Cuomo On Fracking: "That's What Democracy Is All About"
Ask environmentalists in New York whether they woke up on December 17th expecting Governor Andrew M. Cuomo to ban fracking by noon that day. They’ll answer: “no way.”
So, why did Andrew Cuomo buck the trend which saw two dozen other American states give fracking the green light with hardly a question raised, and decide instead to ban it?
What makes the Governor’s decision all the more astonishing is that he prohibited fracking despite a totally
underhanded campaign by the gas industry, which played on a bad economy and problems with other energy sources like coal to push a hugely popular “drill first, ask questions later” agenda. Indeed, New York initially bought into such arguments, leaving it to local activists, academics and environmental organizations to remind state officials that the
evidence shows drill-friendly communities actually tend to do
worse in personal income, employment growth, economic diversity, educational attainment, and ability to attract investment. And, that fracking probably releases
more climate-trashing gases than coal burning.
But, these gambits were rebuffed, and in February 2013,
Cuomo announced that he would do what no other governor had done –
take a deep dive into the emerging science of fracking’s impacts on public health. And, in those two years since Cuomo called in the health experts, the peer-reviewed evidence against fracking’s safety just kept mounting. For example:
•
A 2014 report by Colorado School of Public Health and Brown University researchers found that women living near fracking sites had as much as a 30% increased risk of giving birth to babies with congenital heart defects.• New York’s Institute of Health and the Environment at the University of Albany and others
studied air emissions in five fracking states, finding
dangerously high levels of carcinogenic chemicals like benzene (levels ranged from 35 times to more than 770,000 times normal) and formaldehyde (levels from 30 to 240 times normal) near frack sites.
Cuomo called it correctly, when he and the grass-roots finally buried the hatchet: New York’s decision making process on fracking is“what democracy is all about.” The Governor’s willingness to let the facts lead him where no other U.S. governor had gone before makes his fracking decision what leadership is all about, too.
Fracking lost a big one, as 2014 drew to a close. More such losses are inevitable, as Governors around the U.S. wake up to the reality behind this poisonous technique.