Dimock Twp. families sue Cabot

Dimock residents who claim their water supply was contaminated in the past year, gathered at a news conference Friday morning to announce they were filing a class action suit against Cabot Oil and Gas.  Seated, from left, are Sheila Ely, Pat Farnelli, Jean Carter, Ron Carter, Norma Fiorentino (behind cameraman) and Victoria Switzer. In the middle row are Craig Sautner, Julie Sautner, Victoria Hubert Monica Marta-Ely, attorney Leslie Lewis, an unidentified attorney and attorney Alan Fuchsberg. In the back row are Todd Carter, Jeanette Carter, unidentified person holding sign, Andrea Ely, Mike Ely, Ray Kemble, Scott Ely, Emmagene Ely, and unidentified person. STAFF PHOTO/MIKE RUDOLF

BY LAURA LEGERE
Times-Shamrock Writer

DIMOCK TWP. - In a field between Ronald Carter's trailer and the gas drilling site less than 500 feet from his front porch, a group of neighbors shared nightmarish stories Friday morning about the natural gas extraction they say has changed their lives and homes.

The 15 families were there to announce a lawsuit they filed Thursday against Cabot Oil and Gas Corp., the Texas-based natural gas operator that has drilled 63 wells in a 9-square-mile area around their homes in Susquehanna County, and has permits to drill about 60 more.

Their complaint alleges the company ruined the water they use to drink, bathe and cook; polluted their land; and caused illnesses of the nervous system, digestive system and skin.

Kenneth Komoroski, a Cabot attorney and spokesman, said the company sees no merit in the families' claims and is "disappointed that the citizens felt it necessary to proceed in this fashion."

The company has been cited by the state Department of Environmental Protection for causing at least seven spills at and around well sites in the county in the last 14 months. Cabot recently signed a consent order with the state agency to provide 13 families in Dimock with permanent drinking water supplies after faulty cemented casings and excess pressures in the company's gas wells caused methane to leak into the groundwater.

 

Attorney Leslie Lewis discusses the lawsuit by Dimock Township residents with reporters. STAFF PHOTO/MIKE RUDOLF

Komoroski said each of the spills was "addressed promptly" and "remediated completely" so "there is no ongoing risk to the residents." He added that the company's activities are "heavily regulated" by DEP.

"Those laws are there to ensure the protection of the residents and they work," he said.

The residents told a crowd of about 50 people Friday morning about drinking water that boils with methane, smells of rot or fuel, and leaves its residue on clothes and dishes.

Six of the families that are part of the suit are not among the 13 families who have so far been provided with temporary replacement water supplies by Cabot.

Carter and his wife, Jean, had a "perfect" water test in June 2008, but after a gas well was drilled nearby in September 2008, their water developed a rotten smell that would stay on their clothes and skin, he said.

They paid $7,000 for a water filtration system when a granddaughter who lived in their home was soon to have a baby, then found out that the system would not remove the methane that had seeped into the groundwater and their well.

Pat Farnelli said she and her children would suffer stomach cramps or vomit after drinking their water before they stopped using it a year ago, except when they cannot afford to buy water.

She held up a small jar of black water that she captured this summer from the runoff of a Cabot truck that was spreading it along the dirt road. When she asked a Cabot contractor about it, the man promised her the company only spreads fresh water, she said.

Farnelli is a correspondent for the Susquehanna County Independent, a Times-Shamrock newspaper.

Monica Marta-Ely described a flame that burned a foot high when a neighbor lit a jug of drinking water on fire.

"My kids play in this water, in the creeks," she said with her arm around one child.

One of the attorneys representing the families, Alan Fuchsberg, said the lawsuit exposes the broader impact of natural gas drilling in the multi-state region above the Marcellus Shale.

"They have been paid a pittance for this area to be destroyed," he said.

The township, where one out of every eight residents lives in poverty, was one of the first regions in Northeast Pennsylvania to see gas leasing and drilling. Most of the families in the suit signed leases with Cabot for $25 an acre and the state's minimum royalty, 12.5 percent, minus a share of transportation expenses.

Victoria Switzer, whose water has bubbled with methane and leaves a black ring in her washing machine, said many of the families did not expect riches when they signed the leases - a landman who approached her in 2006 said there might be one gas well in the town - and they are not looking for riches now.

A lawsuit was her last resort after "we couldn't get help anywhere," she said.

"I've gone to every congressman, representative ... DEP, Cabot, anyone I could think of to bring this issue to the forefront," she said.

"We're not greedy people. We just want some justice for something terribly wrong that happened here."

News media from all over the area and even around the world gathered in Dimock Township to report on the lawsuit by residents against Cabot Oil & Gas. STAFF PHOTO/ROBERT BAKER


Posted Nov 25 2009, 12:36 AM by WCEeditor

Comments

Keith wrote re: Dimock Twp. families sue Cabot
on 11-25-2009 6:17 AM

We all know now whats going to happen when they come to Tunkhannock.We don't need the natural gas to survive,but we do need the water.You can't survive without water.I think that all we'll have is memories of what it used to be like around here before the Natural Gas companies showed up.I wish people would have thought about that before they signed all of this land around here away to these guys.God help us all!!!!!

Treelover wrote re: Dimock Twp. families sue Cabot
on 11-25-2009 8:26 AM

these people will have to wait till someone dies from this....then they will have to wait for yearsss to fight it out in court ....Like I have always said........goodbye pennsylvania the beautiful state...hello poison state....im sure this is not the end of all the problems from the gas drilling......THEY SHOULD HAVE NEVER SIGNED!!! NOBODY SHOULD!!

Mike wrote re: Dimock Twp. families sue Cabot
on 11-25-2009 9:12 AM

Maybe these families should have done some research before signing the leases with these greedy gas and oil companies. If they truly respected their land, instead of letting money and greed fuel the destruction of their property, they wouldn't be having these problems. Wake up people! You have nobody to blame but yourselves! If people truly cared about the environment and their land they would have prevented these gas and oil companies from ever coming in.

Gail wrote re: Dimock Twp. families sue Cabot
on 11-25-2009 8:06 PM

If more people don't start standing up for our natural resources, wildlife and the water we so heavily rely upon to LIVE, we are all doomed.  Kudos to these folks for taking a stance and kudos to the Times/WC Examiner for covering and printing it.   Even if you've signed a gas lease (which I have not and never will), we all have the right to protect ourselves and should do so.  

Jake wrote re: Dimock Twp. families sue Cabot
on 11-25-2009 8:27 PM

Mike -- don't fall into the trap of blaming these individual landowners. The "greedy companies" are the ones who are using deception and public-relations slipperiness to trick people into signing. It is a mean thing to blame folks for falling prey to professional scam artists who talk an expert game, lulling suspicion and concern, especially in these times when that little bit of signing money can look like a godsend to keep the mortgage paid up and groceries in the cupboard. I live in central NY so I've been researching up on fracking, and I have to say that if it weren't for google videos of flaming tap water and all the great work of activists getting the word out, I would have no idea that such a horrifying, disgusting, EVIL method of resource extraction could be permitted in the USA.

AM wrote re: Dimock Twp. families sue Cabot
on 11-26-2009 10:22 AM

These families aren't a majority in Dimock..isn't this basicly one Road?? There are a number of wells being drilled in Dimock Twp... are there more complaints besides these?? They signed at $25 an acre when neighbors waited and signed for thousands...Is it just water they are looking for or are they feeling slighted that they signed for so littlle??

 Remember they do not talk to all of us that live in Dimock...

KA wrote re: Dimock Twp. families sue Cabot
on 12-02-2009 9:23 AM

AM is correct.   All these people live on the same road and yet mot all the land owners have issues.  These people are seeing $ signs and are simply looking to collect from big business.  It is the McDonalds coffee in the lap all over again.  Lets use some common sense here.

Rfscala wrote re: Dimock Twp. families sue Cabot
on 12-07-2009 7:25 PM

While I wish Cabot had maintained better control of their drill sites, it does appear to be a VERY isolated problem. The vast majority of wells are drilled, fracked and in production without problems very quickly - then the disturbance is gone and land returns to normal.

The worst part of this incident is that it gave the ANTI-everything crowd something to blow out of proportion. The crazies in NY state are using Dimock as a reason to shut down drilling in NY. Insane people making mountains out of mole hills.

Yet it is not ALL of Dimock having water problems. Why is that?

Maryann wrote re: Dimock Twp. families sue Cabot
on 12-09-2009 12:47 PM

Rfscala, is dead wrong!  All the gas companies are exempt from the Clean Water and Clean Air Act, thanks to Bush and Cheney.  So they can dump up to 300 different poisons down into our aquifers that  will get into our drinking water, ponds, brooks,streams and rivers.  This is not people blowing things out of proportion, this should be front page news every day.  People like you have your heads buried in the sand, and that is very foolish because this will affect all of peoples lives and our wildlife.  This problem will never return to normal.  New York is showing much more wisdom in dealing with the gas companies.    I do believe however, that people who are approached to lease, should do their homework and if they do, they will not sign.  Its common sense folks, wake up to the greedy gas companies from Texas!  They are out to rape our state and go back with their pockets full of money and leave you with poisoned water and your beautiful land destroyed!

Add a Comment

(required)  
(optional)
(required)  
Remember Me?