What Are You Waiting For, New York?

The Mountain State’s acting governor, Earl Ray Tomblin, a Democrat, said this about responsible Marcellus Shale development in his state of the state address yesterday in Charleston:

As the responsible development of the Marcellus Shale’s abundant, clean-burning natural gas reserves expands across the region, more stable and affordable supplies of homegrown energy are being delivered to consumers and small businesses who continue face tremendously difficult economic hardships. At the same time, this environmentally-proven production is helping to create tens of thousands of good-paying jobs for the local workforce, and positively impacting rural communities and small towns. At least largely in Pennsylvania, and West Virginia too.

You see, despite the fact the world’s first natural gas well was drilled in New York State some 185 years ago, the Marcellus Shale’s economic, environmental and energy security benefits are being fully realized in Pennsylvania, but not in the Empire State. Why? Well, leaders in Albany continue to maintain a policy of ‘hurry up and wait,’ keeping a de facto shale gas production moratorium in place as the state struggles with high unemployment and a spiraling budget crisis.

So what are other leaders, from neighboring Marcellus Shale gas-producing states, saying about this historic energy and economic development opportunity?

West Virginia state senator Mike Green, D-Raleigh, chairman of the Senate Energy, Industry and Mining Committee, “believes gas drilling OK if it’s safe for environment,” the Beckley Register-Herald reports. And we agree.

We as a state, and as elected leaders, obviously are welcoming the Marcellus shale exploration,” [Sen.] Green said Friday, emphasizing the abundance of the natural gas poses a major plus for the state’s continued economic growth and expansion of the tax base. “We welcome that industry with open arms,” he said.

The Mountain State’s acting governor, Earl Ray Tomblin, a Democrat, said this about responsible Marcellus Shale development in his state of the state address yesterday in Charleston:

The development of the Marcellus Shale formation for natural gas production is an economic development opportunity for the State, and we need to embrace it! Billions of dollars of private capital have already been invested in this activity and with it has come many jobs.

The development of the Marcellus Shale has the potential to restart the manufacturing industry in West Virginia. It is an opportunity that we simply cannot let go by.

How about water use in the shale gas production process, is it being effectively managed to ensure that the environment is protected? It absolutely is, according to Pennsylvania’s top environmental watchdog, Department of Environmental Protection secretary John Hanger. Secretary Hanger writes this in a recent Landsdale Reporter column:

Here’s the reality: every drop of tap water that was publicly treated is required to meet the safe drinking water standard.

And here’s what they’re saying about economic development and job creation tied directly to the responsible development of the Marcellus Shale’s clean-burning natural gas reserves, which continues to be largely left off the table in New York:

With 900,000 New Yorkers out of work, and the state dealing with a $9 billion gap in its budget, the question remains: What are leaders in Albany waiting for? New taxes, pay freezes for state workers, consolidation of public schools – these are some of the tools that New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo has indicated he’ll use to get the state back on a path toward fiscal sustainability.

How about one more? According to one study, Marcellus development could help create 16,000 new jobs and $15.3 billion in economic activity – and that’s just in Broome County alone.



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