Pittsburgh suburb is deciding whether to allow fracking beneath local park

Reid Frazier Bio Recent Stories Reid R. Frazier is an energy reporter for The Allegheny Front, a Pittsburgh-based public media outlet covering the environment in Pennsylvania. His work has aired on NPR and Marketplace.

Drilling for a proposed gas well would reach from Economy Borough to Linbrook Park, marked with a star, in Franklin Park Borough.

About 200 people packed a public hearing in the bedroom community of Franklin Park outside Pittsburgh Monday night to voice their opinions on a proposal to frack beneath a local park.

Findlay Township-based PennEnergy is planning on building a Marcellus Shale gas well in neighboring Economy Borough that would go horizontally into Franklin Park. The borough council is considering whether to lease 81 acres of land beneath Linbrook Park to the company for the project. The proposal would net the borough, one of the most affluent in Allegheny County, $283,500 plus royalties.

Several landowners near the park have already leased to the company, and told the council to do so as well.

Dave Graff says his family leased its land to the company. He’s worried if the town says no to drilling beneath the park, the company may not drill under his property.

“We don’t have millions of dollars like some of the people in this area, and that (leasing money) could be the difference from us being able to preserve this land that we have and not have it sold off to developers and (have) all the trees obliterated and all the water and habitat for the wildlife destroyed,” he said.

“This could be a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to preserve the land that families have had here for over a hundred years from all the neighborhoods in development.”

But many more residents showed up to oppose the idea.

Loretta Pusateri, a former teacher, said she’s worried about studies linking fracking with health effects, especially for children in the area.

“Unless you’re saying (with) 100 percent (certainty), ‘This is not going to affect any child with asthma or cancer,’ then go for it. But other than that, if you had at least a little bit of doubt — even at 1 percent, then don’t.”

Brendan Grzyb, a 20-year-old college student who’s done cleanups of the park for an Eagle Scout project, said if private landowners want to lease to the gas company that’s fine with him. “But for a public utility like a park to be used like that — I don’t think is very fair to the rest of the community, especially when you see a community so opposed to it.”

A survey mailed by the borough to residents in April found that 55 percent were opposed, to 37 percent who were in favor of the lease. The survey got a 31 percent response rate.

The council could vote on the proposal Wednesday night.

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