Nate Ebert Takes Plea Deal, Vows to Continue Fight Against Fracking

15/06/13. Nate Ebert, who, on Feb­ru­ary 19th climbed a 30 foot pole anchored to a frack waste truck and shut down Green­Hunter Water’s frack waste trans­fer facil­i­ty in New Mata­moras, Ohio for most of a busi­ness day, took a plea deal this morn­ing in the Mari­et­ta Munic­i­pal Court in Mari­et­ta, OH.  He pled to charges of tres­pass­ing and resist­ing arrest.  He received a sus­pend­ed sen­tence and will serve no jail time. 

Upon leav­ing the cour­t­house, Ebert, 33, who lives in Athens Coun­ty, Ohio, said, “Green­Hunter is mak­ing mil­lions of dol­lars from stor­ing and dump­ing tox­ic radioac­tive waste in Ohio. For the sake of prof­it that is chan­neled out of state, they are threat­en­ing the health and safe­ty of our com­mu­ni­ties up and down the Ohio Riv­er.  The state of Ohio should make it a pri­or­i­ty to block GreenHunter’s unscrupu­lous activ­i­ties, and pro­tect Ohio res­i­dents instead of pro­tect­ing indus­try.”  He called for a ban of injec­tion wells in the state of Ohio.  If passed, House Bill 148, recent­ly pro­posed by Rep­re­sen­ta­tives Denise Driehaus and Bob Hagan, and backed by more than 40 Ohio com­mu­ni­ty groups, would ban injec­tion wells statewide.

On Feb­ru­ary 19th, Ohio res­i­dents and allies from numer­ous envi­ron­men­tal groups includ­ing Earth First! dis­rupt­ed oper­a­tions at Green­Hunter Water’s frack-waste stor­age site along the Ohio Riv­er in Wash­ing­ton Coun­ty. Ebert, a mem­ber of Appalachia Resist!, ascend­ed a 30 foot pole anchored to a brine truck in the process of unload­ing frack waste, pre­vent­ing all trucks car­ry­ing frack waste from enter­ing the site.

Over one hun­dred sup­port­ers gath­ered at the facil­i­ty, protest­ing GreenHunter’s plans to increase capac­i­ty for tox­ic frack waste dump­ing in Ohio. Green­Hunter has sought approval from the Coast Guard to ship frack waste across the Ohio Riv­er via barge at a rate of up to half a mil­lion gal­lons per load. The Ohio Riv­er is a drink­ing source for more than 5 mil­lion peo­ple. Test results from mul­ti­ple frack waste sam­ples reveal high lev­els of ben­zene, toluene, arsenic, bar­i­um, and radi­um, among oth­er car­cino­genic and radioac­tive chem­i­cals.

While at the top of the pole, Ebert said,  “We are here to send a mes­sage that the peo­ple of Ohio and Appalachia will not sit idly by and watch our homes be turned into a sac­ri­fice zone!”

Ten peo­ple were arrest­ed at the Feb­ru­ary 19th demon­stra­tion.  Nine of them took plea deals.  The tenth arrestee was a mem­ber of the media. Last week, all charges against that indi­vid­ual were dropped.

Since the Feb­ru­ary 19th protest, Green­Hunter has announced its inten­tions to open numer­ous frack waste stor­age and trans­fer facil­i­ties up and down the Ohio Riv­er, includ­ing a new­ly pro­posed site in Wheel­ing, West Vir­ginia. The Wheel­ing pro­pos­al is the tar­get of emphat­ic oppo­si­tion from many Wheel­ing res­i­dents, who gath­ered at a May 22nd pub­lic meet­ing to let Green­Hunter CEO John Jack know that they dis­trust GreenHunter’s motives and meth­ods, cit­ing wor­ries about radioac­tive waste.  Despite USGS reports of dan­ger­ous radioac­tiv­i­ty lev­els in frack waste, Jack refused to answer any ques­tions about radioac­tiv­i­ty.