DEP Looks for Comments on New Natural Gas Air Permit

The West Virginia Department of Environmental Protection hosted a public hearing in Charleston to discuss a new air quality permit for natural gas facilities in the state. Some wish the DEP would use the permit writing process to incorporate suggestions from scientists who have studied air around gas facilities.

One Permit Instead of Many

The state Department of Environmental Protection’s Division of Air Quality has been scrambling to keep up with federal air quality regulations and a growing natural gas industry—both have been evolving rapidly over the last several years. In an attempt stay current and streamline the process, there’s a new permit being proposed that would take the place of several others.

New Source Review Program Manager within the West Virginia Division of Air Quality, Beverly McKeone, explains that natural gas industry processes have been getting increasingly complicated as gas development continues throughout north and north central West Virginia.  That’s why the DEP is proposing a new permit named G-80.

Similar to old permits, the new permit would require companies to list air pollution projections related to natural gas production, compressor and dehydration facilities based on the emission outputs of on-site equipment.

McKeone says one of the bigger changes is that federal rules would be incorporated by reference. Referencing federal parameters, McKeone explains, enables the state to avoid having to modify existing permits, which keeps the DEP and industry more readily in compliance with federal mandates.

“So we’re trying to update it and trying to keep it a little more of a living document,” McKeone said.

A Comment from the Public

At a sparsely attended public meeting in Charleston co-founder of the West Virginia Surface Owners Rights Organization, David McMahon stood to voice concerns for residents who live close to these gas facilities.

He cited an air study commissioned by the West Virginia legislature in 2011, conducted by the School of Public Health at West Virginia University in 2012. It was presented to the legislature, but McMahon says the report and its recommendations have been more or less ignored by law-makers and state officials ever since. McMahon pointed out that the study found that regardless of current laws and regulations, air pollutants around gas facilities sometimes reached dangerous levels at distances deemed legally safe.

“But the point that we want to make here,” McMahon said, “is that you’ve got the power to do more, you should do more, particularly with regard to ongoing measurement.”

The study commissioned by lawmakers recommends throwing out regulations that site facilities at any fixed distance. Instead, scientists say real-time monitoring should be employed so that companies can respond to dangerous pollutants immediately.

In a short question/answer period at the end of the public hearing, DEP officials responded to questions about additional air monitoring, more or less saying their mandate was to fulfill the letter of state and federal law.

DEP will be accepting comments on the new natural gas air permit until March 30th. Any comments should be sent to: DEPG80A@wv.gov

After Living Next to Drilling Activity, 100 W.Va. Residents Sue Companies

Nuisance and negligence lawsuits have been filed this year throughout West Virginia related to horizontal drilling activities. Noise, air, and water pollution, traffic and debris are among complaints. It’s a new industrial world for many West Virginians living in the growing rural gas fields.  

Gas Moved In Next Door, And Made Itself At Home

Lyndia Ervolina stood in her front yard, 75 feet or so from Route 50 in Doddridge County. She pointed to several heavy trucks passing by.

“They’re hauling water, they’re hauling sand, they’re hauling that silica sand, they’re hauling frac fluid. Anything you can think of,” she said with a strained tone in her voice.

Drill cuttings, heavy machinery, pipe… Ervolina sees it all from her front porch. For the past thirty years, she’s lived in her charming home that rests in a nook off of Route 50, but she says the traffic wasn’t an issue until four or five years ago when horizontal drilling took off in this neck of Doddridge County. She’s not an industry expert, but she well-knows what it’s like to live surrounded by horizontal drilling operations.

Gas has moved in to Ervolina’s yard, literally. She has a beautiful garden that’s clearly seen years of work, but it’s fallen into disrepair. And if you linger there, it’s not too hard to guess why.

There’s a heavy odor wafting through the air that makes you worry about the presence of open flames. Ervolina said it comes from across the street.

“I have a condensate tank up there that they blow off right across the road that they put in when they put the pipeline in. I have no idea why they put it right across from us,” she said.

Condensate tanks are used to clean gas as it goes through lines, to remove impurities.

“And they just blow it into the air,” Ervolina said. “So when it gets blown off into the air it comes to my house.”

Lyndia Ervolina doesn’t own any mineral rights on her two-acre lot; she gains nothing by living within arms-reach of such industry. Companies have no legal obligation to explain what they’re doing even if it’s happening right across the street; and there’s no forum to facilitate communication. She and her family are left to wonder and worry.

She says moving away isn’t off the table, as many others have already done. But it’s a painful thought to entertain.

“My house has no value now and I wonder if I should take what money we have left and invest it in the house or just figure that we might have to move out of here. It kind of leaves you just in this limbo. I just turned 67 and my husband is 68 and … it’s kind of hard to start over.”

Mass Litigation

Ervolina’s story is one of many in the northern gas fields. Over the past year about fifty cases and about a hundred claimants have filed suits mostly in Harrison and Doddridge counties, but also Pleasants, Kanawha, Ritchie, Marion, and Monongalia.  Citizens are filing suit against several companies including Colorado-based Antero Resources, West Virginia-based Hall Drilling, and Pennsylvania-based EQT. The negligence and nuisance claims are coming from residents and property owners like Ervolina last who live in the vicinity of oil or natural gas drilling activities.

I drove around and spoke with other residents in the community who are worried about air and noise pollution. But few are willing to publicly voice concerns because they don’t want to openly criticize economic development in their rural backyards. Some members of the community get paid to do odd jobs for gas companies like monitor traffic, or help clean up spills. Still others like Ervolina who are filing suits and have been advised by legal counsel not to discuss their issues; and if their cases are settled, they are often legally forbidden from discussing problems as part of the legal settlement.

Attorney and co-founder of the West Virginia Surface Owners Rights Organization, Dave McMahon explained that these nuisance suits aren’t very common.

“That’s because there’s often not enough money in one nuisance case for a lawyer to be able to bring the case on a contingent-fee basis,” McMahon said. “And very few people living out there in the country have the money to pay a good lawyer and hourly-basis to bring one of these cases.”

McMahon is not the lawyer filing THESE cases, but he was present when the fifty-or-so cases filed in the state were compiled into a mass litigation suit–which is when many similar cases are compiled to be heard and judged on simultaneously to avoid conflicting rulings and a clogged court system. McMahon says this kind of legal action is the only recourse people have.

“The Horizontal Well Act that was passed a couple years ago didn’t do what it should have for surface owners–we say.” McMahon said. “There were a number of studies put in instead of surface-owner protections. The studies were conducted by WVU and other places. The studies made recommendations to give better protections to surface owners. But neither the DEP nor the legislature have made those changes. So, what we have to hope is that these actions in the court will protect people and will deter the industry from doing the kinds of nuisance things that they’ve been doing.”

***We reached out to Antero, EQT, Hall Drilling, and the WV Oil and Natural Gas Association for comment on this story but got no replies.

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