Gas Drilling Has ‘Massive Effect’
Concerns raised over traffic and pollution in areaBy IAN HICKS Staff Writer
Article Photos
SILVER HILL - As Chesapeake Appalachia prepares to drill for Marcellus Shale natural gas in Oglebay Park, Wetzel County resident Raymond Renaud says those living near the proposed drilling sites may get far more than they bargained for.
Renaud, whose residence lies about a mile from a Chesapeake drilling well in the Silver Hill area, isn't talking about money. He's talking about the impact he and other members of the Wetzel County Action Group have seen on the surrounding area and residents' way of life since Chesapeake began drilling there about three years ago.
"Our first concern is the traffic, by far," said Renaud. "The situation has become quite dangerous."
The winding roads leading to the drilling sites, he noted, are simply not designed for large trucks to travel safely.
"Our infrastructure does not support the activity. Our roads are such that a tractor-trailer simply cannot maintain his lane around our turns," Renaud said.
He added that Chesapeake has been cooperative in taking steps to minimize the danger to residents, including putting escort vehicles in front of tractor-trailers and providing security vehicles to observe traffic conditions.
"Without those steps, we would have had countless fatalities," said Renaud.
Still, he estimated three to four accidents per day occur in the Silver Hill area involving gas drilling vehicles "going into a skid, sliding across the center line and off the road."
Renaud said Brock Ridge and County Road 89, two major access roads for Silver Hill residents, "have taken a major beating" as they're not designed to bear the load of so many large trucks. He said to Chesapeake's credit, the company repaved both roads at its own expense - but the repairs haven't held.
"They finished in the late fall, and Brock Ridge is completely destroyed," said Renaud. "Their new paving job is gone. It's a mud road.
"We're talking about massive road failure. ... We're talking about some pretty massive effects. If your road totally disappears, that's a pretty massive effect," he continued.
And during the winter, said Renaud, those roads are blocked by oversized vehicles multiple times each day.
"Locals who used to drive Brock Ridge now go out of their way and use other roads," he said, noting he's also a member of the Wetzel County Emergency Medical Service. "It's normally a 14-minute trip, and I was an hour and a half getting to the Silver Hill Fire Department."
Water pollution also is a concern, Renaud noted. He said in snowy weather, the company lays down "tremendous volumes" of cinders so its trucks can gain traction. When the snow melts, the cinders mix with the water, creating "a lava flow of cinders going into the creeks," Renaud claims.
"The worst part about this, when it dries up, you're inhaling tremendous volumes of cinder dust. The summer irritant for us is dust. ... People have to power wash their homes," he said.
Another worry stems from an industry process called hydraulic fracturing, or "fracing," in which million of gallons of water, sand and chemicals are blasted into each well to break up the tightly compacted shale. Once the rock is fractured, some of the water - estimates range from 15 percent to 40 percent - comes back up the well. When it does, it can be five times saltier than seawater and laden with dissolved solids such as sulfates and chlorides, which conventional sewage and drinking water treatment plants are not equipped to remove.
Chesapeake officials have maintained they "aggressively implement best practices to reduce the possibility of leaks, spills and discharges" with regard to fracing.
Another industry practice, called flaring, occurs when drilling companies burn off surplus combustible vapors.
"They literally burn it out of the stack. Our concern is, we don't know how toxic that gas is," said Renaud. "If you live downwind or in a hollow, it's a gagging odor. ... It's just not very pleasant."
Renaud believes all these factors are adding up to plummeting property values for landowners near natural gas drilling sites.
"I moved here in the '70s," he said. "I moved to get away from the city, to live in a nice rural atmosphere, and now I live in an industrial zone.
"If you live on a rural road and experience 40 trucks going by your house a day, you would have a hard time selling your house. ... These people are now trying to get Chesapeake to buy their property because they can't recover what they paid for the property. Mortgages outstanding are greater than the value of the property today," Renaud claimed.
Renaud is calling on government officials to step in and help "exploit the Marcellus Shale in a way that benefits the citizens of Wetzel County and West Virginia."
"I really don't fault the gas development companies, because if they went out of their way to satisfy what we're asking for, it's going to increase their costs," he said. "They wouldn't be able to compete. It's an industrywide thing. To me, this is a social issue that requires local, state and federal government."
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MeanStreak
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03-10-10 9:30 AM
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Oh the world is coming to an end Oh the madness. Come on people!!! Just think there will be at 1,095 car wrecks on Olgebay maybe far more because of they have so much more traffic.
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EllisWyatt
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03-09-10 9:45 PM
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Remember the comments made by the "leaders" of Oglebay and the city. Someday, they will be in denial and they will become angry when asked about their previous support for drilling. Certain politicians will completely deny the facts and complain about poor media coverage. One of the many great things about the Information Age is that you can save the comments made by politicians, both printed and video. You can then go back and show it to them years later. Remember this.
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burgster
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03-09-10 6:28 PM
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No doubt the roads are trashed. Does the State of WV not require bonding for these companies that destroy the roads. If so why are the damages not repaired correctly and cost recovered from the bonding company?? At least the state should make an effort to plan for this. They don't mind collecting taxes on the gas produced.
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rogers7
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03-09-10 7:59 AM
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Mark my word that Oglebay will be a huge eye sore when the process starts and it will continue for many years. If you own a home up there, be prepared for your property value to be cut in half. It will be a miserable place to live. Imagine living in a 24-7 construction site.
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wonderwhy
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03-09-10 7:58 AM
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boxerboy- those tankers are carrying adhesives to the mine for ventilation seals.
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thechief
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03-09-10 6:20 AM
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Completely understand Mr. Renaud's complaint about the road situation. I live out here on Grapevine Ridge just outside of Cameron. Between Chesapeake Gas and Consol Coal, our roads are shot. It's like trying to drive over a railroad track of mud for miles. The pavement is completely destroyed. My biggest concern is that the school buses have to travel this road. Because we're a rural area, with so few people, I doubt the county is going to spend big money repaving. Besides, just like Silver Hill, the big trucks will tear it up again. Olgelbay should beware, they are a tourist attraction. I don't see anything attractive about what the mineral and gas companies have done to the hills around here.
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atoddh
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03-08-10 11:45 PM
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Paige.I know your parents- especially your Dad would- put up a fight on this.The people on Whitmar Hills,along GC&P and Washington Farms will have the nasty view and trucks.Oglebay really is the last thing standing in Wheeling.They may need the money now,however. Is logging to follow???
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atoddh
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03-08-10 11:41 PM
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Ellis.I think the Park System like everyone else in Wheeling is having $$ problems.Occupancy is down and expenese up. FYI Thereeis an old back enrty to Oglebay off GC&P below ans south of the stables that they may try to use.It was a private entry used by the Oglebays originally;near the Whitmar Hills entrance.The Long Creek(adjacent to GC&P) and that area will really be trashed by this. I think Worls needs the money to keep the place going.It is expensive.He may regret it.
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Paige60
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03-08-10 11:17 PM
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Oglebay Park is not in Wetzel county it is in Ohio county. I grew up in Wheeling actually Oglebay Park and this is a travesty.. There is no way the roads can handle the trucks etc. but Oglebay is a tourist/visitors area and should not have the topography invaded like this.. If my parents generation were all alive they would not allow this. So Native Wheeling/Oglebay people try and stop this. Paige Fair I am appalled.
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shaman63
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03-08-10 11:11 PM
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In response to Libertylady,,, I live in Silver Hill. My family was the first settlers here over 180 years ago. Have lived here all my life and I have never seen the roads in this condition. I used to live a tranquil, peaceful life in the country. Now it has turned into a industrial zone, ( the Victory Play) so named by CHK. Now i fight dozens of tractor trailers a day for my share of the road. Maybe you need to take a drive through Silver Hill and surrounding ridges and see what is going on. Mr Renaud actually lives about 7 miles from Silver Hill, and is frquently in the area as he is a member of the Grandview Fire Dept. and responds to the many accidents in the area. As far as the mortgages, people here owe more on them than their property is actually worth now. Several families are trying to sell their farms, and their only hope is for CHK to buy them as no one else in their right mind would consider moving into this industrial zone. Please be careful driving out here.
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LibertyLady
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03-08-10 10:14 PM
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I am very upset with newspaper talking to someone (Mr. Renaud) and the supposed facts from this person that does not even live in Silver Hill. I grew up there, go back quite frequently and the roads and traffic are no worse than when I was a kid riding the school bus. Mr. Renaud lives nearly 10 miles from Silver Hill. How would he know what is going on there. I believe the newspaper should talk to the actual residents of Silver Hill and get their opinion, not just someone from the area that wants to bad mouth everything. PS: Mr. Renaud not too many folks in Silver Hill have a mortgage. They are the real residents -- the ones their ancestors settled the area over 150 years ago.
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UNCOMMONSENSE
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03-08-10 8:42 PM
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As I said on previous posts, RT89 has been TOTALLY destroyed by the heavy vehicle traffic. Last summer it was so bad that it should have been CLOSED. RT 88 at Oglebay CAN'T handle the heavy loads of drilling rigs. And the mud will be a HUGE issue this year. As I said before, you only get ONE chance to make an impression with tourists. If that impression is of a pothole ridden mud hole of a road leading to a park with contaminated ponds, and acid drainage, then you will QUICKLY be out of business. Greed for a quick buck NEVER pays off
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boxerboy
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03-08-10 8:27 PM
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I notice convoys of weird-shaped tanker trucks on WV Rt-2 and Rt-250. They usually travel in threes. The tankers have three compartments, which are valved in the undercarriage. Unlike traditional chemical tankers, which are smooth cylinders, these compartmentalized tankers have sloping sides as if to funnel dry ingredients. The trucks always display Pennsylvania plates. Does anyone know what they carry and how the product is used at the drilling site (if in fact they are)?
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rogers7
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03-08-10 7:53 PM
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If you think the roads are in bad shape now, wait until about 2 months after they start the process. If you want to see what they will look like, take a ride on route 89 between New Martinsville and route 250 near Cameron. You will pass Brock Ridge, which was paved by Chesapeake this past fall and it is now a dirt road. The roads going up to Oglebay will be no different in a short amount of time. You can bank on that statement.
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Reactionary
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03-08-10 7:50 PM
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"ObamaCare" is great for America! the Stimulus is good for America! It's for the greater good! So is drilling for gas. If that stupid and often repeated phrase is good enough for Socialist Government, it's good enough for gas drilling! Can't have it "One-Way" all the time!
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Rudolph
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03-08-10 7:10 PM
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And to think Randy Worls practically gave the Oglebay rights away.
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wvhoopie
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03-08-10 7:02 PM
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Only the corporate butt kissers are for this drilling. It's pure greed and screw the residents. Over and over again, these drillers have proven what type of land will be left and you can guarantee those who do this trashing don't live around here and they just don't care.
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EllisWyatt
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03-08-10 6:54 PM
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You know, outside of the drilling companies and the local "leaders", I cannot seem to find ANYONE who thinks that drilling on Wheeling's Crown Jewel is a wise move. There are many questions that have not been answered. I have mentioned this previously and atoddh also brought it up but how will the trucks get to and from Oglebay? There are no other roads. There are no secret routes. The trucks will have to take 1 of 2 roads, both of which are narrow and in rough shape. Those involved in this decision should be removed from office.
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Reactionary
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03-08-10 6:41 PM
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wunder, your technical insight is amazing!!! Where did you copy/paste all that stuff? I know where most of the stuff you name comes from, what it is and how it's used, but I'd like to have YOU explain it all to me; if it's not too much trouble. And NO copy/paste!! I want it in YOUR words!
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atoddh
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03-08-10 6:22 PM
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The rigs to Oglebay will either have to go up 88 or GC&P: a mess either way.The drilling sounds like it will be right above GC&P perhaps one mile from Greggsville across from Whitmar Hills.It will not be pretty.
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legacy08
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03-08-10 3:47 PM
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Meanstreak, this guy is correct and not exagerating I have in-laws down there and it is that bad. just because you didnt see it on the news doesnt mean its not true. take a drive down there yourself before you make idiotic comments about something you know nothing about, you know- check er out.
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rogers7
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03-08-10 1:57 PM
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This guy is not full of crap. I live in this area and what he is saying is 100% true. Oglebay residence will find out very soon. If I were you, I would put my house for sale now and hope it sells before they start the process. It will be an absolute horror because it is terrible where it is now in Wetzel County and the Oglebay area is about 10 times more populated with the same type of roads.
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rover1958
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03-08-10 11:13 AM
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Many, many of the folks that comment on these pages noted these 'effects' back on Day One when it was first announced that the local Parks had been sold out. We were 'pooh poohed' with sweet songs of money for local government and the parks and jobs, jobs, jobs. Well. The sign will read, 'Wheeling, America's Chemical Dump & Former Site of Oglebay Park'
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MeanStreak
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03-08-10 10:33 AM
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So this guys is saying that there is no less than 1,095 vehicle accisdents in the Silver Hill are in a year. That statement is ridiculous. Shows credence to his so called concerns. "countless" fatalities. another brilliant statement. This guys is full of crap.
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TheLightthatbanishesdarkness
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03-08-10 9:28 AM
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Having a safe environment and economically feasible drilling operations is not a mutually exclusive endeavor! This is an opportunity for a partnership between drilling corporations,government and private citizens to come together to get the best minds and ensure that both our environment is safe and a company can make a profit. This will not be easy but it can be done it must be done!
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