Showing posts with label environmental involvement. Show all posts
Showing posts with label environmental involvement. Show all posts

Monday, September 10, 2012

Community Meeting

League of Women Voters and Sierra Club present:

Much Ado About Fracking

A community meeting on gas drilling this week that you won't want to miss!

Moderated by B.J. Austin of KERA Dallas, this panel discussion will feature Dr. Eduardo Olaguer, Director of Air Quality Research at the Houston Advanced Research Center, and author of a new study showing that gas industry emissions are significantly increasing smog pollution levels in D/FW.

Thursday, September 13th, 7:00pm
Northaven United Methodist
11211 Preston Rd. 75230
 
 
The Dallas City Council is considering several major changes to our local gas drilling ordinance.  Come learn about the fracking process and how it will affect the region's air and water, the economy and health of people and the environment.
 
 
Bring a friend, spread the word.  The choices Dallas officials are making now will affect all of us for decades to come.  Make sure your voice is heard!

Monday, November 28, 2011

Park in the Woods: New Perennial Garden

Audubon volunteer and educator, Mariana Griggs from near by Cedar Ridge Preserve installs a garden of herbs and native flowers in the fenced courtyard of the Park in the Woods Recreation Center.  Beds were turned by Mariana and volunteers Ed Noise from the Cedar Ridge Preserve, and Ed and Claudia Meyer from Fox Hollow Homeowneres Association.

Lemon grass, sweet marjoram, oregano, mint, wooly thyme, dill, coneflowers, calendula, sage, turk's cap, iris and many other herbs and flowers were purchased from a grant from the Audubon Society of Cedar Ridge Preserve.  Mariana hopes the garden will inspire young children, teens and adults visiting the Rec Center to spend time out-of-doors learning about plants, insects, and the birds and animals that the garden will attract.  Mariana is a teacher, naturalist, community gardener, and forensic scientist.  She sees the garden as step to understanding nature and its potential in our society.

In February, fruit trees will be planted and volunteers will be needed.  This will be a great opportunity for teens needing Community Service hours.  Email mcnadallas@gmail.com for more information.


How to Create a Garden

Mariana Griggs Ready to Work

Preparing the Beds


Ed Meyer Hauling Plants and Top Soil


Voila!


Thursday, October 13, 2011

Gas Industry Pushing to Drill in Our Neighborhood Next?



Reprinted from the Dallas Observer
What the Frack: Task Force Isn't Done, But City Moves Closer to Issuing First Drilling Permit
By Leslie Minora Wed., Oct. 12 2011 at 8:32 AM 



North Lake map with Valley Ranch to the East and Irving to the West

 
XTO and Trinity East, two of the companies that have paid the city big money and signed leases to drill for gas within the city limits, have agreed to wait 30 months while the city rewrites its gas drilling ordinance. But one company has no such deal with the city: Chief Oil & Gas, which, we discovered at yesterday's meeting of the gas drilling task force, is moving ahead with its longstanding plans to drill on a site owned by Luminant at North Lake, near Coppell but within the Dallas city limits. "Luminant is providing the minerals and the land. Chief is providing the know-how and the drilling," said Dallas Cothrum of Masterplan, the land-use consulting company representing Chief.
In order to drill, companies must obtain site-specific zoning permission from city council -- a specific use permit (SUP) -- as well as a city permit, which is issued according to technical standards, providing that the company submits materials demonstrating that they are in accordance with the city's current drilling ordinance. Meanwhile, the Dallas drilling task force is crafting updated ordinance recommendations, which they will vote on next month before submitting to the city council.
But before it began revising its drilling ordinance, the city approved five SUPs for drilling sites, and Chief is the only one currently moving forward in the permitting process, as documented in the letter below from Masterplan, which ends with the line, "Finally, I cannot remember an occurrence when it took the city so long to issue a permit for an allowed use."
Theresa O'Donnell, the city's director of Sustainable Development and Construction, said her office has requested additional information from Chief. And if the company complies with the current ordinance, she said, the city must grant a permit allowing fracking on the site. Currently, she said during her zoning presentation to the drilling task force yesterday, the application is "substantially complete."
If a permit is issued, there is legally nothing stopping Chief from drilling on the site. "We're perfecting our package and plan to resubmit this week," said Cothrum. Depending on a variety of factors, drilling could begin before the end of the year -- which is what Chief said last year, following the resolution of a host of other controversies involving the property.
"We want to see if there's gas there," Cothrum said. "We wouldn't have gone through the process if we weren't serious about finding out if there's gas at North Lake."
The North Lake location is relatively secluded from residential neighborhoods, O'Donnell told the task force. "We could see the activity," she said, and "watch the process without having any immediately adjacent neighbors that are affected by it."
Potential fracking sites for which the city has granted SUPs will be held to the city's current ordinance rather than being forced to comply with the revisions currently under consideration. "They'd be perfectly within their rights to say no [to complying with a revised ordinance], but we could ask," O'Donnell said, addressing this issue yesterday during her zoning and permitting presentation to the drilling task force. She told Unfair Park that, generally, "You get to play by the set of rules that are in place at the time of your application."
O'Donnell made it clear that Dallas does not have a moratorium on fracking, but reiterated that until now, gas drilling companies that have paid the city millions for leases have voluntarily stalled their applications.
"We've asked them to hold off," she said. "They're just voluntarily keeping their application suspended."
But with Chief's pursuance of a drilling permit, the promise is disintegrating. She told the task force that companies holding those leases "could come in and submit all their documentation for a permit this afternoon if they would like." In other words: Dallas could be fracked.

Wednesday, October 5, 2011

Citizen Recommendations for a new Gas Drilling Ordinance


Citizens work hard to protect their neighborhoods ....    by Mayor Rawlings

The Dallas City Council was presented with recommendations for the creation of a new Dallas Gas Drilling Ordinance on October 4, 2011.  These recommendations have been compiled after months of research and study coordinated by the following citizen groups:

Mountain Creek Neighborhood Alliance
Dallas Area Residents for Responsible Drilling
Downwinders at Risk
Texas Campaign for the Environment

Other municipalities gas ordinances in the Barnet Shale were studied and used as a guide for the Dallas citizens proposal.

Recommendation highlights:

  • A 3000 foot setback based upon public safety (danger to water mains, foundations, bridges, etc), as outlined in the national guidelines of the Corps of Engineers Manual with regards to the Joe Pool Lake Dam infrastructure. 
  • Full disclosure of fracking fluid ingredients, with no exceptions,and with samples taken by the city.
  • Off-sets for air pollutants of NOx, VOCx and Greenhouse Gases.
  •  No wells allowed inside a residential area.  Wells to be restricted to areas zoned for heavy industry.
  • Notice of a Gas Well SUP permit application shall be mailed to all residences, schools, churches, day care center, nursing homes and business within a one mile radius of the facility.  
See attached link for copy of Recommendations: 

 http://www.scribd.com/doc/67593580/Citizens-Recommendations-for-a-Dallas-Gas-Well-Ordinance

Wednesday, September 7, 2011

It's My Park Day

Friends of Emerald Lake Host Clean Up

Saturday, September 10th, 2011

8am - Noon



Emerald Lake Park behind Mt Creek Library


You are invited to join us at Emerald Lake shore Saturday, September 10 between 8 and 12 or at another time this week-end. The very low water gives us the opportunity to pick up bottles and other trash that have been submerged there for a long time. Call Wayne Dye if you have any questions: 214-693-0919 or Sally at 972-533-9555.

Wear sun protection and older protective shoes. Bags and gloves will be available on Saturday in 3 locations:
  1. Outside the entrance of Mt. Creek Library before hours and just inside the door after the library opens.
  2. From Mt. Creek Library: take sidewalk down to lakefront and the 1st lakeside park bench.
  3. From Playground end: find bags on picnic table between playground and vollyball court.

Pick up a couple of white bags and a pair of gloves and carry them around along the sidewalk to the furthest partially filled tied bag and start your trash pick up from there. When partially filled (too big to fill), tie ends together and leave below the edge of the sidewalk where you ended your pickup for later collection.

If you choose to clean-up the undeveloped side of the lake follow above guidelines, leaving your bag near the shore where you ended for collection by canoe later Saturday.

You can also collect trash along the tree lines in the park if you prefer and leave bags off the edge of the sidewalk or next to the nearest trash bin.

Thank you for considered helping in this community service effort.

Sincerely, Wayne and Sally Dye, Friends of Emerald Lake