http://www.stargazette.com/story/news/local/2015/07/08/fracking-propane-proposed-tioga-county-ny/29863383/
Fracking with propane proposed for Tioga County, NY
Andrew Casler, [email protected] | @AndrewCasler 5:02 p.m. EDT July
8, 2015
  [image: 20150708 Barton]Buy Photo

(Photo: photos by KELLY GAMPEL / Staff Photo)
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BARTON – A proposal to frack for natural gas using gelled propane and sand
was announced Wednesday morning at Barton Town Hall in Tioga County.

Snyder Farm Group spokesman Kevin "Cub" Frisbie said an application was
filed Tuesday with the state Department of Environmental Conservation.

The move comes after Gov. Andrew Cuomo's administration officially banned
large-scale hydraulic fracturing on June 29. The state announcement ended a
seven-year review process that drew hundreds of thousands of public
comments and sharply divided the general public.

"We are outside of the state's ban," Tioga Energy Partners, LLC legal
counsel Adam Schultz said. "The state banned high-volume hydraulic
fracturing, but that's not what we're doing."

Tioga Energy Partners is the contracting company working with the Snyder
Farm Group on the drilling application.

More than 60 people attended the press conference, which was held outside
the Town of Barton municipal offices.
[image: 20150708 Barton]Buy Photo

A large crowd gathered outside Barton town hall Wednesday morning to hear
about Snyder Farm Group's proposal for a natural gas well beneath a Barton
farm. (Photo: KELLY GAMPEL / Staff Photo)

The Snyder group is a collection of five Tioga County farm families who
have leased land for natural gas development. The group is seeking to
develop a 53-acre natural gas well in Halsey Valley, which is in the Town
of Barton, Tioga County — about 25 miles south of Ithaca and 30 miles east
of Elmira.

The well pad would occupy about 31/2 acres on Ernest "Bucky" Snyder's
150-acre hay and corn farm.

The group has applied for two drilling permits, Frisbie said.

*The well would get drilled into the Utica Shale formation, about 9,500
feet underground, according to Frisbie. "Then we will do a horizontal turn
and go into the Marcellus Shale at approximately 4,400 feet," he said.*

Town of Barton Supervisor Leon "Stick" Cary said that fracking may mean "a
happy time for the residents of the Town of Barton, as well as Tioga
County." Cary said that he anticipates increased taxes for local government
and new jobs.

"The Snyder Group ... have done a good job to harvest what is theirs," Cary
said. "It's the gas under their lands, and they have picked a way that is
safe ... it will make this area flourish, there's no doubt in my mind."

Tioga Energy Partners said it would use gelled propane and sand to
hydraulically fracture Marcellus Shale and release natural gas.

"What the state studied, and eventually decided to ban, was the use of high
volumes of water for fracturing purposes," Schultz said. "This process that
we are proposing doesn't use any water, the fracturing takes place using
liquified petroleum gas."

The groups are seeking to develop the well under a New York state Generic
Environmental Impact Statement on the Oil, Gas and Solution Mining
Regulatory Program from 1992.

"(The application) will be subject to rigorous review, which we fully
support, and that process will be completed when it was completed," Schultz
added.

The state's fracking ban started a 120-day clock for fracking proponents to
examine whether the ban has any legal holes; fracking opponents have lauded
the ban. If a lawsuit isn't filed by Oct. 27, state law says the decision
can no longer be challenged.

The DEC issued a 43-page "findings statement," which laid out the agency's
rationale for implementing a statewide ban on fracking with more than
300,000 gallons of fluid. The document cites a number of uncertainties
about the process' impact on human health and the environment while
questioning whether it would be economically feasible in New York.

*Economic gains sought *

"Bucky" Snyder, the owner of the land where the well pad could be located,
said that he thinks the push to develop gas in Tioga County is a positive
step.

"It's going to create a lot of jobs, and it's going to create a lot of
well-needed help for this area," Snyder said. "There's a lot of people who
don't have jobs in this area."
[image: 20150708 Barton]Buy Photo

Ernest “Bucky” Snyder discusses the positives of having a natural gas well
underneath his Halsey Valley Road farmland in the Town of Barton, near
Tyler Hollow Road. (Photo: KELLY GAMPEL / Staff Photo)

Sen. Tom Libous, R-Binghamton, sent spokesman Jim Thomas to the Wednesday
press conference.

"We think that this will be a resource for the county after the Tioga Downs
announcement (Tuesday)," Thomas said. "I think things are really starting
to bounce back in Tioga and look forward to moving forward with this."

The Nichols racino is proposing a $195 million investment that would double
its work force and lead to $32 million in new gaming tax revenues.

"I think we have a resource beneath our lands that we're not using, and
other states are reaping an economic benefit from it, but we aren't," said
Terri Tyson, of Halsey Valley. She owns 92 acres where she farms dairy
cattle.

"If the opportunity arises, I wouldn't be afraid to have (fracking) on my
property," she said.

Tyson added that she wants to see gas drilling developed safely, and she
believes that the Snyder Farm Group will do just that.

"I have young children that want to take over the farm when I'm done with
it, and it's very important to me that our land is protected, but also that
we do have some benefits," she said.

Cecil Coons, who owns 68 acres in Halsey Valley, said his town needs
industry and new tax revenue.

"We're going to get jobs, we're going to get lease money, and it's going to
help everybody," he said.
   Tioga County Farm Bureau president and member of the Snyder Farm Group
Wednesday, July 8, announces the five-farm family group's intentions to
install a natural gas well undeneath a hayfield in the Town of Barton. A
press conference was held outside the town hall. (Photo: Kelly Gampel)

Follow Andrew Casler on Twitter @AndrewCasler
<https://twitter.com/andrewcasler>.

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