Center For Coalfield Justice To DEP: Harmon Natural Gas Processing Plant Should Be Required To Apply For A Full Title V Air Quality Permit As They Originally Proposed In Washington County
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This testimony was presented by Sarah Martik, Executive Director of the Center for Coalfield Justice based in Washington County, at a March 11 hearing by the DEP Office of Environmental Justice on an Air Quality Permit for the expansion of the MarkWest Energy's Harmon Creek Natural Gas Processing Plant in Smith Township, Washington County.

Hello, my name is Sarah Martik, and I am the executive director of The Center for Coalfield Justice (“CCJ”), which is a Pennsylvania-incorporated not-for-profit organization with federal Internal Revenue Service §501(c)(3)-status recognition located in Washington, PA.

Our mission is to “improve policy and regulations for the oversight of fossil fuel extraction and use; to educate, empower and organize coalfield citizens; and to protect public and environmental health.”

CCJ has over three thousand members and supporters and is governed by a volunteer Board of Directors.

Thank you for the opportunity to provide input on the expansion of MarkWest Liberty Midstream & Resources, LLC’s (“MarkWest”) Harmon Creek Gas Processing Plant (''Harmon Creek''), which adds several new air pollution sources in one of the most overburdened areas in Pennsylvania.

CCJ respectfully submits the following comments which will expand on the following:

1. MarkWest should be required to re-apply for a Title V permit,

2. MarkWest and the Department of Environmental Protection (“DEP”) must account for and consider all cumulative impacts (including the numerous existing facilities) in the project area to ensure that additional burdens will not be imposed on this overburdened community, and

3. The DEP must opt this permit into the Environmental Justice Policy.

MarkWest must reapply for a Title V permit.

MarkWest did not apply for a Title V permit because the expansion's emissions are estimated to be just below the threshold that would require it.

However, we understand that MarkWest initially planned to apply for a Title V permit but backtracked.

Given this context and past experience with operators in the region, and past experiences of violations at this specific facility, it is very likely that MarkWest will emit above the threshold of their proposed permit, and, therefore, would require a Title V permit.

Thus, the DEP should require MarkWest to apply for a Title V permit now rather than later to better protect this community.

The project area is one of the most overburdened in the state with many cumulative impacts, and this expansion must be opted into the Environmental Justice Policy.

The Harmon Creek plant is only one source of pollution within this community: there is another cryogenic plant, a [gas pipeline] compressor station, a number of unconventional well-pads and a number of abandoned/orphaned wells, in addition to the associated infrastructure like pipelines.

All of these sources contribute to this area’s significant environmental burden, and failing to consider this within the context of the Harmon Creek application puts people at increased exposure risk.

Here, PennEnviroScreen identifies three of the four census block groups within one mile of the project as EJ areas, including the block group (Block Group 1, Census Tract 7137) that contains the project, yet this permit was not opted into the full benefits of the Environmental Justice Policy.  [Click Here to see graphic]

Block Group 1, Census Tract 7137, is disadvantaged to the 94th percentile for all block groups in Pennsylvania.

They received a score of 92 for toxic air emissions and a 96 for compressor stations - which approval of this application would only make worse.

Other indicators that affect living conditions where this block group received high scores include unconventional oil and gas wells (89), hazardous waste and storage sites (90), coal mining (85), and mining concerns (91).

This block group has a population with high incidents of heart disease.

Block Group 2, Census Tract 7140, ranks in the 96th percentile for disadvantaged block groups.

Again, they are disproportionately exposed to high levels of toxic air emissions (89) and compressor stations (89), but they are also exposed to high levels of traffic (96).

This block group received an environmental effect score of 100 due to the impact of unconventional gas wells (93), hazardous waste and storage sites (92), coal mining (84), and mining concerns (97).

There is also a high unemployment rate here, receiving a score of 91.

Block Group 2, Census Tract 7137, is one of the most disadvantaged block groups in the state, placed in the 99th percentile.

It received a score of 96 for both toxic air emissions and traffic while receiving scores of 90 for toxic water emissions and 86 for compressor stations.

This block group also received an environmental effects score of 100 since residents are affected by conventional gas wells (80), unconventional gas wells (87), hazardous waste and storage sites (91), and mining concerns (96).

In addition, there are many children under five in this block group (96), and there are high rates of heart disease (85).

The only block group within one mile of the project that is not an EJ area is Block Group 2, Census Tract 7110.

However, this block group still received high scores for toxic air emissions (92), conventional gas wells (86), and mining concerns (94).

Communities Near Bulger Compressor Station

The communities near the Bulger Creek Compressor station are already exposed to pollution.

Pollution from compressor stations can cause burning eyes and throat, skin irritation, headaches, nausea, vomiting, cancer, and cardiovascular and respiratory risks (which many people in these block groups already have).

Pipelines and unconventional gas wells, which are likely to increase in the area to feed the expansions, come with additional health impacts.

Unconventional gas wells increase the risk of groundwater contamination, exposing nearby residents to radioactivity, salts, and chemicals used in fracking fluid.

This means residents in these block groups are exposed through the air they breathe and the water they drink.

Additionally, pollutants from all the related infrastructure can have health impacts up to 10 miles.

Thus, it is evident that the communities near this project are already disproportionately burdened by numerous cumulative impacts, and additional burdens from expanding this facility must not be accepted or imposed, and at the bare minimum they should be required to apply for a Title V permit.

However, it is clear that additional burdens are likely to be imposed anyway, and the DEP did not choose to opt this permit into their Environmental Justice Policy, finalized in 2023.

The Environmental Justice meeting that was held just prior to this comment period did not give residents enough time to react to information and form comments to give at this hearing.

At the very least, the environmental justice meeting and the hearing should have been held on separate days.

The Environmental Justice Policy offers much more than one meeting to learn the basics about a project.

The Environmental Justice Policy recommends a tailored outreach approach for each community, easy-to-understand documents in an accessible place, enhanced inspection and enforcement, and more.

This community has not been given what they deserve from the DEP, and the DEP should rectify that.

Thank you for your consideration, please feel free to reach out with questions at any time.

Click Here for a copy of the hearing testimony.  

Sarah Martik, Executive Director of the Center for Coalfield Justice, and can be contacted by email to: smartik@centerforcoalfieldjustice.org or 724-229-3550.

Visit DEP’s MarkWest Harmon Creek Natural Gas Processing Plant webpage for more information on DEP actions related to this facility.

(Photo: The Energy Age Blog - Marcellus Air.)

Resource Links - Harmon Creek Hearing:

-- Community Speaks Out Against Expansion Of Harmon Creek Natural Gas Processing Plant In Washington County  [PaEN]

-- Washington County Resident To DEP: Harmon Creek Natural Gas Plant Expansion Will Result In A Huge Increase In Air Pollution, It Should Be Required To Have A Major Air Quality Permit, It Is Not A ‘Minor’ Source  [PaEN]

-- Moms Clean Air Force To DEP: Families In Washington County Are Already Living In The Middle Of Major Natural Gas Industrial Sites - Do Not Expand The Harmon Creek Natural Gas Processing Plant And Make It Worse  [PaEN]

-- Center For Coalfield Justice To DEP: Harmon Natural Gas Processing Plant Should Be Required To Apply For A Full Title V Air Quality Permit As They Originally Proposed In Washington County [PaEN]

-- Fact Sheet: How Oil and Gas Operations Impact Your Baby’s Health

-- Frackland Video Tour, with Lois Bower-Bjornson, Clean Air Council

-- 3 Days That Shook Washington County: Natural Gas Plant Explosion; Pipeline Leak Of 1.1 Million Cubic Feet Of Gas; 10,000 Gallon Spill At Compressor Station  [PaEN]

-- 2025 PA Shale Gas & Public Health Conference Attended By Nearly 480 People Featured Health Experts, Scientists, Advocacy Groups On Health, Environmental Impacts Of Shale Gas Development  [PaEN]

-- Presentations Now Available From 2022 Shale Gas & Public Health Conference In Nov. Hosted By PA League Of Women Voters & University Of Pittsburgh Graduate School Of Public Health  [PaEN]

Resource Links - Health:

-- Part I - Environmental Impacts: State Dept. Of Health, Penn State Medical Webinars On Caring For Persons Living & Working In Communities With Oil & Natural Gas Extraction  [PaEN]

-- Part II - Health Impacts: State Dept. Of Health, Penn State Medical Webinars On Caring For Persons Living & Working In Communities With Oil & Natural Gas Extraction  [PaEN]

-- PA Shale Gas & Public Health Conference Attended By Nearly 480 People Featured Health Experts, Scientists, Advocacy Groups On Health, Environmental Impacts Of Shale Gas Development  [PaEN]

-- Presentations Now Available From 2022 Shale Gas & Public Health Conference In Nov. Hosted By PA League Of Women Voters & University Of Pittsburgh Graduate School Of Public Health  [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]

-- State Dept. Of Health Apologizes For Not Listening To Communities Suffering Health Impacts From Shale Gas Development; New Health Study Results ‘Just The Tip Of The Iceberg’  [PaEN]

-- State Health Plan Identified Oil & Gas Development As Health Risk Last Year; Environmental Health Indicators Map Is Now Available To Show Potential Risks Near You [PaEN]

-- Fact Sheet: How Oil and Gas Operations Impact Your Baby’s Health

-- Frackland Video Tour, with Lois Bower-Bjornson, Clean Air Council

-- 3 Days That Shook Washington County: Natural Gas Plant Explosion; Pipeline Leak Of 1.1 Million Cubic Feet Of Gas; 10,000 Gallon Spill At Compressor Station  [PaEN]

-- Physicians For Social Responsibility PA’s Dr. Ned Ketyer Shares Summary Of Studies Of Shale Gas Development Impacts On Human Health [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]

-- 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]

-- DEP Determines Rulemaking Petition Submitted By Environmental, Health Groups To Adopt More Protective Setbacks From Shale Gas Wells Is An Action The Environmental Quality Board Has Statutory Authority To Take [PaEN]

-- Cecil Township Supervisors In Washington County Adopt 2,500 Setback From Shale Gas Well Pads From Homes, Businesses, 5,000 Foot Setback From Hospitals, Schools  [PaEN]

-- Range Resources And MarkWest Liberty Midstream File Legal Challenges To The 2,500 Foot Shale Gas Facility Setback Ordinance Adopted By Cecil Township, Washington County  [PaEN]

-- The Energy Age Blog: Range Resources & MarkWest Liberty Midstream File Legal Challenges Against 2,500 Foot Shale Gas Setback Ordinance In Cecil Twp., Washington County 

-- Cecil Township Supervisors Direct Solicitor To Prepare Ordinance Increasing Setbacks From Shale Gas Well Pads By At Least 2,500 Feet; Another Hearing, Vote Expected Nov. 4   [9.9.24]   [Hearing Summary]

-- 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]

-- Senators Santarsiero, Comitta Introduce SB 581 Increasing Setback Safety Zones From Natural Gas Drilling Sites, Other Infrastructure, Based On Latest Science  [PaEN]

-- Environmental Health Project: Setback Distances And The Regulations We Need To Protect Public Health From Oil & Gas Facilities  [PaEN]

PA Oil & Gas Industry Compliance/Notice Dashboard:

-- PA Oil & Gas Weekly Compliance Dashboard - March 15 to 21:  42 More Conventional, 7 More Shale Gas Abandoned Wells; Mine Subsidence Under Compressor Station; Conventional Gas Well Explosion; 2 Shale Gas Companies Fail To Report Shale Gas Waste Generation, Production In 12 Counties  [PaEN] 

-- Mine Subsidence Found Under Olympus Energy/Hyperion Natural Gas Compressor Station Construction Site In Penn Twp., Westmoreland County  [PaEN]

-- Volunteer Firefighters, DEP Respond To Conventional Gas Well Explosion, Fire In Westmoreland County [PaEN]

-- DEP Issues One Conventional Well Owner 36 Violations For Abandoning Their Conventional Wells; 7 More Violations Issued To Shale Gas Drillers For Abandoning Wells  [PaEN]

-- DEP Issued Violations To Range Resources, LPR Energy For Not Filing Shale Gas Production And Waste Generation Reports In 12 Counties  [PaEN] 

-- PA Oil & Gas Industrial Facilities: Permit Notices, Opportunities To Comment - March 22 [PaEN]

-- DEP Invites Comments At April 30 Hearing On RACT 3 Air Quality Permit For Tennessee Gas Pipeline Compressor Station 307 In Howe Twp., Forest County  [PaEN]

-- DEP Posted 115 Pages Of Permit-Related Notices In March 22 PA Bulletin  [PaEN] 

Related Articles This Week:

-- DEP To Host April 1 Webinar On New Program To Reduce Methane Pollution From Oil And Gas Operations  [PaEN]

-- Environmental Health Project To Hold April 1 Webinar On What The Shapiro Administration Can Do To Better Protect Public Health From The Impacts Of Shale Gas Development  [PaEN]

-- Environmental Health Project Seeking Communities To Participate In HealthWatch Program To Better Understand Local Health Impacts Of Shale Gas Development  [PaEN]

-- Presentations Posted From 2025 Shale Gas & Public Health Conference Featuring Health Experts, Scientists, Advocacy Groups, Workers On Health, Environmental Impacts Of Shale Gas Development  [PaEN] 

-- Center For Coalfield Justice To DEP: Harmon Natural Gas Processing Plant Should Be Required To Apply For A Full Title V Air Quality Permit As They Originally Proposed In Washington County [PaEN]

-- Capital And Main - Audrey Carleton: The Little Town Of Cecil Township, Washington County That Stood Up To Big Shale Gas And Set More Protective Setback Distances And Now Faces Legal Challenges From 2 Shale Gas Drillers

-- Susquehanna River Basin Commission Approves New Into-Basin Transfer General Permit, Water Withdrawals, Including 6 Shale Gas Development Water Withdrawals  [PaEN]

-- Susquehanna River Basin Commission Approved 34 Shale Gas Well Pad Water Use General Permits In January  [PaEN] 

-- The Derrick: Hearing Dates Set On Rhodes Estates Water Companies; PUC Judge Urges Parties To ‘Seriously Explore’ Settlements [Venango Water Co. Impacted By Conventional Oil Well Wastewater Spill]   [PaEN]

-- Penn State Extension: April 2 Webinar: Gravity Energy Storage -  Giving Inactive Oil Wells A Second Life  [PaEN] 

-- Penn State Research: Reusing Old Oil And Gas Wells For Energy Storage Using Compressed Air Technology  [PaEN]

NewsClips:

-- Inquirer - Frank Kummer: PA Attorney General Launches Criminal Investigation Into Energy Transfer/Sunoco Pipeline Spill In Bucks County

-- Spotlight PA: Federal Money To Plug PA’s Oil & Gas Wells Abandoned By Their Owners Is Unfrozen, But Federal Uncertainty Plagues Contractors

-- Dallas-based Law Firm Wins $51.98 Million Judgment Against Energy Transfer/Sunoco Pipeline Company In Beaver County Court In Contract Dispute; Court Also Found Negligent Construction Of Revolution Pipeline Contributed To Its Explosion In Beaver County

-- Observer-Reporter: Shale Gas Industry Leaders Reflect On Industry’s Direction At Range Resources Event  [PDF of Article]

-- Wilkes-Barre Times: Shapiro Administration Plugs 300 Abandoned Conventional Oil & Gas Wells Across PA

-- Warren Times: Warren City Council Approves Conventional Drilling Permit Near Betts Park

-- Sen. Yaw Reintroduces Bill Prohibiting Local Governments From Banning Any Fuel Source For Appliances, Heating Homes Or Business

-- PUC To Hold Hearings Starting April 7 On Proposed UGI Gas Rate Increase Of Up To 10.8%

-- Inquirer - Frank Kummer/Kristen Graham: Philadelphia Gas Works Explores Heating, Cooling Philly School And City Rec Center With Geothermal Energy

-- The Allegheny Front - Reid Frazier: Report: Shell Petrochemical Plant In Beaver County Could Be Up For Sale

-- The Allegheny Front: As Fracking At Ohio’s Largest State Park Gets Underway, How The Industry Has Changed This Rural County

-- Inside Climate News: EPA Considers Giving Oil & Gas Companies More ‘Flexibility’ To Dispose Of Their Highly Toxic Wastewater

-- The Hill: Texas Workers Face Mounting Dangers In The Heart Of America’s Greatest Oil & Gas Boom  [Part I] 

-- The Hill: Deregulation Push By President, Texas Republicans Sparks Hope And Fear In The Oil & Gas Fields  [Part II]

-- The Hill:  Texans Grapple With Rising Toxic Pollution As Oil, Gas Production Booms  [Part III] 

-- Reuters: US Natural Gas Prices Up On Record Flows To LNG Gas Export Plants

-- Bloomberg: ‘Drill, Baby, Drill’ Mantra Set To Make US LNG Gas Exports Less Competitive

-- Reuters: US EIA Reports US Natural Gas Pipeline Completions Boosted LNG Gas Takeaway Capacity For 2 Years In A Row

-- Bloomberg Opinion: Cheaper Power Is Too ‘Woke’ For Texas Republicans; State Debating Bills To Boost Natural Gas, Restrain Renewables

[Posted: March 17, 2025]


3/24/2025

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