ACFAN signed onto a public records request this week to uncover the extent to which the Kasich administration worked to discredit, marginalize, or otherwise thwart citizen efforts to protect Ohio communities from the fracking industry. Frackgate exposed Kasich administration collusion with industry in permitting and promoting fracking and frack waste dumping in Ohio.
The Kasich administration’s Frackgate began with news of a 2012 internal memo in which Ohio Department of Natural Resources (ODNR) outlined a plan to promote fracking in state parks and undermine groups of concerned citizens with the help of the fracking industry. Although the Kasich government denied that the governor’s office was involved, correspondence about the memo and an associated meeting soon revealed the lie.
“The specific naming of organizations and legislators as opposition groups raises questions about how seriously the ODNR and the administration are taking their duties to protect Ohio residents over the interests of the oil and gas industry.”
The communications plan identified state legislators and environmental organizations as “eco-left,” giving the impression that the ODNR is a PR firm for the oil and gas industry instead of a regulatory agency.
“Unfortunately, it seems that it’s fallen upon the people of Ohio to ensure transparency and accountability of our state government and agencies,” said Brian Kunkemoeller, conservation coordinator for the Sierra Club Ohio Chapter said. “Ohioans must get to the bottom of the plans regarding the wholesale of our public lands, and coercive propaganda plans by state officials to do so.”
Teresa Mills of the Buckeye Forest Council has been reviewing inspection reports on fracking and fracking waste disposal wells for the last several years. She said, “Clearly, serious problems at wells are falling through the cracks. After the release of the memo, my question is now whether or not it’s intentional.”
The identification of oil and gas companies including Halliburton, and lobby groups such as the Ohio Oil and Gas Association as allies in the document, suggests a level of collaboration and coordination that is inconsistent with the role of ODNR to “ensure a balance between the wise use and protection of our natural resources for the benefit for all.”
“When the line between the regulators and the regulated becomes blurred, unnecessarily risking the health of Ohioans, we have a duty to correct the problem. Unfortunately, we don’t feel we can rely on the state to take this possible collusion seriously, so we’re working together to get the information out to the public,” said Vanessa Pesec, president of Network to Educate and Organize for Gas Accountability and Protection.
According to Food & Water Watch, questions remain as to how those groups were identified, whether the ODNR public relations team tracks the activities of these groups and what other public relations tactics are being used to sell Ohio residents on the benefits of fracking.
“Athens County Fracking Action Network has known ever since examining ODNR’s unsound permitting guidelines that ODNR and the Kasich government have no interest in meeting their ethical and legal obligations to protect our drinking water,” said Athens resident and Athens County Fracking Action Network member Zella Nisley. ”We believe that this public records request will further expose the incestuous relationship between the Kasich government and its master, the oil and gas industry.”