ]working with our internal asthma-prevention program, but also with the Pennsylvania Department of Education, to make sure that school districts understand the risk for asthma and any potential mitigation that school districts can play in terms of where to have recess, if they have recess outside versus inside, and things like that,” she explained. How To Get Help On Gas Related Health Issues “The other big piece we wanted to make sure that we addressed in response to the studies is making sure that residents have an understanding of how they reach the Department of Health to relay their health concerns,” said Rodack. “So we do have an environmental-health epidemiology team that works with residents that can do surveys with residents to understand what's going on with them and try to offer resources and recommendations for how to help them with any health impacts that they're experiencing,” she said. “We have added a new feature to our website that helps streamline those requests that come in. “We're also working closely with the Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Protection, who receive thousands and thousands of environmental-health complaints, to make sure that those get to our team, who can handle the health side of those complaints.” Click Here to file a health complaint with the Department of Health’s Division of Environmental Health Epidemiology. New Health Literature Review “We are conducting a new review of the literature in this space, so taking another look and being able to complete a literature review of, like I said, the growing body of research in this space, and then being able to provide those updates to healthcare providers and the public,” said Rodack. Continue Cancer Monitoring “And we will also continue to monitor cancer incidents with an intention to environmental exposures in this region,” she added. Responding To Gas Facility Emergencies In response to a question about what the Department of Health is doing to urge counties to include natural gas facilities like pipelines, compressor stations, pipeline pigging operations, natural gas processing plants and other gas infrastructure in county emergency mitigation plans, Rodack said-- “We do have our Bureau of Emergency Health Preparedness in the Department of Health, and they work very closely with PEMA [PA Emergency Management Agency] and DEP. “And we are actively reaching out to those folks to talk about how we ensure that county emergency management plans include the industry and any potential impacts in terms of evacuation or things like that, that residents would need to know about. “So those conversations are going to be starting, and we thank residents for bringing that to our attention.” Conclusion “I would not be here [at the Conference] if it wasn't for the community members who really continued to advocate for their families and for their health and for someone to pay attention to what's happening to them in their communities.” “We acknowledge that there's certainly more work that needs to be done, but we are committed, at the Department of Health, to continuing to listen to the community members, to hearing and understanding what they experience, and also being the voice of public health in the Commonwealth and trying to push for additional change,” said Rodack. Visit Health’s Oil and Natural Gas Production Health Concerns webpage for more information. Questions should be directed to: env.health.concern@pa.gov or call 717-787-3350. NewsClip: -- Public Herald: I Turned Blue - Workers Share Horrifying Experiences Treating Oil & Gas Wastewater Related Articles - Oil & Gas Health Impacts: -- New Penn State Study Finds Runoff From Conventional Oil & Gas Wastewater Dumped On Unpaved Roads Contains Pollutants That Exceed Human-Health, Environmental Standards [PaEN] -- Environmental Health Project - Part 1: Personal Narrative Of Environmental, Health Impacts From Oil & Gas Drilling On Siri Lawson, Warren County [PaEN] -- Environmental Health Project - Part II: Personal Narrative Of Environmental, Health Impacts From Oil & Gas Drilling On Siri Lawson, Warren County [PaEN] -- DEP Reports Shale Gas Operations Sent Over 138,000 Cubic Feet Of Radioactive TENORM Waste To Low-Level Radioactive Waste Facilities For Disposal In 2022 - Over 911,000 Cubic Feet Since 2017 [PaEN] -- House Committee Hearing On Increasing Safety Setbacks Zones Around Natural Gas Facilities Heard About First-Hand Citizen Experiences On Health Impacts, From Physicians On Health Studies And The Gas Industry On Job Impacts [PaEN] -- Sen. Yaw, Republican Chair Of Senate Environmental Committee, Calls Bill To Reduce Shale Gas Industry Impacts On Health, Environment ‘Stupid’ [PaEN] -- State Dept. Of Health Pushing For Changes To Reduce Adverse Health Impacts From Natural Gas Development [PaEN] -- University Of Pittsburgh School Of Public Health Studies Find Shale Gas Wells Can Make Asthma Worse; Children Have An Increased Chance Of Developing Lymphoma Cancer; Slightly Lower Birth Weights [PaEN] -- Environmental Health Project Finds Results ‘Very Concerning’ From University Of Pittsburgh Studies Showing Links Between Natural Gas Development And Lymphoma Cancer, Worsening Asthma Conditions, Lower Birth Weights [PaEN] -- Between The Lines Podcast: Pediatrician Dr. Ned Ketyer Explains The Results Of New Studies Of The Health Impacts Of Natural Gas Development On Children And Adults [PaEN] -- State Dept. Of Health Invites Citizens To File Environmental Health Complaints Related To Natural Gas Development; Health Will Also Review Environmental Test Results [PaEN] -- Environmental Health Project: Gov. Shapiro Must Acknowledge Health Risks Of Natural Gas Development And Take Meaningful Action To Protect The Public [PaEN] -- Senate Hearing: Body Of Evidence Is 'Large, Growing,’ ‘Consistent’ And 'Compelling' That Shale Gas Development Is Having A Negative Impact On Public Health; PA Must Act [PaEN] -- 9th Compendium Of Studies On Health & Environmental Harms From Natural Gas Development Released - ‘The Rapidly Expanding Body Of Evidence Compiled Here Is Massive, Troubling And Cries Out For Decisive Action’ [PaEN] -- Environmental Health Project: PA’s Natural Gas Boom - What Went Wrong? Why Does It Matter? What Can We Do Better To Protect Public Health? [PaEN] -- Environmental Health Project: Setback Distances And The Regulations We Need To Protect Public Health From Oil & Gas Facilities [PaEN] -- Environmental Health Project: How DEP Issues Permits For Shale Gas Facilities Without Considering Cumulative Impacts - How New Facilities Will Add To Existing Pollution Loads And Impact The Area PaEN] PA Oil & Gas Industry Public Notice Dashboards: -- PA Oil & Gas Weekly Compliance Dashboard - Dec. 9 to 15 - 500 Conventional Abandoned Well Violations; 25 Days Of Shale Gas Water Withdrawals Without Permission; Wastewater Pipeline Spill [PaEN] -- PA Oil & Gas Industry Compliance So Far In 2023 - It Isn’t Pretty [PaEN] -- PA Oil & Gas Industrial Facilities: Permit Notices/Opportunities To Comment - December 16 [PaEN] -- DEP Posted 68 Pages Of Permit-Related Notices In December 16 PA Bulletin [PaEN] Related Articles This Week: -- Former Employees Of Eureka Resources Oil & Gas Wastewater Treatment Company Ask For Criminal Investigation Of Eureka And An Audit Of DEP Over Alleged Workplace, Environmental Violations [PaEN] -- Senate Environmental Committee Reports Independent Energy Information Office Bill; Democrats Attempt To Table Environmental Hearing Board Nominee [PaEN] -- EPA/DOE Award DEP $44.4 Million To Plug Active, Conventional Oil & Gas Wells To Stop Leaking Methane [PaEN] -- Videos Now Available From PA League Of Women Voters, University Of Pittsburgh School Of Public Health Shale Gas & Public Health Conference; Dept. Of Health Pushing For Changes To Reduce Adverse Health Impacts [PaEN] -- House Passes Bill Requiring Registration Of Cryptocurrency Mining Operations, Impact Study [PaEN] -- Carbon County Residents Urge DEP To Deny Stronghold Digital Mining, Inc. Request To Burn Tires To Fuel Its Cryptocurrency Mining Operation At The Panther Creek Power Plant [PaEN] -- CNX Ends Coordination On West Virginia Adams Fork Ammonia Energy Project, Anchor Of ARCH2 Hydrogen Hub Application [PaEN] -- HEI Energy Hosts Dec. 18 Webinar On New Research On Community Exposures To Oil & Gas Development & Groundwater Contamination In Beaver, Greene & Washington Counties [PaEN] -- Independent Fiscal Office Estimates 2023 Act 13 Shale Gas Drilling Impact Fee Revenue Will Drop By Nearly $105 Million, While Almost 400 New Wells Were Drilled So Far In 2023 [PaEN] -- House Passes Bill Requiring Registration Of Cryptocurrency Mining Operations, Impact Study [PaEN] -- Carbon County Residents Urge DEP To Deny Stronghold Digital Mining, Inc. Request To Burn Tires To Fuel Its Cryptocurrency Mining Operation At The Panther Creek Power Plant [PaEN] -- House Hearing: Shapiro Administration Supports Expanding Alternative Energy Portfolio Standards; Renewables Lower Energy Costs; Increase Grid Reliability; More Work Needed To Improve Natural Gas Reliability [PaEN] -- WeConservePA Hosts Jan. 22 Webinar On Why Municipalities Should Consider A Utility-Scale Solar Energy Facility Ordinance [PaEN] -- Penn State Extension Webinar Dec. 21: Shale Gas Trends For Landowners, Growth & Land Leasing [PaEN] NewsClips This Week: -- Public Herald: I Turned Blue - Workers Share Horrifying Experiences Treating Oil & Gas Wastewater -- Williamsport Sun: Ex-Employees Seek Criminal Probe Against Eureka Resources Oil/Gas Wastewater Treatment Plant In Williamsport -- NorthcentralPA.com: Former Eureka Resources Employees Ask Lycoming County DA Gardner For Criminal Investigation Of Workplace At Oil/Gas Wastewater Treatment Plant -- Citizens Voice: Former Eureka Employees Ask Lycoming County DA For Criminal Investigation Of Workplace At Oil/Gas Wastewater Treatment Plant -- Williamsport Sun: Fracking Water Spills At Eureka Resources Oil/Gas Wastewater Treatment Plant In Williamsport -- TribLive Letter: For Natural Gas Industry, Concern For Health Should Trump Industry Profits -- Lock Haven Express Letter: Who Does Senator Yaw Represent? - By Karen Elias -- The Daily Item Letter: We Deserve A Refund, Too, From The Legislature [Pitt Shale Gas Health Studies] - By Trey Casimir -- Bob Donnan Blog: Unleashing LNG Natural Gas Exports On Pennsylvania’s Habitat -- Erie Times Guest Essay: Regulatory Reform Needed To Advance Critical Natural Gas Projects In PA - By American Petroleum Institute PA -- TribLive Letter: Natural Gas Industry A Win For Pennsylvania - Keystone Contractors Assn. -- PennLive Guest Essay: Black And Brown Communities Cannot Be Left In The Dark As Energy Innovation Booms - By Fmr ExxonMobil Executive -- Williamsport Sun Letter: ‘Any Legislation Or Regulation That Seeks To Further Restrict The Development, Transportation or Use Of Natural Gas Will Harm Our Economy, Undermine Personal Property Rights, Weaken National Security And Reverse The Significant Environmental Program Enabled By This Clean Abundant Energy Source’ - By Marcellus Shale Gas Coalition -- The Center Square - Anthony Hennen: Act 13 Shale Gas Drilling Impact Per Well Fee Revenues To Drop $105 Million -- Post-Gazette: PA Shale Gas Impact Fee Revenues Drop $105 Million -- Utility Dive: North American Electric Reliability Corp Board Risks Missing Deadline For Adopting New Generator Winterization Standards To Ensure Grid Reliability [Response To Winter Storm Elliot Problems] -- Reuters: Extreme Cold Still Poses Reliability Challenge For North American Power Generators, Particularly Natural Gas Infrastructure - NERC -- Utility Dive: US Electricity Load Growth Forecast Jumps 81% Led By Data Centers, Industry -- StateImpactPA - Rachel McDevitt: PA Will Have 2 Years To Update Oil & Gas Facility Methane Emission Rules To Match EPA -- Reuters: US Natural Gas Prices Up 1% On Higher Demand, Record LNG Exports -- Post-Gazette - Anya Litvak: Shale Gas Exports Get A Seat At The Global Table: ‘That’s Our Business’ [EQT] -- Reuters: Freeport LNG Natural Gas Plant Settles With EPA Over Safety Failures In 2022 Texas Blast -- Offshore Technology: US Gas Producer EQT Explores Sale Of Production Assets Worth $3 Billion In NE PA -- Reuters: US Natural Gas Producer EQT Explores Sale Of Production Assets Worth $3 Billion In NE PA -- Pittsburgh Business Times: CNX Pulls Out Of Adams Fork Hydrogen Project -- PennLive Letter: Let’s Get To Work On PA’s Hydrogen Hubs, Develop Strong Standards - By Rep. Rabb (D-Philadelphia) -- Herald-Star: Tenaska Outlines Carbon Capture, Storage Project In Shale Gas Formations In SW PA, Southern Ohio -- The Allegheny Front: COP28 Roundup: Food, Health, Disaster Relief And The Oceans -- Financial Times: COP28: The New Climate Commitments That Really Count: Oil & Gas Methane Reductions; Tripling Renewables; Boost Energy Efficiency -- AP: Experts At Odds Over Result Of UN Climate Talks: ‘Historic,’ ‘Pipsqueak’ Or Something Else? -- Bloomberg: COP28 Deal Signals Role For Natural Gas In Clean Energy Transition -- Reuters: What Are The Loopholes In COP28 Climate Deal That Could Keep Oil, Gas, Coal Flowing Indefinitely [Posted: December 12, 2023] |
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12/18/2023 |
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