Tag Archives: water testing

Advice to Track Drilling’s Effects on Water

Source : WHSV

WV Professor Offers Advice to Track Drilling’s Effects on Water

WHEELING, W.Va. (AP)
A professor and a team of students at Wheeling Jesuit University have advice for West Virginians worried that natural gas drilling in the Marcellus shale field could hurt their water supplies.

A professor and a team of students at Wheeling Jesuit University have advice for West Virginians worried that natural gas drilling in the Marcellus shale field could hurt their water supplies.

Biology professor Ben Stout tells West Virginia Public Broadcasting that people should test their water daily with a conductivity pen they can buy online for $80 to $150. It measures the ability of dissolved materials to conduct electricity.

A kit from a federally certified lab can create a baseline for water quality by identifying those materials. He says people then must keep detailed records about conductivity, color, taste and odor.

Companies are rushing to tap the deposits underlying West Virginia, Pennsylvania, New York and Ohio.

Meanwhile, legislators are struggling with how to regulate the water-intensive hydraulic fracturing technologies the wells require.

Arrangements Being Made to Test Water in Monroe County

A Monroe County resident offers some notes on a recent community meeting:

I did go to the meeting on the 14th, led by Dale McCutcheon and Howdy Henritz.  They gave out the one page from the regulations about what drillers must do re your water–you could get a copy of it from Dale (his office number is the same as that for the Monroe Health Center).  Basically, they cannot drill within 1000 ft of an existing well (meaningless in karst) and they have to give notice to land owner–various ways detailed.

Dale and Howdy have made arrangements with REIC (a water testing lab in Beckley) to test for the basics that would show up from a well contaminated by drilling–cost $200.  The samples must be collected by a “licensed person”–Howdy and Dale qualify, and not by landowner.  They are collecting names so they can do it by areas.  If you don’t have a baseline test done, you’re out of luck if your well or spring is polluted.  On the other hand, if your well is polluted, the drillers are not going to do much–maybe bring you bottled water the rest of your life.

At the meeting also were Rocky Parsons and Dennis White.  Rocky had maps of the karst showing the lineament–a crack though the area marked by many sinkholes and which cavers believe may contain fabulous caves–pretty much unexplored.  (He also had marked on it the flow length and direction of the known dye tests.)  Cavers say that drilling MUST NOT be done anywhere near the lineament.  The first well planned is right near it.

Merri Morgan