(USA) Croatan Earth First! Locks Down North Carolina DENR For Complicity In Fracking

Sev­en mem­bers of Croatan Earth First! and par­tic­i­pants from our Pied­mont Direct Action Camp locked togeth­er today, bar­ri­cad­ing the front of North Carolina’s Depart­ment of Envi­ron­ment and Nat­ur­al Resources (DENR) build­ing in down­town Raleigh. Pro­vid­ing phys­i­cal, active resis­tance against frack­ing in North Car­oli­na, CEF! has cho­sen DENR for an action as they are respon­si­ble for help­ing legal­ize frack­ing, and will be respon­si­ble for reg­u­lat­ing it. They have also hired a cor­rupt Min­ing and Ener­gy Com­mis­sion board, which includes peo­ple with vest­ed inter­ests in hydraulic frac­tur­ing occur­ing. We are let­ting them know that this farce won’t stand! No com­pro­mise in defense of Moth­er Earth!

In addi­tion, a size­able demon­stra­tion is being held around the lock down, with sev­er­al large ban­ners, signs, lit­er­a­ture, etc. Police active­ly cleared the site, and have closed off the road, label­ing the entire block a crime scene. Press was being pre­vent­ed from approach­ing the site.  In nego­ti­a­tion made with the police, press was allowed inside to do inter­views and take pho­tos if the block­aders agreed to unlock lat­er. The pro­test­ers decid­ed to unlock as a tac­ti­cal deci­sion to walk away with­out arrests and save our legal funds for future events.

Press Release

Croatan Earth First! Locks Down NC DENR For Com­plic­i­ty In Frack­ing

Raleigh, NC – This morn­ing mul­ti­ple peo­ple locked them­selves to the front of the Depart­ment of Envi­ron­men­tal and Nat­ur­al Resources head­quar­ters at 217 W. Jones St. in protest of the state’s con­tin­ued path towards the legal­iza­tion of hydraulic frac­tur­ing (or frack­ing) for nat­ur­al gas.  Envi­ron­men­tal­ists across the state have orga­nized and cam­paigned against hydrofrack­ing leg­is­la­tion for over a year, which result­ed in a veto of SB 820 this past sum­mer by Bev­er­ly Per­due.  The leg­is­la­ture over­rode the veto short­ly after dur­ing a con­tro­ver­sial vote in which a mis­tak­en bal­lot was cast for legal­iza­tion, and the vot­er was refused a recast.

“All legal chan­nels of protest have been exhaust­ed,” says Earth First!er Emi­ly Smith at the ral­ly out­side the action.  “We’ve learned that the leg­is­la­ture and reg­u­la­tors will not pro­tect the water we drink and air we breathe.  It’s time for the pub­lic to take oth­er types of action to stop hydrofrack­ing. “   This past Spring NC DENR released a report that gross­ly under­es­ti­mat­ed the pos­si­ble envi­ron­men­tal risks of frack­ing.  Since then, they have been work­ing with the new­ly formed Min­ing and Ener­gy Com­mis­sion which includes sev­er­al mem­bers that are close­ly linked to oil & gas: Ray Cov­ing­ton, a part­ner at NC Oil & Gas, who prof­its finan­cial­ly from an increase in leased lands for frack­ing; Chair­man Jim Wom­ack, a Lee Coun­ty Com­mis­sion­er and an oil indus­try sup­port­er who claimed at a DENR pub­lic meet­ing that you were more like­ly to be hit by a mete­or than have water con­t­a­m­i­nat­ed by frack­ing; and Charles Hol­brook a for­mer employ­ee of Chevron Oil.

“Hav­ing peo­ple who sup­port and ben­e­fit from oil and gas extrac­tion on a reg­u­la­to­ry com­mis­sion is like a fox guard­ing the hen­house.”  The EPA recent­ly released a study that con­firmed con­t­a­m­i­na­tion of the water aquifer in Pavil­lion, Wyoming with frack­ing flu­ids, but DENR has done noth­ing to mod­i­fy their report.  “We’re not going to let indus­try destroy North Car­oli­na like they have Penn­syl­va­nia,” says Smith refer­ring  to the numer­ous spills that have occurred in the high­ly fracked Mar­cel­lus Shale—including 4,700 gal­lons of hydrochlo­ric acid spilled this year in Brad­ford Coun­ty and a 30-foot methane geyser which erupt­ed in Tio­ga coun­ty, PA.  A blowout at one of Chesa­peake Energy’s rigs in Wyoming this year burned escap­ing methane for sev­er­al days and more than 70 res­i­dents had to be evac­u­at­ed.  “Frack­ing is not only con­t­a­m­i­nat­ing our land and water irre­versibly, but it’s spew­ing mas­sive amounts of methane, a green­house gas, into the atmos­phere.”